The Bill/Characters

Everything About Fiction You Never Wanted to Know.


A 2003 official book on the show, dedicating a large paragraph to each character, still manages to get to 20 pages for its character section. Yep, there's been that many. Oddly enough, most of them haven't died. Emphasis on most.

You may start humming whichever version of "Overkill" you like best and please tell us how many you get through while reading this.

Characters are placed in the location they spent most of their time- some moved between branches. Please note that female characters can only be referred to here as WPC if they were in the show entirely before 1994.

A complete list of character deaths can be found at the bottom of this page (moved from the main page for reasons of space and clarity), but characters that were Killed Off for Real are also marked with (DECEASED).

Uniform

Chief Superintendent Charles Brownlow

Played by Peter Ellis

A description of the character goes here.

Tropes exhibited by this character include:
  • Benevolent Boss
  • Da Chief
  • Desk Jockey
  • Nepotism: A running gag was that Brownlow only got to Chief Super thanks to his connections to the masons, and that while he's not totally incompetent he's certainly out of touch with modern policing.
  • Vitriolic Best Buds: It is difficult to describe his relationship with Chief Inspector Derek Conway as anything other than the Type 2 variant.

Superintendent John Heaton

Played by Daniel Flynn

A description of the character goes here.

Tropes exhibited by this character include:

Superintendent Adam Okaro

Played by Cyril Nri

A description of the character goes here.

Tropes exhibited by this character include:

Superintendent Tom Chandler (DECEASED)

Played by Steven Hartley

Heretics, they used to call them. Outsiders. Whatever it is, this thing... it's inside ME.
Supt Tom Chandler

A description of the character goes here.

Tropes exhibited by this character include:
  • Bad Boss
  • Dirty Cop
  • Karmic Death: After Mickey Webb and Jack Meadow's uncover a rape allegation about him in which the victim in question was Driven to Suicide and he faced humiliation and ruin, he ultimately decided to swallow his own gun than face justice.
  • Kick the Dog: Nearly every episode But the absolute chief of all of them would have to be Raping his pregnant wife Debbie Mcallister on their wedding night for seemingly no reason at all and then scolding a shocked Debbie the next morning, Attempting to handwave it by saying the following-

Chandler "Its our wedding night, and you SERIOUSLY expect us not to have sex?"

Chief Inspector Derek Conway (DECEASED)

Played by Ben Roberts

Sometimes you just want to lock yourself inside your office, and tell the rest of the world to Foxtrot Oscar.
Chief Insp Derek Conway

A description of the character goes here.

Tropes exhibited by this character include:

Inspector Andrew Munroe (DECEASED)

Played by Colin Tarrant

A description of the character goes here.

Tropes exhibited by this character include:

PC/Sgt/Insp Dale Smith

Played by Alex Walkinshaw

A description of the character goes here.

Tropes exhibited by this character include:
  • Cartwright Curse: Smithy tends to be very unlucky in love.
  • Character Development:
    • And a lot of it too. Its very easy to forget that when he was first introduced in 1999, 'PC' Dale Smith was portrayed as being a bigot and a bully, who was brought into the show mainly to shake up the existing cast dynamic. He eventually left to join (as it was called then) SO 19, the Armed Response dudes of the Met, and managed to end Bob Cryer's career by an unfortunate gunshot. When he returned as a regular character in 2003, Sergeant Dale Smith was generally shown to be a very moral and totally sympathetic character, and certainly by the time it was axed in 2010 he had more or less become the defacto "star" of the series.
    • An interesting fact is that he was shown to be very much Bob Cryer's protégé, with the two sharing an almost father/son bond. Cryer was the one who supported Smithy's application to SO 19, and over the course of their shared time on the series it was clear that Cryer was smoothing down the rough edges on this younger officer. By the time he became a Sergeant/Inspector, Smithy had mellowed to become more or less a younger version of Sgt Cryer.
  • It's Personal: The whole feud with PC Gabriel Kent.

Sergeant Bob Cryer

Played by Eric Richard

You'd get all your paperwork done a lot quicker if you used the computer.
Sgt June Ackland
I'm perfectly happy with my quill and parchment, thank you very much.
Sgt Bob Cryer

A description of the character goes here.

Tropes exhibited by this character include:
  • Berserk Button: You couldn't get a more straight-laced copper than Bob Cryer. But if anybody mentioned his troubled son Patrick, with whom Cryer had some Parental Issues (most specifically I Have No Son), he was liable to get very moody with them.
  • By-The-Book Cop
  • Doesn't Like Guns: Cryer was never particularly comfortable with being one of the station's Authorised Firearms Officers, particularly after an incident where he accidentally shot and killed a (technically) unarmed robber. He often advised younger officers against going on firearms training courses. Ironically, he was written out of the series after getting a leg wound from friendly fire.
  • Old-Fashioned Copper
  • Team Dad

Sergeant Alec Peters

Played by Larry Dann

I could spend all afternoon trying to figure out which one of them is Tom and which one is Harry, and I'd end up being Dick!
Sgt Alec Peters

A description of the character goes here.

Tropes exhibited by this character include:

Sergeant Tom Penny

Played by Roger Leach A description of the character goes here.

Tropes exhibited by this character include:
  • Achey Scars: The gunshot wound that he receives at the end of Season Three would continue to occasionally flare up in really tense situations in the years afterwards.
  • Directed by Cast Member: Roger Leach wrote a number of scripts after leaving the series.

PC Reg Hollis

Played by Jeff Stewart A description of the character goes here.

Tropes exhibited by this character include:

PC Cathy Bradford

Played by Connie Hyde

Cathy Bradford? She's got about as much community spirit as Adolf Hitler!
Jim Carver

A description of the character goes here.

Tropes exhibited by this character include:

(W)PC Polly Page

Played by Lisa Geoghan

A description of the character goes here.

Tropes exhibited by this character include:
  • The Cutie
  • Not as You Know Them: She was written out of the series in 2002, following her role in the 'Dave Quinnan' exit storyline. Then she was brought back a whole year later, having supposedly been "on leave" for all that time, only to immediately be plunged into a storyline where she commited murder and lost her job as a cop. And THEN she was brought back again a few months later as a "civilian" worker at the station, where what little dignity the character still had left was systematically removed, before she was finally dumped for good in early 2004. To anyone who grew up watching the optimistic and loveable WPC Page of 1992-2001, it was like we were watching the same actress playing a completely different person.
  • Wide-Eyed Idealist

PC Gabriel Kent (DECEASED)

Played by Todd Carty

A description of the character goes here.

Tropes exhibited by this character include:
  • Being Evil Sucks: This exchange with Andrea Dunbar reveals this within the character, after he takes her hostage in the storage room.

Andrea: How can you carry the weight of all you've done around with you? How do you sleep at night?
Gabriel: I Dont.

PC Cass Rickman (DECEASED)

Played by Suzanne Maddock

A description of the character goes here.

Tropes exhibited by this character include:

PC Tony Stamp

Played by Graham Cole

A description of the character goes here.

Tropes exhibited by this character include:

PC Kerry Young (DECEASED)

Played by Beth Cordingly

A description of the character goes here.

Tropes exhibited by this character include:

PC Des Taviner (DECEASED)

Played by Paul Usher

A description of the character goes here.

Tropes exhibited by this character include:
  • Dirty Cop: Played the role of the bad cop when partnered with Reg Hollis, and then accidentally blew up the station killing six officers when he threw a firebomb through Andrew Monroe's office window to try and destroy counterfeit notes he had unwittingly donated to a memorial for Chief Inspector Conway and knew they would be traced back to him.
  • Heterosexual Life Partners: With Reg Hollis.
  • Ho Yay:
    • Again, him an Reg Hollis, oh so very much, just Des's nickname for Reg gives it away: Reggie Babes.
    • And any viewer who watches his final few episodes without viewing the early ones beforehand would be forgiven for making the mistake there was a love story between them.
  • Oop North: Another Scouser.

CID

DSI/DCI/Superintendent Jack Meadows

Played by Simon Rouse

A description of the character goes here.

Tropes exhibited by this character include:

DS/DI/DCI Frank Burnside

Played by Christopher Ellison

A description of the character goes here.

Tropes exhibited by this character include:
  • Anti-Hero
  • Bald of Awesome
  • Bluffing the Murderer: He employs this technique more than once.
  • Cowboy Cop
  • Deadpan Snarker: Probably the most famous example in the series.
  • Field Promotion: This is how he gets from DI to DCI after going undercover for five years. His promotion happened off-screen.
  • Gene Hunt Interrogation Technique: He was doing it years before Gene Hunt came along, though. Most noteably, one of his most well known tactics for getting confessions out of suspects was to flush their heads down the toilet.
  • Good Cop, Bad Cop: Go on, try and guess which one he pretends to be.
  • Jerkass: Unlike his predecessor at Sun Hill, DI Roy Galloway (see below), Frank Burnside has no sense of esprit de corps. He'll very happily spit-roast a member of his own team if he thinks it'll get him brownie points with his bosses, and a continuing theme of his time on the series is the distrust that the officers under his command have of him, and of his methods. And that's just the way Frank likes it.
  • Kubrick Stare
  • Lying to the Perp: This is usually what starts to happen when Bluffing the Murderer doesn't get Frank the result that he wants.
  • Put on a Bus: Twice. His first departure (1993) seen him vanish between episodes with only a perfunctory "after the fact" explanation, while his second departure (2000) happened because he was moved over to a Spin-Off series. Which was then cancelled. His ultimate fate was never revealed.
    • Commuting on a Bus: As noted, he came back for a series of semi-regular guest appearances in 1998, 1999 and 2000.
  • Rabid Cop: He occasionally comes across this way.
  • Retcon: Arguably. His character was portrayed as being extremely dodgy in his first few guest appearances in the series. But after they made him a regular character, they gave him the backstory of it all having been part of his undercover duties (his job having been to weed out other corrupt officers). None of which excuses the fact that he continues to do pretty much the same kind of things after his promotion, of course...
  • Spin-Off

Detective Inspector Roy Galloway

Played by John Salthouse

I don't give a shit about reliefs, over-time budgets, or any of your petty arguments. All I want to do is cut the crime on my manor. That IS the job we're being paid to do, remember?
Roy Galloway

A description of the character goes here.

Tropes exhibited by this character include:
  • Anti-Hero
  • Drives Like Crazy: Galloway pushes his motor to its limits in nearly every episode. This was eventually Lampshaded when, in the middle of one Chase Scene, the thing flat out refused to go any longer, and he had to spend the next fifteen minutes of the episode desperately trying to convince a car dealer to trade it in for something else. When called out on his aggressive driving, he was prone to protest "what are you talking about? I'm Hendon trained".
  • Fiery Redhead
  • Jerk with a Heart of Gold: Roy Galloway exhibits many similar outward personality traits to Frank Burnside. The difference being, underneath it all, he's generally a more amiable person... he just allows the stresses of his job to get to him from time to time. When push comes to shove, he always supports those under his command. He does have conflicts with his fellow officers in the course of his duties, which makes him appear abrasive. But he'll always make it up to them, apologising and buying them a drink after work. And he's always quick to give praise to others, when he thinks its due.
  • Married to the Job: And also a Workaholic. He's in the middle of going through a very messy divorce when the series begins.
  • Put on a Bus: Between Seasons Three and Four. Its interesting that he was never given any kind of departure storyline (or even an explantion as to where he went), given he was such a pivotal character in nearly all of the first 36 episodes.
  • Redheaded Hero

DS/DI Samantha "Sam" Nixon

Played by Lisa Maxwell

A description of the character goes here.

Tropes exhibited by this character include:

DS Don Beech

Played by Billy Murray

A description of the character goes here.

Tropes exhibited by this character include:

DC Alfred "Tosh" Lines

Played by Kevin Lloyd

A description of the character goes here.

Tropes exhibited by this character include:
  • Defective Detective: Quite a few of Sun Hill's finest had noticable flaws. But Tosh's flaws were often the ones that the average viewer at home might have found the most relatable: he never had enough money (one episode seen his wife making quite a scene at a bank when they refused to give her any more credit), resulting in him having to work oodles of over-time in order to keep his five kids feed, which meant that he was constantly tired at work; and his own love of fast food often ended with him being unable to take part in major chase scenes without serious risk of having a heart attack. But through it all, Tosh had a keen copper's instinct, which made him an indispensable member of the team.
  • Only Known by Their Nickname: His given name is Alfred, but everybody just calls him Tosh.
  • Written-In Absence: RIP Kevin Lloyd.

Sergeant/DC Jo Masters (transferred to uniform on promotion)

Played by Sally Rogers

A description of the character goes here.

Tropes exhibited by this character include:

DS/DC Stevie Moss

Played by Lucy Speed

A description of the character goes here.

Tropes exhibited by this character include:

DC Zain Nadir

Played by T.J. Ramini

A description of the character goes here.

Tropes exhibited by this character include:

Other recurrers

Eddie Olosunje

Crime Scene Examiner.

Tropes exhibited by this character include:

Deaths In The Bill

Due in large part to its frequent cast turnover, the series has killed off a lot of its characters during its 26+ year run. Here is a list of these fatal casualties.

  • PC Ken Melvin- Blown up by an IRA car bomb.
  • PC Pete Ramsay - Shot down in the middle of a bank raid gone wrong, while saving DC "Tosh" Lines' life.
  • PC Phil Young - Gassed himself in a car.
  • DC Viv Martella - Killed by armed robbers.
  • DS Jo Morgan - Shot by a hitman (who wasn't aiming at her).
  • PC Cathy Marshall - Fell in the river and drowned while chasing a suspect by the docks in the middle of the night.
  • DC Rosie Fox - Strangled.
  • PC Eddie Santini - After getting off for murder, he was shot by a Dirty Cop.
  • DS John Boulton - Got his head smacked repeatedly against a concrete floor by Dirty Cop Don Beech.
  • SC Terry Knowles - Stabbed to death in his fourth episode.
  • Chief Inspector Conway - Got a petrol bomb thrown in his car.
  • Inspector Monroe - Killed in the fire.
  • DC Kate Spears - Killed as a result of the fire.
  • PC Ben Hayward - ditto.
  • DC Paul Riley - ditto.
  • PC Di Worrell - ditto.
  • PC Sam Harker - ditto, although Taviner seriously considered switching off his life support since he was a witness to his actions (see his own entry).
  • Superintendent Tom Chandler - Shot himself in the head after it emerged he had covered up a rape. Before that, he'd raped his pregnant (who conceived with him in a disabled toilet at a memorial service) new wife and taken her hostage.
  • PC Cass Rickman - December 2002, strangled by the Sun Hill Serial Killer.
  • Sergeant Matt Boyden - Shot in the street in a drive-by, involving his own daughter.
  • DC Juliet Becker - Stabbed in a van. Guess being bisexual is not a good thing to be in Sun Hill.
  • PC Des Taviner - Actually responsible for the Sun Hill fire (he'd chucked a petrol bomb in to destroy some fake currency and failed to realise there was a gas cylinder in there). Was beaten to death by a mentally-ill cell mate.
  • PC Kerry Young - Shot by Gabriel Kent outside Sun Hill nick. He'd earlier raped her. To top it all, she was pregnant.
  • DC Rob Thatcher - After shooting the woman who had killed his father many years ago, committed Suicide by Cop.
  • DC Ken Drummond - In a van filled with petrol that was driven into the front reception by a racist, sacked officer.
  • PC Andrea Dunbar - Left to die in the petrol-filled van incident by Gabriel Kent. It had just been revealed to the others that she was an undercover journalist.
  • SRO Marilyn Chambers - Killed in the same incident, just as Reg Hollis was going to propose to her.
  • PC Gabriel Kent- Really went to town on the whole Dirty Cop business. Used a false name to join up, seduced June Ackland, then pretended he was her long-lost son (he wasn't, he just lived with him) and was responsible for the deaths of two officers (see above), as well as raping two others. Decided to jump off a high-rise rather than face justice.
  • PC Lance Powell - Strangled by another Serial Killer. Being gay and Christian isn't a good thing in Sun Hill either.
  • PC Honey Harman - Shot dead by Zain Nadir's criminal lover.
  • PC Billy Rowan - July 2007, throat cut. In his first episode, no less.
  • PC Emma Keane - Was the last one out of an exploding building. As well as the final death in the series.

Back to The Bill