New Tricks: Old Dogs


11:00 pm - 12:20 am, Tuesday, March 17 on U&Drama +1 (60)

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About this Broadcast

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Old Dogs
Season 3, Episode 3

A dog is found killed in a manner that matches a series of animal slayings from 30 years earlier. The team reopens the case, but the cruelty of the crimes affects Brian's judgement - especially when his own pet dies. Jack's deteriorating health causes concern for his colleagues and a visit to a museum leads to an alarming discovery. Richard Briers guest stars


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

Cast & Crew

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Richard Briers (Actor) .. James Farlow
Alun Armstrong (Actor) .. Brian Lane
James Bolam (Actor) .. Jack Halford
Amanda Redman (Actor) .. Sandra Pullman
Dennis Waterman (Actor) .. Gerry Standing
Susan Jameson (Actor) .. Esther Lane
Caroline Loncq (Actor) .. Pathologist
Michael Maloney (Actor) .. John Fletcher
Marian Pashley (Actor) .. Miss Herbert
Joseph Millson (Actor) .. Tom Christie
Frances de la Tour (Actor) .. Professor Styles
Juliet May (Director)

More Information

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Did You Know..

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Richard Briers (Actor) .. James Farlow
Born: January 14, 1934 in Merton, Surrey
Best Known For: His role in The Good Life.
Early-life: Richard David Briers was born on January 14, 1934, in Raynes Park, London. The cousin of gap-toothed comic actor Terry-Thomas, Briers grew up in a flat above a cinema and attended RADA between 1954 and 1956. He has a sister and left school with no qualifications. He did, however, win a scholarship to Liverpool Playhouse, and soon became an accomplished stage actor. He moved to the Belgrade Theatre in Coventry before making his West End debut.
Career: Briers' film career began in the 1960s with British features including Bottoms Up, Murder She Said, and The Girl on the Boat. He turned his attention to TV, gaining fame initially in the sitcom Marriage Lines, but it's probably for The Good Life that he will be best remembered. He teamed up again with its creators, John Esmonde and Bob Larbey, on the 1980s sitcom Ever Decreasing Circles. Briers went on to join Kenneth Branagh's Renaissance Theatre Company, taking on more classical and Shakespearean roles including King Lear and Uncle Vanya. He's also appeared in Monarch of the Glen, Peter Pan, Mary Shelley's Frankenstein and Torchwood. He voiced the cartoon Roobarb twice - in 1974 and 2005.
Quote: On growing old: 'I want very little action. I'm one of those awfully boring people who likes David Attenborough and the news.'
Trivia: Briers was married to actress Ann Davies from 1958 until his death in 2013. They had two daughters, Lucy and Kate.
Alun Armstrong (Actor) .. Brian Lane
Born: July 17, 1946 in Annfield Plain, near Stanley, Co Durham
Best Known For: New Tricks.
Early-life: Alun Armstrong was born in Annfield Plain, near Stanley, Co Durham, on July 17, 1946. His father was from Cumberland and his mother was from Co Durham. He attended Consett Grammar School before going to Newcastle University. Unhappy in academia, he took a job as a gravedigger, where a colleague managed to get him an interview for a behind-the-scenes job with a theatre company. That in turn led to acting work.
Career: Armstrong's screen debut came in the classic Michael Caine gangster movie Get Carter in 1971. Other early roles included parts in Whatever Happened to the Likely Lads?, Softly, Softly and The Sweeney. His many other TV roles include Austin Donaghue in Our Friends in the North, Detective Chief Inspector Frank Jefferson in In the Red, and George Mole in Adrian Mole: The Cappucino Years, alongside Alison Steadman. Film credits include The French Lieutenant's Woman (1981), Krull (1983), American Friends (1991), Patriot Games (1992) and Braveheart (1995). He has won countless accolades for his classic stage roles. He is currently best known for playing the role of Brian Lane in popular BBC series New Tricks, a part he played for 10 series.
Quote: 'I'm more concerned about losing my marbles than losing parts - especially when it comes to learning lines!'
Trivia: Armstrong originated the role of Thénardier in the London production of Les Misérables and won an Olivier Award for playing the title role in Sweeney Todd.
James Bolam (Actor) .. Jack Halford
Born: June 16, 1935 in Sunderland
Best Known For: Being a Likely Lad.
Early-life: Born James Christopher Bolam on June 16, 1935, in Sunderland. His father died when he was young. The family left the North East when James was 12, and he attended school in Derby. There was no showbiz influence in his family, but Bolam went to the cinema every Saturday and that inspired him to try acting. He briefly worked as a trainee chartered accountant, before winning a place at the Central Drama School in London. He made his professional stage debut at the Royal Court in 1959.
Career: Bolam appeared on stage alongside Laurence Olivier and John Gielgud, then followed it up with films The Loneliness of the Long Distance Runner and A Kind of Loving, before being cast as cynical Terry Collier in The Likely Lads in 1964. He agreed to reprise the role in Whatever Happened To The Likely Lads? nine years later. James went on to star in When the Boat Comes In, Only When I Laugh and Alan Plater's Beiderbecke trilogy. He has also appeared in Clockwork Mice, The End of the Affair, Born and Bred, Grandpa in My Pocket, To Kill a King and controversial feature-length drama Shipman, about serial killer doctor Harold Shipman. He starred in New Tricks between 2003 and 2012 and continues to appear on stage.
Quote: 'I'm suddenly popular again. I don't know why.'
Trivia: He was awarded an MBE in 2009.
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.
Susan Jameson (Actor) .. Esther Lane
Caroline Loncq (Actor) .. Pathologist
Michael Maloney (Actor) .. John Fletcher
Marian Pashley (Actor) .. Miss Herbert
Joseph Millson (Actor) .. Tom Christie
Frances de la Tour (Actor) .. Professor Styles
Best Known For: Rising Damp.
Early-life: Born in Bovingdon, Hertfordshire, on July 30, 1944. She has a younger brother, Andy, who is an actor and screenwriter. She was educated at the Lycee Francais and later studied acting at the Drama Centre. She then spent six years with the Royal Shakespeare Company, originally playing small roles before gradually building up to leading parts, gaining most acclaim as Helena in a production of A Midsummer Night's Dream.
Career: De la Tour spent four years playing spinster Miss Jones in classic sitcom Rising Damp on TV, and also appeared in the 1980 film spin-off. She's rarely been out of work since, playing a wide range of roles on TV, film and stage. Among her most acclaimed small-screen projects are Duet for One, Cold Lazarus and Tom Jones; she's recently returned to sitcom with Vicious and Big School. On film she's featured in the Harry Potter franchise, Alice in Wonderland and Hugo. On stage, her recent collaborations with Alan Bennett, in The History Boys, The Habit of Art and People, have been resounding successes.
Quote: 'I didn't think that Rising Damp would have quite the longevity it's enjoying. It became more popular years later, and people started calling it a classic. But it's like we left it behind and it never died.'
Trivia: Joanna Lumley, Dawn French and de la Tour were rumoured to have been considered as replacements for Colin Baker when he left Doctor Who in 1986; Sylvester McCoy was cast instead.
Francis Matthews (Producer)
Juliet May (Director)
Steve Coombes (Writer)