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Soldier Soldier | |
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Genre | Military drama |
Created by | Lucy Gannon |
Starring | Robson Green Jerome Flynn Gary Love Rosie Rowell Holly Aird Annabelle Apsion Ben Nealon Alex Leam |
Theme music composer | Jim Parker |
Opening theme | "Soldier Soldier" |
Country of origin | United Kingdom |
Original language | English |
No. of series | 7 |
No. of episodes | 82 |
Production | |
Executive producers | Ted Childs (Series 1–5) Jonathan Powell (Series 6–7) |
Running time | 50 minutes |
Production company | Central Independent Television |
Original release | |
Network | ITV |
Release | 10 June 1991 9 December 1997 | –
Soldier Soldier is a British television drama series. Created by Lucy Gannon, produced by Central Television and broadcast on the ITV network, it ran for a total of seven series and 82 episodes from 10 June 1991 to 9 December 1997. It featured the daily lives of a group of soldiers in 'A' Company, 1st Battalion The King's Fusiliers, a fictional British Army infantry regiment loosely based on the Royal Regiment of Fusiliers.[1] The title comes from a traditional song of the same name, "Soldier, Soldier, Won't You Marry Me?", an instrumental version of which is used as its theme music.
Set in the immediate aftermath of the Cold War, it is a dramatisation of army life in the early to mid-1990s, when the British Army was undergoing significant change. This is perhaps best demonstrated during the third series, around 1994, when a significant number of real regiments were forced into amalgamations with one another due to downsizing of the army. Within the world of Soldier Soldier, the King's Fusiliers are forced to amalgamate with the Cumbrian Regiment, another fictional regiment, becoming the King's Own Fusiliers. At the time Soldier Soldier was broadcast, the fatality rate was low, with most casualties due to training accidents and suicides. The military as a whole was assigned to performing more peacekeeping missions than actually doing any fighting. As a consequence, the show served well to portray the army, despite the domestic problems that could occur, in a fairly good light.
Although many well known and not so well known actors appeared in Soldier Soldier over the period it was broadcast, perhaps the best known are Robson Green and Jerome Flynn, who portrayed Fusilier Dave Tucker and Sergeant Paddy Garvey respectively. It was their performance of "Unchained Melody" in an episode of the fourth series that propelled them to stardom, giving them several number one songs and a best selling album.[2] At the end of the fifth series in 1995, both actors left the show.[3] After a decline in viewing figures (following their departure), 1997 saw the decision to end the drama after seven series.
TV presenter Chris Kelly wrote and produced some episodes of the series.[4]
1991. Following a six-month tour in Northern Ireland, the King's Fusiliers return to duty at their Midlands headquarters.
No. | Episode | Directed by | Written by | Original air date |
---|---|---|---|---|
1 | "All the King's Men" | Laurence Moody | Lucy Gannon | 10 June 1991 |
2 | "Fun and Games" | Laurence Moody | Lucy Gannon | 17 June 1991 |
3 | "Dirty Work" | Zelda Barron | Lucy Gannon | 24 June 1991 |
4 | "Fighting Spirit" | Laurence Moody | Garry Lyons | 1 July 1991 |
5 | "Battlefields" | Laurence Moody | Lucy Gannon | 8 July 1991 |
6 | "Loyal to the Corps" | Laurence Moody | Jane Hollowood | 15 July 1991 |
7 | "Flying Colours" | Laurence Moody | Lucy Gannon | 22 July 1991 |
Series 2, 1992, was set in Hong Kong, apart from the first two episodes.
No. | Episode | Directed by | Written by | Original air date |
---|---|---|---|---|
1 | "A Man's Life" | Laurence Moody | Lucy Gannon | 21 September 1992 |
2 | "Something Old, Something New" | Laurence Moody | Lucy Gannon | 28 September 1992 |
3 | "A Touch of the Sun" | Laurence Moody | Jane Hollowood | 5 October 1992 |
4 | "Lifelines" | Nick Hamm | Lucy Gannon | 12 October 1992 |
5 | "Saving Face" | Nick Hamm | Jack Chaney | 19 October 1992 |
6 | "Lost and Found" | Laurence Moody | Billy Hamon | 26 October 1992 |
7 | "The Last Post" | Nick Hamm | Lucy Gannon | 2 November 1992 |
Series 3, 1993, was set in New Zealand and Germany.
No. | Episode | Directed by | Written by | Original air date |
---|---|---|---|---|
1 | "Shifting Sands" | Anthony Garner | Heidi Thomas, from an idea by Chris Kelly | 7 September 1993 |
2 | "Live Fire" | Ian Mune | Heidi Thomas | 14 September 1993 |
3 | "Base Details" | Anthony Garner | Victoria Taylor | 21 September 1993 |
4 | "Fall Out" | Sarah Hellings | Julian Jones | 28 September 1993 |
5 | "Disintegration" | Suri Krishnamma | Peter Barwood | 5 October 1993 |
6 | "Hide and Seek" | Rodney Bennett | Bill Gallagher | 12 October 1993 |
7 | "Trouble and Strife" | Anthony Garner | Peter Barwood | 19 October 1993 |
8 | "Hard Knocks" | Jan Sargent | Billy Hamon | 26 October 1993 |
9 | "Camouflage" | Anthony Garner | Roy MacGregor | 2 November 1993 |
10 | "Staying Together" | Rodney Bennett | Sam Snape | 9 November 1993 |
11 | "Dutch Courage" | Michael Brayshaw | Jesse Carr Martindale | 16 November 1993 |
12 | "Stand by Me" | Michael Brayshaw | Heidi Thomas | 23 November 1993 |
13 | "Leaving" | Anthony Garner | Roy MacGregor | 30 November 1993 |
Series 4, 1994, was set in Cyprus, Germany and the UK.
No. | Episode | Directed by | Written by | Original air date |
---|---|---|---|---|
1 | "Stormy Weather" | Rodney Bennett | Heidi Thomas | 20 September 1994 |
2 | "Away Games" | Rodney Bennett | Michael Jenner | 27 September 1994 |
3 | "Damage" | Michael Brayshaw | Heidi Thomas | 4 October 1994 |
4 | "Second Sight" | Anthony Garner | Peter Barwood | 11 October 1994 |
5 | "Over the Top" | Anthony Garner | Len Collin | 18 October 1994 |
6 | "Proud Man" | Anthony Garner | Len Collin | 25 October 1994 |
7 | "Further Education" | Michael Brayshaw | Peter Barwood | 1 November 1994 |
8 | "Baby Love" | Anthony Garner | Michael Jenner | 8 November 1994 |
9 | "Band of Gold" | Graham Moore | Heidi Thomas | 15 November 1994 |
10 | "Going Back" | Anthony Garner | Peter Barwood | 22 November 1994 |
11 | "Poles Apart" | Michael Brayshaw | Michael Jenner | 29 November 1994 |
12 | "Bombshell" | Michael Brayshaw | Chris Ould | 6 December 1994 |
13 | "Changing the Guard" | Graham Moore | Peter Barwood | 13 December 1994 |
Series 5, 1995, was set in Australia, the UK and South Africa.
No. | Episode | Directed by | Written by | Original air date |
---|---|---|---|---|
1 | "For Better, For Worse" | Bruce MacDonald | Peter Barwood | 5 September 1995 |
2 | "Second Chances" | Bruce MacDonald | Peter Barwood | 12 September 1995 |
3 | "Love Not Money" | Paul Brown | Jo O'Keefe | 19 September 1995 |
4 | "Bushed" | Ken Hannam | Peter Barwood | 26 September 1995 |
5 | "Far Away" | Ken Hannam | Ann Brown | 3 October 1995 |
6 | "Ill Wind" | Ken Hannam | Ann Brown | 10 October 1995 |
7 | "Sweet Revenge" | Geoff Harris | Jo O'Keefe | 17 October 1995 |
8 | "The Army Game" | Graham Moore | Shaun Prendergast | 24 October 1995 |
9 | "Love and War" | Michael Brayshaw | Chris Lang | 31 October 1995 |
10 | "Leaving" | Michael Brayshaw | Chris Lang | 7 November 1995 |
11 | "Hard Lessons" | Graham Moore | James Clare | 14 November 1995 |
12 | "Stick Together" | Bruce MacDonald | Jo O'Keefe | 21 November 1995 |
13 | "Under the Sun" | Alan Grint | Peter Barwood | 28 November 1995 |
14 | "Baptism of Fire" | Alan Grint | Peter Barwood | 5 December 1995 |
15 | "Twist of Fate" | Alan Grint | Peter Barwood | 12 December 1995 |
Series 6, 1996, was set in the UK, except the penultimate episode, which was set on a fictional island in the South Atlantic.
No. | Episode | Directed by | Written by | Original air date |
---|---|---|---|---|
1 | "River Deep" | Patrick Lau | Chris Lang | 3 September 1996 |
2 | "Divided Loyalties" | Paul Brown | Ann Brown | 10 September 1996 |
3 | "All for One" | Michael Brayshaw | Simon Andrew Stirling | 17 September 1996 |
4 | "Walking on Air" | Catherine Morshead | Peter Barwood | 24 September 1996 |
5 | "Under the Gooseberry Bush" | Michael Brayshaw | Len Collin | 1 October 1996 |
6 | "Flash Point" | Paul Brown | Peter Barwood | 8 October 1996 |
7 | "Money For Nothing" | Graham Moore | Chris Lang | 15 October 1996 |
8 | "Dear Joe" | Douglas Mackinnon | James Quirk | 22 October 1996 |
9 | "Asking for it?" | Michael Brayshaw | Len Collin | 29 October 1996 |
10 | "Delayed Action" | Graham Moore | Ted Childs | 5 November 1996 |
11 | "Beast" | Paul Brown | Peter Barwood | 12 November 1996 |
12 | "Fall for Love" | Douglas Mackinnon | James Quirk | 19 November 1996 |
13 | "War Path" | Michael Brayshaw | Mark Holloway | 26 November 1996 |
14 | "Deliver us from Evil" | Douglas Mackinnon | Chris Lang | 3 December 1996 |
15 | "Hell and High Water" | Paul Brown | Len Collin | 10 December 1996 |
Series 7, 1997, was set in the UK, except episode 10, which was set in Africa.
No. | Episode | Directed by | Written by | Original air date |
---|---|---|---|---|
1 | "Divided We Fall" | Paul Brown | James Quirk | 23 September 1997 |
2 | "Things Can Only Get Better!" | Graham Moore | Nicholas Martin | 30 September 1997 |
3 | "Line of Departure" | Paul Brown | Bernadette Davis | 7 October 1997 |
4 | "Under Fire" | Christopher King | Nicholas Martin | 14 October 1997 |
5 | "Friends and Lovers" | Christopher King | Richard McBrien | 21 October 1997 |
6 | "How Was it for You?" | Graham Moore | Nicholas Martin | 28 October 1997 |
7 | "The Road to Damascus" | Christopher King | Len Collin | 4 November 1997 |
8 | "Out" | Crispin Reece | Mark Holloway | 11 November 1997 |
9 | "Fit to Explode" | Graham Moore | Shaun Prendergast | 18 November 1997 |
10 | "Chain of Command" | Roger Tucker | Rob Gittins | 25 November 1997 |
11 | "Sounds of War" | Graham Moore | Billy Hamon | 2 December 1997 |
12 | "No Pain, No Gain!" | Paul Brown | Nicholas Martin | 9 December 1997 |
The King's Own Fusiliers | |
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Active | 1993– |
Country | United Kingdom |
Branch | Army |
Type | Line Infantry |
Role | Air Assault Infantry (at end of series) |
Size | One battalion |
Part of | King's Division |
Garrison/HQ | 1st Battalion – Aldershot (at end of series) |
Motto(s) | Honi Soit Qui Mal Y Pense (Shamed Be He Who Thinks Ill Of It) |
Insignia | |
Hackle | Blue over White From King's Fusiliers |
The King's Own Fusiliers, originally the King's Fusiliers, is the infantry regiment portrayed in the series. Like all fusilier regiments, both the "King's" and the "King's Own" wear a hackle in its head-dress; this is coloured dark blue over white. During the third series of Soldier Soldier, which took place during the Options for Change military reforms, the King's Fusiliers was forced to amalgamate with another regiment, "The Cumbrians (Duke of Rutland's Own)", mimicking the real life amalgamation of the King's Own Royal Regiment (Lancaster) and the Cumbrian based Border Regiment in 1959 to form the King's Own Royal Border Regiment.
During negotiations with the commanding officer of the other regiment to be merged (over which customs and traditions should be carried over to the new regiment), attempts were made by the Cumbrians to keep the new regiment as an ordinary infantry regiment, rather than a fusilier regiment, which would also see the loss of the King's hackle. However, research by the regimental commander of the King's Fusiliers, Lt Col Osbourne, found that, during the Cumbrians' (fictional) service in the Crimea, the Cumbrians had worn the hackle and served as fusiliers for six months in honour of the fusiliers that had served alongside them. As a result, the new regiment was named "The King's Own Fusiliers".
The cap badge of the King's Own Fusiliers features the lion surmounting the crown, which is the recognised symbol of the British Army, within the circlet of the Order of the Garter. Surmounting the garter is the traditional flame that indicates a fusilier regiment. (Coincidentally, in series 1 episode 2 of Red Cap, the Royal Cambrian Fusiliers wore the same cap badge and hackle as the King's Own Fusiliers.)
As an ordinary infantry battalion, the King's Fusiliers/King's Own Fusiliers was in the arms plot rotation, and thus participated in a number of different roles:
During its time in Windsor, in addition to other duties, the King's Own Fusiliers provided the guard at Buckingham Palace, the Tower of London and Windsor Castle.
This section possibly contains unsourced predictions, speculative material, or accounts of events that might not occur. Information must be verifiable and based on reliable published sources. (November 2011) |
As the King's Fusiliers/King's Own Fusiliers has no geographical location in its name, it can only be speculated what recruiting area it represents. In early episodes, the senior officers discuss the possibility of being amalgamated with other regiments from the Midlands. During series 1, the possibility of merging or disbanding regiments is discussed, and, at that point, the Cumbrians and the Rutlands are expected to be amalgamated. During the final episode of series 2, the regiment's commanding officer announces orders for the King's Fusiliers to form a new "Midlands Regiment" along with the Cumbrians and the Rutlands, though, in later episodes, the other regiment to be merged is referred to as The Cumbrians (Duke of Rutland's Own).
Other anecdotal references in the series pointing to the regiment's location being in the Midlands include the use of a Midlands commercial radio station, BRMB, being played by various characters, and a local, specifically Birmingham, telephone area code on signage and vehicles. However, given that the series was made in the Midlands by the "Central Films" division of Central Television, these local references can be expected.