Desmond's: Difference between revisions

Everything About Fiction You Never Wanted to Know.
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* [[British Accents]]: Most of the young characters had Cockney accents. (The older generation had West Indian accents.)
* [[British Accents]]: Most of the young characters had Cockney accents. (The older generation had West Indian accents.)
* [[Catch Phrase]]: Matthew had "There's an old African saying..."
* [[Catch Phrase]]: Matthew had "There's an old African saying..."
* [[The Character Died With Him]]: The first episode of ''Porkpie'' reveals Shirley is widowed and now runs the shop, Norman Beaton having died the previous year.
* [[The Character Died with Him]]: The first episode of ''Porkpie'' reveals Shirley is widowed and now runs the shop, Norman Beaton having died the previous year.
* [[Eighties Hair]]: Plenty of biiiiiiig hair, particularly since it's a show set in a salon.
* [[Eighties Hair]]: Plenty of biiiiiiig hair, particularly since it's a show set in a salon.
* [[Hey, It's That Guy!]]: Dominic Keating, who played Tony, went on to play Malcolm Reed in [[Star Trek Enterprise]].
* [[Hey, It's That Guy!]]: Dominic Keating, who played Tony, went on to play Malcolm Reed in [[Star Trek: Enterprise]].
* [[The Eighties]]: Michael is the archetypal 80s yuppy, with double-breasted suit and enormous and presumably madly expensive mobile phone.
* [[The Eighties]]: Michael is the archetypal 80s yuppy, with double-breasted suit and enormous and presumably madly expensive mobile phone.
* [[Spin-Off]]: ''Porkpie'', in which the titular character [[Rags to Riches|wins the lottery]].
* [[Spin-Off]]: ''Porkpie'', in which the titular character [[Rags to Riches|wins the lottery]].

Revision as of 03:40, 16 April 2014

Desmond's was a Britcom made from 1989-1994. It centred around a family-run barbershop in Peckham, and was one of the earliest shows on British television to have a mostly black cast[1]. Much of the comedy came from the generation and culture gap between the very West Indian parents Desmond and Shirley, and their very English children, Michael, Gloria and Sean.

Tropes used in Desmond's include:

 From the long warm nights with the ocean breeze,

To the damp and to the rain of London city.

We come from the sun to live in the cold,

I miss my rum, I want my coconut tree.

  1. The absolute earliest was The Fosters, which ran from 1976-77, and also starred Norman Beaton as the head of the family