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Emergency – Ward 10

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TV

Created by
  
Tessa Diamond

Composer(s)
  
Peter Yorke

No. of episodes
  
1016

Final episode date
  
27 June 1967

Genre
  
Soap opera

6.2/10
IMDb

Also known as
  
Calling Nurse Roberts

Ending theme
  
Silks and Satins

Country of origin
  
UK

First episode date
  
19 February 1957

Network
  
ITV

Number of episodes
  
1,016

Emergency – Ward 10 Emergency Ward 10

Cast
  
Bud Tingwell, Desmond Carrington, John Alderton, Glyn Owen, Richard Thorp

Similar
  

Emergency – Ward 10 is a British medical soap opera series shown on ITV between 1957 and 1967. Like The Grove Family, a series shown by the BBC between 1954 and 1967, Emergency – Ward 10 is considered to be one of British television's first major soap operas.

Contents

Emergency – Ward 10 httpsiytimgcomviZyK0OUlCxzIhqdefaultjpg

Overview

Emergency – Ward 10 EMERGENCYWARD 10 A TELEVISION HEAVEN REVIEW

The series was made by the ITV contractor ATV and set in a fictional hospital called Oxbridge General. Growing out of what was originally intended to be no more than a six-week serial (entitled Calling Nurse Roberts), the series became ITV's first twice-weekly evening soap opera. Emergency – Ward 10 was the first hospital-based television drama to establish a successful format combining medical matters with storylines centring on the personal lives of the doctors and nurses.

Emergency – Ward 10 Emergency Ward 10

Emergency – Ward 10 attracted attention for its portrayal of an interracial relationship between surgeon Louise Mahler (played by Joan Hooley) and Doctor Giles Farmer (played by John White), showing the second kiss on television between black and white actors in July 1964, the first such kiss being in a Granada TV play You in Your Small Corner in 1962. However, the producers wrote Mahler out shortly afterwards by sending her to Africa, where she succumbed to snake bite.

Emergency – Ward 10 Emergency Ward 10

When ratings began to slide it was decided to convert the programme from a soap to a one-hour drama for Saturday nights, produced by Jo Douglas. It didn't work. Emergency – Ward 10 ended in 1967 after the show had been on air for ten years. ATV executive Lew Grade later admitted that cancelling the series was one of the biggest mistakes he ever made in his career.

Emergency – Ward 10 Emergency Ward 10

The formula was subsequently revived with the (originally) afternoon series General Hospital (no connection with the American daytime soap General Hospital) which was broadcast between 1972 and 1979.

Australia's Charles "Bud" Tingwell starred in the series as surgeon Alan "Digger" Dawson, enjoying a heart-throb status because of his role.

Its haunting closing theme tune was "Silks and Satins" by Peter Yorke.

Releases

In March 2008, Network released a DVD set containing the 24 earliest surviving episodes which date from 1959 and 1960. A second 24-episode volume was released in July 2008, while a third 24-episode set was released in 2010. A 1966 episode was included on Network's Soap Box Volume One DVD as was the sole-surviving episode of spin-off Call Oxbridge 2000.

Cast list

source:

References

Emergency – Ward 10 Wikipedia