"Shelley" Moving In (TV Episode 1979) Poster

(TV Series)

(1979)

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8/10
Moving In
Prismark1010 August 2019
It was with some trepidation I rewatched the first episode of Shelley. What if it is not as good as you remember it to be?

It is safe to say. Shelley is still a comedy classic. This is a good opening episode and still made me laugh several times.

James Shelley is the perennial wisecracking layabout with a degree in Geography. In the first episode he and his girlfriend Fran are looking for a new flat. It is notable that the newspaper headline he is reading talks about being a rip off capital. Some of the flats Shelley goes to see are crummy. The rental agency is happy to supply false references for two weeks rent which was illegal.

In the cafe Shelley flirts with the nice but dim waitress. At the dole office his wit gets a sardonic response from My Alan Forsyth, not to be confused with Bruce. Forsyth is not happy with Shelley arriving late for his giro and not impressed with stories about his mother and her wooden leg.

Shelley is heading forman abrasive relationship with Mrs Hawkins (Josephine Tewson) their new landlady. She does not like layabouts.

Writer Peter Tilbury (who at the time was better known as an actor) has to be complemented for Shelley's caustic with and Hywel Bennett did it with so much charm. Tilbury was fortunate that the election of the Conservative government in 1979 led to an immediate increase in the unemployment figures. So the show became tropical very quickly.

Gillian Taylforth is makes brief appearance as the cashier in the cafe. Ironically she appeared in a Conservative Party political broadcast prior to their election victory. Rosie Collins was rather nice and perky as the waitress. Kenneth Cope is rather barbed as Forsyth.

To think that Hywel Bennett's career was in the doldrums prior to this show. He was a rising star in the late 1960s and ended up in social security benefits in real life.
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what I found out
tuesdaystudio17 October 2010
Shelley is a British sitcom made by Thames Television and originally broadcast on ITV from 1979 to 1984 and from 1988 to 1992, with occasional hiatuses. Hywel Bennett starred as James Shelley, a sardonic, 28-year-old, anti-establishment postgraduate and career income tax dodger. Belinda Sinclair played Shelley's girlfriend Frances, and Josephine Tewson appeared regularly as his Landlady, Edna Hawkins. The series was created by Peter Tilbury who also wrote the first three series. Writing duties for subsequent episodes were handed over to Andy Hamilton and Guy Jenkin (both of whom would later go on to write the hugely successful Drop the Dead Donkey for Channel 4), with other episodes written by Barry Pilton, Colin Bostock-Smith, Bernard McKenna and David Firth. All 71 episodes were produced and directed by Anthony Parker.
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10/10
"Are you sure you're not Bruce Forsyth?"
ShadeGrenade25 January 2008
Warning: Spoilers
Shelley and his girlfriend Fran are searching for somewhere to live. In a café, he teases a well-endowed but dim waitress by suggesting a 'spot of troilism'. It means threesome, but she thinks he is asking for food.

At the Unemployment Benefit Office, he collects his Giro from the humourless Alan Forsyth, who is openly contemptuous of him. Then he is shown around a bed-sit by a pleasant but talkative lady named Mrs.Hawkins. He sees one other bed-sit that day. It is disgustingly filthy.

Back at the café, Fran tells him that she has found a place, and holds up a bunch of keys. It turns out to be Mrs.Hawkins' house, and she is none too pleased with the idea of having Shelley as a sitting tenant...

I can remember watching this opening episode of 'Shelley' back in 1979 and being amazed at how well written and performed it was, more like a B.B.C.-2 sitcom than a Thames one. The reference to Thatcher's recent election victory gave the show topicality. Shelley teases Forsyth by stating that as soon as the new Government sorts out the economy, unemployment will fall ( it stood at just over one million then ), and people such as he will be made redundant. As we now know, it did not fall - it rocketed to three million. Peter Tilbury must have been dead pleased with his show's timing. 'Moving In' was only his second script, his first being 'Sprout' in 1974. John Alderton played 'Darwin Sprout' who like Shelley was a charming liar and rogue. Though very funny, it failed to develop beyond the pilot stage.

'Moving In' effectively sets the scene for the series, including many key ingredients such as a rude encounter with a D.H.S.S. ( as it was called then ) officer, Shelley flirting with an attractive woman, and insults traded with landlady Mrs.Hawkins.

Josephine Tewson played 'Mrs.Hawkins'. What can one say about this lady except that she's been brilliant in everything she's been in? From co-starring with Ronnie Barker in 'Clarence' to Patricia Routledge in 'Keeping Up Appearances', she is more than a fine supporting actress, but a comedy legend in her own right. Most of the best moments of the early seasons of 'Shelley' involved her and Hywel Bennett. As the tight-lipped 'Alan Forsyth', Kenneth Cope provides a nicely dry counterbalance to Shelley's sarcastic wit. I have to throw in a quick mention of Rosie Collins as the waitress. This attractive actress cropped up in numerous television shows of the late '70's/early '80's, such as 'Emery Presents' and 'Victoria Wood As Seen On T.V.'. We don't see her anymore but she made a great impression on yours truly at the time.

Shelley's rude comments about the Asian man's bed-sit probably would not be allowed now.

The scene with the 'accomodation agent' makes chilling viewing. A homeless black man is told there is nothing available, yet when Shelley tries he gets a place straight away.

Funniest moment - the look of horror on Mrs.Hawkins' face when she sees who her new tenant is!
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10/10
Why is Shelley not available on DVD?
paul-jennings324 November 2006
When is this comedy series going to be available on DVD?When you think of the mediocre material that is already available,it mystifies me why the commercial possibilities of releasing Shelley, which in its heyday attracted up to 18 million viewers,has escaped those who currently own the rights.I know that 2 episodes are available on VHS,but this is really a poor result for such a good series.Hywel Bennett was excellent in the role of Shelley and always had a good supporting cast.Another bone of contention is the fact that this series is rarely,if ever, repeated.Given the enormous amount of channels churning out repeats of repeats day after day it really is a puzzle that this comedy has apparently also eluded the attention of programme schedulers.
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