New Tricks: The One That Got Away


10:05 pm - 11:05 pm, Tuesday, January 20 on U&Drama (20)

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About this Broadcast

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The One That Got Away
Season 10, Episode 8

A photo featuring a missing 19-year-old music student turns up in a charity shop donation bag on the anniversary of her disappearance 17 years earlier, prompting Sandra to suspect the work of a serial killer. However, as the team gets to work identifying and tracking down the other people in the picture, increasing pressure to hand over the investigation forces Sandra to consider her future, and she turns to a familiar face to help her make her decision. Amanda Redman stars, with Denis Lawson, Dennis Waterman and Nicholas Lyndhurst


HD subtitles 16x9 audio-description
Detective/Thriller Movie/Drama

Cast & Crew

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Denis Lawson (Actor) .. Steve McAndrew
Nicholas Lyndhurst (Actor) .. Danny Griffin
Amanda Redman (Actor) .. Sandra Pullman
Dennis Waterman (Actor) .. Gerry Standing
Anthony Calf (Actor) .. DAC Robert Strickland
Serge Hazanavicius (Actor) .. Max Clement
Phoebe Nicholls (Actor) .. Annie Banks
Louisa Clein (Actor) .. Emma Hewitt
Dorian Lough (Actor) .. Stuart McKelvie
Sean Baker (Actor) .. Dave Sheldon
Barry McCarthy (Actor) .. Donald Wheldon
Robert Beach (Actor) .. Tom Miller
Andy Hay (Director)
Tom Mullens (Producer)

More Information

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Did You Know..

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Denis Lawson (Actor) .. Steve McAndrew
Born: September 27, 1947 in Perthshire, Scotland
Best Known For: Being Ewan McGregor's uncle.
Early-life: Denis Stamper Lawson was born on September 27, 1947, in Perthshire, Scotland. His sister, Carol, is the mother of actor Ewan McGregor. Their parents hailed from Glasgow, but moved to Crieff to escape the poverty-stricken city. They later owned a watchmaker and jeweller's store. He remains very close to his family, and inspired Ewan to become an actor. Lawson left Crieff in the early 1970s to pursue his career in London.
Career: Lawson's first big success was in West End musical Pal Joey. He also appeared in such memorable TV productions as The Merchant of Venice, Rock Follies and The Man in the Iron Mask. He had a small role in the original Star Wars trilogy, was in the acclaimed Local Hero in 1983, and took the lead in sitcom The Kit Curran Radio Show. He has rarely been out of work since, whether it's on stage, film or TV. Among his other projects are The Ambassador, Bob Martin, Hornblower, Holby City, Bleak House, Robin Hood, Enid, Just William, Marchlands and New Tricks. He's also a director and has worked with his nephew on the theatre production Little Malcolm and his Struggle Against the Eunuchs, and short film Solid Geometry.
Quote: "The Star Wars films were one of the least important jobs I've ever done."
Trivia: He voiced a character in the video game Star Wars Rogue Squadron II: Rogue Leader.
Nicholas Lyndhurst (Actor) .. Danny Griffin
Born: April 21, 1961 in Emsworth, Hampshire
Best Known For: Playing Del Boy's gangly brother Rodney Trotter.
Early-life: Nicholas Simon Lyndhurst was born on April 21, 1961, in Emsworth, Hampshire. He was raised by his single mum Liz, but has described his father Joe as a "gentle man, very funny, very charming". Nicholas subsequently had little contact with Joe after turning 17. At the age of eight he decided he wanted to be an actor, and at 10 he began training while boarding at the Corona Stage Academy. Appearances in adverts paid for his studies.
Career: Lyndhurst made his TV debut in an adaptation of Heidi in 1974. He followed this with roles in The Prince and the Pauper, and The Tomorrow People. In 1978, Lyndhurst began his transition into more grown-up roles by playing Ronnie Barker's son in Porridge spin-off Going Straight, and classic sitcom Butterflies, but it was Only Fools And Horses that made him a household name when it began in 1981. Since then, he's also starred in The Two of Us, The Piglet Files, David Copperfield, Gulliver's Travels, Goodnight Sweetheart, After You've Gone and Only Fools prequel Rock & Chips. He is now a regular in New Tricks.
Quote: "The idea of achieving fame and fortune didn't cross my mind and I find it terrifying that being famous is the sole objective of so many young people today."
Trivia: He enjoys underwater diving.
Amanda Redman (Actor) .. Sandra Pullman
Born: August 12, 1957 in Brighton
Best Known For: At Home with the Braithwaites and New Tricks.
Early-life: Amanda Jacqueline Redman was born in Brighton on August 12, 1957, the eldest of two children. She poured a saucepan of boiling soup over her torso and left arm when she was 18 months old and needed regular skin grafts until she was five. She studied at the Bristol Old Vic Theatre School. She was shattered after her father died suddenly when she was 20.
Career: Redman first attracted attention in 1981 with her steamy film debut in Richard's Things. Roles proved sporadic in that decade, but her career took off in 1991 when she played Roberta in Spender, and Sally in The Men's Room. Bigger roles followed, such as Dr Joanna Stevens in Dangerfield in 1995. She hit the headlines in 1998, first with Close Relations which featured a ménage à trois, then as Diana Dors for glossy drama The Blonde Bombshell. Her small-screen success was consolidated with roles as a teacher in Hope and Glory and as lottery winner Alison in At Home with the Braithwaites - but she has also appeared in the films Sexy Beast (2000) and Mike Bassett: England Manager (2005). She starred in popular BBC drama New Tricks between 2003 and 2013. More recently, she starred in TV movie Tommy Cooper: Not Like That, Like This.
Quote: "If you're seen as a strong woman, men think you don't need protecting. Yet, underneath it all, I'm quite vulnerable."
Trivia: Redman received an MBE in 2012.
Dennis Waterman (Actor) .. Gerry Standing
Born: February 24, 1948 in Clapham
Best Known For: The Sweeney, Minder, and New Tricks.
Early-life: Born February 24, 1948, in Clapham, south London, the youngest of nine children, the son of a British Rail ticket collector. As a child he attended the Corona Theatre School and began his professional career with a role in Snowball, a 1960 Children's Film Foundation production. The same year he made Night Train to Inverness, and was asked to join the Royal Shakespeare Company. Playing William in a TV series based on the Just William books made him a star. He then tried to break into Hollywood.
Career: At 16, Waterman returned to Britain and concentrated on stage work until an acclaimed performance in 1968's Up the Junction led to more film roles. Low-budget movies (such as Scars of Dracula) and TV shows (including Colditz) followed until, in 1974, he co-starred with John Thaw in Regan, the pilot episode of iconic series The Sweeney, which became a major TV hit. A 10-year stint in comedy drama Minder followed. Other projects include TV shows On the Up, Stay Lucky, and Circles of Deceit. He's also worked on the stage, most notably in Jeffrey Bernard is Unwell, and My Fair Lady. As Gerry Standing, in BBC drama New Tricks, he has introduced himself to a new generation of fans.
Quote: "If I am not such a hell-raiser any more, it isn't because I've given up. It's just that my energy levels have fallen. I haven't stopped looking at women. I'm not blind."
Trivia: He has made several records, including, famously, the theme tunes of several of his TV shows.
Anthony Calf (Actor) .. DAC Robert Strickland
Serge Hazanavicius (Actor) .. Max Clement
Phoebe Nicholls (Actor) .. Annie Banks
Louisa Clein (Actor) .. Emma Hewitt
Dorian Lough (Actor) .. Stuart McKelvie
Sean Baker (Actor) .. Dave Sheldon
Barry McCarthy (Actor) .. Donald Wheldon
Robert Beach (Actor) .. Tom Miller
Andy Hay (Director)
Tom Mullens (Producer)
Julian Simpson (Writer)

Before / After

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