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Empire Road is a British television series, made by the BBC in 1978 and 1979. Written by Michael Abbensetts, the programme ran for two series.[2]

Empire Road
GenreDrama
Written byMichael Abbensetts
Directed byAlex Marshall[1]
StarringNorman Beaton,
Allister Bain,
Sheila Kelley,
Frances Cox,
Meg Johnson,
Thomas Baptiste,
Wayne Laryea,
Rosa Roberts
Country of originUnited Kingdom
Original languageEnglish
No. of series2
No. of episodes15
Production
Running time30 minutes
Release
Original networkBBC2
Original release31 October 1978 (1978-10-31) 
1 November 1979 (1979-11-01)

The series was the first British television series to be written, acted and directed predominantly by black artists. A soap opera, similar in format to Coronation Street, Empire Road depicted life for the African-Caribbean, East Indian and South Asian residents of a racially diverse street in the city of Birmingham.

Cast members included Norman Beaton, Corinne Skinner-Carter, Wayne Laryea, Joseph Marcell, Rudolph Walker and Rosa Roberts. The programme also provided early TV exposure for Julie Walters who appeared in a few episodes. The series was made at BBC Pebble Mill with location work in the Handsworth area of Birmingham.

The eponymously named theme song was recorded by Matumbi and also released as a single in 1978.

The general premise of the series concerns the day-to-day life of a residential property landlord who also owns a minimarket – where his brother-in-law is a junior partner – and sometimes deals with social concerns of the time, namely race issues, family issues and mixed relationships. Problems that arise are usually solved or at least calmed by the protagonist family's patriarch using reasoning based on his life experience, wisdom and common sense. Some of the younger characters affectionately regard him as a benign 'godfather' figure. The patriarch's son runs a dry-cleaning business.

Norman Beaton would later go on to star in the Channel 4 comedy series Desmond's.


Notes


  1. Akua Rugg, Brickbats & bouquets: black woman's critique (Race Today Publications, 1984), p. 43
  2. Karen Ross (2002). "Empire Road". In Alison Donnell (ed.). Companion to Contemporary Black British Culture. Routledge. pp. 103–4. ISBN 978-1-134-70025-7.






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