Bergerac: All for Love


4:30 pm - 7:00 pm, Wednesday, December 31 on U&Drama +1 (60)

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About this Broadcast

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All for Love
Season 9, Episode 11

Christmas 1991 edition and last-ever episode of the crime drama. Jim accompanies Charlie to Bath with a priceless painting after Danielle's rejection, but falls for the charms of a ruthless woman with sinister plans for his future. Guest starring Bill Nighy and Philip Glenister


subtitles
Detective/Thriller Movie/Drama

Cast & Crew

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John Nettles (Actor) .. Jim Bergerac
Deborah Grant (Actor) .. Deborah Bergerac
Terence Alexander (Actor) .. Charlie Hungerford
David Kershaw (Actor) .. Ben Lomas
John Telfer (Actor) .. Willy Pettit
Roger Sloman (Actor) .. Victor Deffand
Bill Nighy (Actor) .. Barry
Philip Glenister (Actor) .. Philip
John Milne (Writer)
Terry Marcel (Director)

More Information

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Did You Know..

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John Nettles (Actor) .. Jim Bergerac
Born: October 11, 1943 in St Austell, Cornwall
Best Known For: Playing Jim Bergerac.
Early-life: John Vivian Drummond Nettles was born on October 11, 1943, in St Austell, Cornwall. He was adopted at birth by a carpenter and his wife, who was a cleaner. John later discovered his biological mother was an unmarried Irish nurse who died of tuberculosis at the age of 28. Despite these humble beginnings, he won a scholarship to study philosophy and history at Southampton University. He trained to be a teacher, but drifted into acting after appearing in a touring version of the play Camus during his time at university.
Career: While appearing in amateur drama productions, Nettles was spotted by an agent who arranged work for him at the Royal Court Theatre. He made his debut as a standard bearer in Macbeth, opening doors for Alec Guinness. His first movie was The Red, White and Black in 1970. His big break came in 1972's A World At War, followed by a four-year stint in The Liver Birds. Nettles became a household name thanks to Bergerac, which ran for 10 years until 1991. TV projects since include Romeo And Juliet, The Hound of the Baskervilles and Midsomer Murders. He has also provided the narration for such programmes as Airport and The Hunt.
Quote: "I live in the tranquility and splendour which befits someone of my seniority."
Trivia: Nettles received an OBE in 2010.
Deborah Grant (Actor) .. Deborah Bergerac
Terence Alexander (Actor) .. Charlie Hungerford
Born: March 11, 1923 in London
Best Known For: His role as Charlie Hungerford in BBC detective drama Bergerac.
Early-life: Terence Joseph Alexander was born in London on March 11, 1923. The son of a doctor, he grew up in Yorkshire. He started acting in the theatre at the age of 16. During the Second World War he served in the British Army with the 27th Lancers and was seriously wounded in Italy.
Career: Alexander quickly established himself as a character actor and went on to appear in more than 300 films, TV movies and series episodes. He mostly had bit parts and fame did not come to him until later in life when he landed the role of lovable rogue and would-be tycoon Charlie Hungerford in Bergerac in 1981. He played the part for 10 years and it made him a household name. After Bergerac, he starred alongside Rik Mayall in The New Statesman. He died on May 28, 2009 at the age of 86.
Quote: On his early interest in becoming a priest: "I realised that celibacy wasn't for me".
Trivia: He was an amateur numerologist and the number 23 was very significant to him.
David Kershaw (Actor) .. Ben Lomas
John Telfer (Actor) .. Willy Pettit
Roger Sloman (Actor) .. Victor Deffand
Bill Nighy (Actor) .. Barry
Born: December 12, 1949 in Caterham, Surrey
Best Known For: Love Actually and State of Play.
Early-life: Born William Francis Nighy on December 12, 1949, in Caterham, Surrey. His mother was a psychiatric nurse, his father a car mechanic. He has two older siblings and claims he probably would have followed in his dad's footsteps had he not discovered literature in his teens. Although not academically gifted at school, he ran away to Paris to write a novel. After failing to put pen to paper, he returned to the UK to become a journalist, but realised he wasn't cut out for it. On the advice of a girlfriend, he went to drama school.
Career: Nighy honed his craft at Liverpool's Everyman Theatre in the 1970s. He made his TV debut in 1980 in sitcom Agony. His first film, Eye of the Needle, came a year later. He has juggled acclaimed stage appearances with TV and film work. His role as a randy lecturer in 1991's The Men's Room made him a heart-throb, but he didn't become familiar to audiences until a string of hits beginning with 1998's Still Crazy, followed by Auf Wiedersehen, Pet, State of Play, and Love Actually. He also starred in The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy, the Pirates of the Caribbean sequels, Stormbreaker and Underworld: Evolution. Other projects include Valkyrie, Underworld: Rise of the Lycans, The Boat That Rocked, G-Force, Wild Target. The Best Exotic Marigold Hotel and playwright David Hare's Worricker trilogy.
Quote: "I watched Love Actually and it was good fun but I thought, 'God you're old, you're knackered-looking, you look terrible' - because I do and I am."
Trivia: Nighy suffers from the condition Dupuytren's contracture, which causes the ring and little finger of each hand to be permanently bent towards the palms. His daughter Mary is an actress.
Philip Glenister (Actor) .. Philip
Born: February 10, 1963 in London
Best Known For: Playing gruff copper Gene Hunt in Life on Mars and Ashes to Ashes.
Early-life: Philip Haywood Glenister was born on February 10, 1963, in London. Showbusiness was in his blood from an early age, especially as his father, John, is a TV director and his elder brother Robert is an actor. He went to Hatch End Comprehensive School, worked as a film publicist, and later studied at the Central School of Speech and Drama for three years, before appearing in 1990 stage play Mad Forest.
Career: Glenister's first professional role was as Mercutio in Romeo and Juliet at the Lyceum, Edinburgh. He went on to star in Jonathan Harvey's acclaimed play Beautiful Thing at the Bush Theatre in London. On TV, Glenister honed his craft in Minder, Love Hurts, True Love, The Perfect Blue and Sharpe. However, it was roles in Clocking Off, The Hunt, State of Play and Island at War that boosted his profile. On the big screen he has appeared in ID, Calendar Girls, Kingdom of Heaven and Bel Ami. Award-winning BBC drama Life on Mars and its follow-up Ashes to Ashes turned him into a cult hero. He has also starred in the film Tuesday, and on TV in Cranford, Demons, Big School and Mad Dogs. He hosts the series For the Love of Cars.
Quote: "The celebrity stuff really isn't me. I'm interested in the work: good writing, getting the part and the character right, pleasing the audience."
Trivia: In 2008, he published a book on 1970s and 80s culture called Things Ain't What They Used to Be.
John Milne (Writer)
Terry Marcel (Director)

Before / After

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