A Touch of Frost: Conclusions


09:10 am - 11:15 am, Thursday, February 19 on ITV3 (10)

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About this Broadcast

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Conclusions
Season 1, Episode 3

The detective is paired with DC Webster, an officer who is struggling to fit in with life in Denton after being seconded from Scotland, with the duo investigating a robbery at a local casino and a hit-and-run incident involving Roger Massie, the son of a local politician, and soon finds that both matters are linked. David Jason stars, with Bruce Alexander and George Anton


subtitles audio-description
Detective/Thriller Movie/Drama

Cast & Crew

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David Jason (Actor) .. DI Jack Frost
Bruce Alexander (Actor) .. Supt Stanley Mullett
George Anton (Actor) .. DC Webster
Neil Phillips (Actor) .. DCI Allen
Sue Johnston (Actor) .. Phyllis Bowman
Ben Daniels (Actor) .. Roger Massie
Norma West (Actor) .. Stella Massie
Douglas McFerran (Actor) .. Ronnie Eustace
Caroline Paterson (Actor) .. Diana Webster
Jane Hazlegrove (Actor) .. Maureen Shelby
Tony Armatrading (Actor) .. Leslie Russell
Dominique Barnes (Actor) .. Baroness Sophie von Essenbeck
Rowena King (Actor) .. Julia KIng
Don Leaver (Producer)

More Information

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Did You Know..

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David Jason (Actor) .. DI Jack Frost
Born: February 02, 1940 in London
Best Known For: His role as Del-Boy in Only Fools and Horses.
Early-life: Born David John White in Finchley, north London, on February 2, 1940, the son of a cleaner and a porter. As a child, he blossomed after appearing in a school play, but he followed his father's wishes and became an electrician. He remained a member of an amateur theatre group until a local newspaper critic advised him he had real talent and should turn professional. He signed up for drama school and joined actors' union Equity, only to be told they already had a David White on their books.
Career: After stints in local theatre, Jason graduated to TV, joining Michael Palin, Eric Idle and Terry Jones for Do Not Adjust Your Set in 1967. In the early 1970s, he appeared in the films White Cargo and Under Milk Wood and played the lead in TV comedy A Sharp Intake of Breath, before being cast opposite Ronnie Barker in the popular sitcom Open All Hours. He worked with the comedian again in 1975 in Porridge when he played old man Blanco, a performance that prompted producers to invite him to audition for the role of Grandad in Only Fools and Horses in 1981. The show's makers decided to cast him as Del-Boy instead after noticing his obvious chemistry with on-screen brother Nicholas Lyndhurst. It turned him into a household name. In the 1980s, he also provided the voices for animated children's favourites, including Danger Mouse and Count Duckula. Jason's huge success continued in the 1990s with The Darling Buds of May and A Touch of Frost. Even though he retired from the role of Det Insp Jack Frost in 2008, after playing the character for 16 years, he claimed to have no plans to retire himself from acting. His recent work includes The Royal Bodyguard and Still Open All Hours.
Quote: "I've never 'felt my age', whatever that means. I think there are a lot of people who feel 22 when in fact they're 62, and there are a lot of youngsters who behave as if they were four times their age. It's an attitude of mind, isn't it?"
Trivia: He was knighted by the Queen in December 2005.
Bruce Alexander (Actor) .. Supt Stanley Mullett
George Anton (Actor) .. DC Webster
Neil Phillips (Actor) .. DCI Allen
Sue Johnston (Actor) .. Phyllis Bowman
Born: December 07, 1943 in Warrington, Cheshire
Best Known For: The Royle Family and Brookside.
Early-life: Born Susan Johnston on December 7, 1943, in Warrington, Cheshire. Her mother was a housewife, and her father was a plumber who worked his way up to become a clerk of works. While employed at a tax office, Johnston would visit the Cavern in Liverpool during her lunch break. She used to hang around with Paul McCartney, and went to his 21st birthday party. They lost touch until a few years ago when they met during a visit by the Queen to Liverpool. She eventually quit her job and studied at London's Webber Douglas Academy of Dramatic Arts.
Career: On leaving drama school, Johnston began landing roles in fringe theatre, school workshops and occasional TV appearances in shows such as Coronation Street. She didn't become a famous face until her eight-year stint in Brookside as long-suffering Sheila Grant. She went on to star in Medics, hit comedy The Royle Family (alongside Brookie co-star Ricky Tomlinson), and The Things You Do for Love, in which the actress played former Corrie actress Pat Phoenix. Among her film credits are the award-winning Brassed Off, and crime drama Face, starring Robert Carlyle. Other projects include Sex, Chips and Rock 'n' Roll, Score, My Uncle Silas, Jam & Jerusalem, Waking the Dead and Being Eileen.
Quote: "I'm a character actress, not a glamour one. I like playing a dried-up old stick."
Trivia: Her memoir, Things I Couldn't Tell My Mother, was published in 2011.
Ben Daniels (Actor) .. Roger Massie
Born: June 10, 1964 in Nuneaton
Best Known For: Playing Finn in Cutting It.
Early-life: Born in Nuneaton on June 10, 1964. He's the son of a Rolls-Royce engineer-turned-grocer and the owner of a children's clothes shop. He claims to have been shy, but naughty as a child. School plays gave him the acting bug and he also credits David Lynch's The Elephant Man as a source of inspiration. He studied acting at Lamda before appearing in a series of repertory productions up and down the UK. He made his big-screen debut in 1987 Emily Lloyd vehicle Wish You Were Here, while his first TV appearance was in the 1989 drama The Paradise Club.
Career: Daniels claims his big break came when he landed a leading role in Alan Ayckbourn's Family Circles at Scarborough's Stephen Joseph Theatre in 1986. He then played Mercutio in a made-for-TV version of Romeo and Juliet. Larger parts in the likes of Outside Edge and Silent Witness followed, while on the big screen, his film CV was boosted with appearances in Passion in the Desert, and Fanny and Elvis. In 2002, he won the role of Finn Bevan in the series Cutting It, becoming a household name in the process. After quitting in 2004, he has gone on to star in Spooks, The Virgin Queen, The State Within, Lark Rise to Candleford, The Paradise and Law & Order: UK.
Quote: "Homophobia is still shockingly prevalent in film and TV. I know I've lost work because of being gay, and it is always an issue. I don't consider myself politically gay, but whenever I catch a whiff of that now, I'm on it like a ton of bricks."
Trivia: Daniels was in the running to replace Matt Smith in Doctor Who before the role went to Peter Capaldi.
Norma West (Actor) .. Stella Massie
Douglas McFerran (Actor) .. Ronnie Eustace
Caroline Paterson (Actor) .. Diana Webster
Jane Hazlegrove (Actor) .. Maureen Shelby
Tony Armatrading (Actor) .. Leslie Russell
Dominique Barnes (Actor) .. Baroness Sophie von Essenbeck
Rowena King (Actor) .. Julia KIng
Don Leaver (Producer)
Anthony Simmons (Director)
Richard Harris (Writer)
Born: October 01, 1930 in Limerick City
Best Known For: A distinguished film and stage career.
Early-life: Richard St John Harris was born in Limerick City on October 1, 1930, the youngest of nine children from a middle-class, Roman Catholic family. He was a talented sportsman, representing Munster on several occasions until contracting TB ended his career. Richard went on to study acting at the London Academy of Music and Dramatic Art. He went on to join Joan Littlewood's Theatre Workshop and soon began getting roles in various West End stage productions.
Career: Harris made his film debut in the 1958 British comedy Alive and Kicking. Other roles followed in The Guns of Navarone and Mutiny on the Bounty before his first lead role came in 1963's This Sporting Life. Other movies followed, including The Heroes of Telemark, Major Dundee, Camelot, A Man Called Horse, The Cassandra Crossing and The Wild Geese. He appeared in a number of forgettable productions during the 1980s but returned to form in the 1990s with The Field, Patriot Games and Unforgiven. His later films included Gladiator and two Harry Potter films. He died in London on October 25, 2002, at the age of 72, following a battle with Hodgkin's disease.
Quote: "I was a sinner. I slugged some people. I hurt many people. And it's true, I never looked back to see the casualties."
Trivia: Had three children with first wife Elizabeth Rees. A life-size sculpture of him as an 18-year-old squash player was unveiled by Russell Crowe in Kilkee, Co Clare, where Harris won a local cup four times in a row between 1948 and 1951.

Before / After

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Heartbeat
11:15 am