Genre: | Sitcom |
Runtime: | 30 minutes |
Creator: | Richard Ommanney |
Director: | Nic Phillips |
Starring: | Lise-Ann McLaughlin Tim Bentinck Brett Fancy Angus Barnett |
Channel: | ITV |
Company: | LWT |
Location: | London, England, UK |
Executive Producer: | Marcus Plantin |
Producer: | Nic Phillips |
Theme Music Composer: | Brian Bennett |
Language: | English |
Country: | United Kingdom |
Num Series: | 2 |
Num Episodes: | 14 |
Square Deal is a British sitcom created by Richard Ommanney which ran for two series between 3 September 1988 and 13 October 1989 on the ITV network.[1] The series starring Lise-Ann McLaughlin and Tim Bentinck as Nigel and Emma Barrington, a yuppie couple whose apparently comfortable lifestyle is brusquely shaken by the arrival on the scene of Sean, an incurable and impoverished young romantic.[2] It was produced by London Weekend Television.
Sean Hooper (Brett Fancy) is a determined dreamer who has set himself until his next birthday – eight weeks hence – to make a success of his life; he then bumps into Emma – literally, they have an accident from which he ends up in plaster – and they agree to go into business together, buying a café/sandwich bar. The enterprise will benefit from a perfect blend of their talents: her business knowledge and his acumen as a sandwich-maker – hitherto, he has been selling them to a market stall to support his career as a writer.
With Sean on the scene, Nigel and Emma's relationship rapidly deteriorates, and a love triangle emerges, first in Nigel's mind and then in reality, as Emma realises that, for all his quirks, Sean is more fun to be with than her husband. An estate agent with a cunning mind, Nigel proceeds to wreck his wife's café plans by gazumping her, and talk of a divorce is soon in the air. Later (in the second series) Sean turns his attentions to rock singing, becoming a fledgling star, while Nigel becomes Sean's landlord and develops an interest in his new neighbour, Geraldine (Georgina Melville).[3]
Title | Director | Writer | Original air date |
---|
Title | Director | Writer | Original air date |
---|
In a positive review, James Green wrote in The Stage and Television Today, "On the casting side the best thing is the impossibly pretty Lise-Ann McLaughlin as the fore-mentioned wife. How Timothy Bentinck, as her estate-agent husband can act the lord and master in these times of femine independence is criminal. She not only looks surperb but is expected to work at the do-it-yourself chores to put a few more thousands on the home."[4] The historian Mark Lewisohn called the show "modestly successful, if flawed".[5]