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  • Warning: Spoilers
    Seven years after 'Sykes & A' ended, Eric and Hattie returned on the BBC, this time in colour, though they were living at 28 Sebastapol Terrace rather than 24 and the title of the show was shortened simply to 'Sykes'.

    Things were still more or less the same though, they still lived next door to the annoying Charles Fulbright Brown and Eric was still the usual walking disaster area he was before and Hattie ( who was often referred to as either 'Hat' or 'Harriet' ) was as usual the one left to pick up the pieces, which usually caused her to cry with an exasperated: ''Oh Eric!''. The incompetent Corky Turnbull ( played once again by Deryck Guyler ) appeared once again eating Eric and Hat out of house and home. Joan Sims appeared from time to time as Madge, the lady from the bread shop who fancied Eric ( or 'Ricky' as she for some bizzare reason called him ) and always kept him supplied with doughnuts.

    A new running gag in the series included both Eric and Hattie talking to the cuckoo clock on their wall, which they named Peter.

    Most of the episodes were remakes in colour of some of the original episodes, such as 'Sykes & A Bus' ( which was originally titled 'Sykes & A Following' and had Eric and Hat working as a bus crew ) 'Sykes & A Bath' ( which saw Eric getting stuck in a bath ) and, the best of all, 'Sykes & A Stranger' ( which saw an old friend of Eric and Hattie's from their childhood return and honour his promise of marriage to Hattie. In the original he was played by Leo McKern however was played here by Peter Sellers ).

    Charles Fulbright Brown was written out after the third series when Richard Wattis, who played him, died of a heart attack. The show ran on the BBC until the end of the 70's but in its final year the show was starting to look tired and flat. The final episode, 'The BBC Honours Sykes', was particularly awful, especially as it ruined every illusion that the show was not a sitcom.

    Hattie Jacques sadly passed away in 1980, aged just 58. The BBC tried to convince Eric to continue the show without Hattie but he wisely chose not to. However, he unwisely crossed over to Thames Television to front the less than hilarious 'The Likes Of Sykes', things then started to go downhill for poor Eric.

    'Sykes', like its predecessor, while never a classic, was good, gentle fun and for that reason alone it deserves to be fondly remembered
  • ShadeGrenade21 February 2009
    Warning: Spoilers
    In the early '70's, the B.B.C. revived several hit sitcoms from the previous decade, including 'Steptoe & Son', 'The Likely Lads', 'Till Death Us Do Part', 'Whacko!', and of course, 'Sykes'. I.T.V. had been enjoying success with the likes of 'On The Buses', the 'Doctor' series, and 'Please Sir!' and the B.B.C. wanted to compete. In the new medium of colour, the resurrected shows took on a new lease of life.

    Each week, the pounding of a drum would signal the start of a new 'Sykes' episode. The new show was much the same as the earlier one; he still lived in Sebastopol Terrace ( though at number 28, not 24 ) with twin sister Hattie ( Hattie Jacques ), and the next-door neighbour was the pompous Charles Fulbright Brown ( Richard Wattis ). Added to the mix were Deryck Guyler ( fresh from 'Please Sir!' ) as a policeman with a fondness for food named 'P.C. Turnbull' ( known to his friends as 'Korky' ), and Eric had an admirer in the shape of Madge from the bread shop ( Joan Sims ) who called him 'Ricky' and kept him supplied with cakes. Korky's wife was never seen, but her reedy voice ( courtesy of Eric ) sounded not unlike that of 'Minnie Bannister' from 'The Goon Show'.

    Eric's character was that of an overgrown boy, constantly trying out new things ( such as building his own burglar alarm or redecorating ) but never quite getting the hang of them. Hat ( or 'Harriet' as he often called her ) was like a mother figure, always telling him off but defending him when others did the same. She frequently talked to the cuckoo clock on the wall, which she called 'Peter'.

    In one episode, Eric and Hattie returned from holiday only to find an old tramp ( Roy Dotrice ) had moved in and made himself at home ( Eric had left the front door open! ). In another, they went to a holiday camp where Eric caused chaos by refusing to get up early in the morning. Another memorable episode had him getting a job in a factory, and almost causing a strike by working too slow and then too fast! When Eric, Hattie and Korky went caravanning, they fell out and hurled plates of porridge at one another! Another time they bought a boat and almost got blown up by a mine left over from W.W.2. "Its alright!", said Hat: "I think its one of ours!".

    Some of the early episodes were remakes of the '60's shows, such as 'Sykes & A Stranger'. The original featured Leo McKern as an ex-con who returns to honour a old childhood promise to marry Hattie. For the remake, Eric enlisted the services of his old friend from 'The Goon Show' days Peter Sellers ( in a rare B.B.C. sitcom appearance ).

    'Sykes' blend of visual and character driven comedy made it a big hit which ran for the remainder of the decade. Wattis sadly passed on in 1975, and the show continued but was noticeably poorer for his absence. Joy Harington came aboard as another neighbour - Miss Rumbelow. It ended in 1979 with the appalling 'The B.B.C. Honours Sykes'. I say appalling because it ruined the illusion that the show was not a sitcom!

    In 1980, Hattie died. The B.B.C. wanted Eric to continue alone, but he rightly declined. The chemistry between the leads had made 'Sykes' special.

    Repeats have been few and far between. Network issued the 1972 series on D.V.D. in 2004, but its ongoing dispute with the B.B.C. means we are unlikely to get more releases, and '2entertain' do not seem keen to pick up the baton.

    A few years back, the now-defunct satellite channel 'U.K. Drama Daytime' put on most - but not all - of the shows. They showed that 'Sykes' still has the ability to delight and amuse in equal proportions.