Post by RitaLittlewood on Jan 28, 2009 10:37:55 GMT
From the Daily Mail:
Cash-strapped ITV axes family dramas Heartbeat and The Royal
By Paul Revoir
Last updated at 1:59 AM on 28th January 2009
ITV has axed 1960s drama Heartbeat, it was revealed last night.
It has not commissioned another series after the one currently in production is completed later this year.
The Royal, a spin-off series also set in rural Yorkshire, is also to be culled in a desperate drive to save money.
The Royal Today, the daytime TV spin-off, has already gone.
It comes after the broadcaster last week announced it was halving the output of The Bill to a single episode a week. insiders say they expect many more cutbacks by ITV bosses.
The success of shows like Dancing On Ice and I'm A Celebrity... are also blamed for squeezing traditional drama out of the schedules.
Heartbeat, which has starred actors including Nick Berry and Tricia-Penrose, has been a staple part of cosy Sunday night viewing for nearly two decades.
The series, which first aired in April 1992, used to draw 10million viewers. It now attracts between 4 and 5million, while The Royal gets 4million.
There were suggestions Heartbeat could make a comeback in a couple of years' time. But sources close to the show admit that once ITV has laid off the actors and closed the production offices, it will not return.
The insider said: 'Staff have been kept holding on another series of Heartbeat, but there has been nothing. People on the show have been told at the moment that there is no recommission.'
Another source close to the show said: 'Heartbeat has been there for years. This is a big deal. I would have to say even if ITV was not in trouble, you would have to admit this is a series that is at the tail-end of its career.'
'Its like all the things that Yorkshire TV has been founded on, they are all coming to a close.'
Other stars to have appeared in the show over the years are former Coronation Street actor Nikki Sanderson, Gwen Taylor and Bill Maynard.
ITV has denied suggestions that it is also set to scale back the number of episodes on Emmerdale.
Cash-strapped ITV axes family dramas Heartbeat and The Royal
By Paul Revoir
Last updated at 1:59 AM on 28th January 2009
ITV has axed 1960s drama Heartbeat, it was revealed last night.
It has not commissioned another series after the one currently in production is completed later this year.
The Royal, a spin-off series also set in rural Yorkshire, is also to be culled in a desperate drive to save money.
The Royal Today, the daytime TV spin-off, has already gone.
It comes after the broadcaster last week announced it was halving the output of The Bill to a single episode a week. insiders say they expect many more cutbacks by ITV bosses.
The success of shows like Dancing On Ice and I'm A Celebrity... are also blamed for squeezing traditional drama out of the schedules.
Heartbeat, which has starred actors including Nick Berry and Tricia-Penrose, has been a staple part of cosy Sunday night viewing for nearly two decades.
The series, which first aired in April 1992, used to draw 10million viewers. It now attracts between 4 and 5million, while The Royal gets 4million.
There were suggestions Heartbeat could make a comeback in a couple of years' time. But sources close to the show admit that once ITV has laid off the actors and closed the production offices, it will not return.
The insider said: 'Staff have been kept holding on another series of Heartbeat, but there has been nothing. People on the show have been told at the moment that there is no recommission.'
Another source close to the show said: 'Heartbeat has been there for years. This is a big deal. I would have to say even if ITV was not in trouble, you would have to admit this is a series that is at the tail-end of its career.'
'Its like all the things that Yorkshire TV has been founded on, they are all coming to a close.'
Other stars to have appeared in the show over the years are former Coronation Street actor Nikki Sanderson, Gwen Taylor and Bill Maynard.
ITV has denied suggestions that it is also set to scale back the number of episodes on Emmerdale.