Chancer
Chancer is a British crime drama television series that aired on ITV from 1990 to 1991, consisting of two seasons and 20 episodes.[1] Produced by Central Television, it centers on Stephen Crane, a shrewd London business analyst and con artist played by Clive Owen, who uses manipulation and opportunism to save a failing family-owned car company from financial collapse while navigating personal betrayals and his unresolved family history.[2] Set against the backdrop of late 1980s yuppie culture in London's financial district, the series explores themes of greed, deception, and redemption through Crane's schemes involving insider trading and corporate intrigue.[1] The show features a strong ensemble cast, including Simon Shepherd as the aristocratic Piers Garfield-Ward, Susannah Harker as the resilient Joanna Franklyn, Leslie Phillips as the charming yet flawed Jimmy Blake, and Peter Vaughan as the authoritative Tom Franklyn.[3] Executive produced by Ted Childs and produced by Sarah Wilson, Chancer was directed by Alan Grint and others, with writing contributions from Guy Andrews and Simon Burke.[3] It garnered a cult following for its sharp portrayal of 1980s excess and is particularly noted for propelling Clive Owen to stardom, earning him widespread praise for his charismatic depiction of the morally ambiguous anti-hero.[4]Overview
Premise
Chancer is a British television drama series that follows the exploits of Derek Love, a charismatic conman and financial operator who uses the alias Stephen Crane, navigating the high-stakes world of London's financial district during the late 1980s yuppie era.[5] Crane is depicted as a shrewd and morally ambiguous figure who employs deception and manipulation to achieve his ends while adhering to a personal code of ethics.[6] The series, spanning 20 episodes across two seasons—13 in Series 1 and 7 in Series 2—explores Crane's schemes amid themes of ambition, betrayal, and redemption.[7] In Series 1, Crane loses his position at Kleber's Bank following an insider trading scandal, prompting him to orchestrate an elaborate con to embezzle funds and rescue Douglas Motors, a struggling sports car manufacturer and family-owned business led by Robert Douglas. Following a destructive fire at the factory, Crane is recruited by associates, including his old school friend Piers Garfield-Ward, to save the company.[6] This endeavor draws Crane into complex family dynamics, including his romantic involvement with colleague Jo Franklyn, daughter of company advisor Tom Franklyn, forcing him to confront moral dilemmas as his deceptions unravel.[5] The arc highlights Crane's resourcefulness in the cutthroat corporate environment, balancing loyalty to friends against the risks of his illicit tactics.[8] Series 2 sees Crane, having served time in prison for his previous crimes, reemerge under his true identity as Derek Love to assist Piers, now a more established businessman who has inherited a financially decaying stately home, in restoring it from ruin.[9] Haunted by the consequences of his past actions—including the tragic loss of Jo—Crane forms new alliances while evading old adversaries like banker Jimmy Blake, navigating a web of personal vulnerabilities and high-society intrigues.[5] Throughout both seasons, the narrative underscores Crane's ethical boundaries within a landscape of deceit, portraying his evolution from opportunistic rogue to a man grappling with the human cost of his ambitions.[10]Themes
Chancer explores the moral ambiguity inherent in the yuppie culture of the late 1980s, portraying its protagonist Stephen Crane as a charming rogue who operates with a personal code of ethics while blurring the boundaries between legitimate business practices and outright con artistry.[11][5] Crane's schemes, such as assuming a false identity to orchestrate financial maneuvers, highlight this duality, where self-interest often masquerades as loyalty or ingenuity in the high-stakes world of London's financial district.[5][12] The series delves into themes of greed, betrayal, and redemption through intricate financial schemes that test family loyalties and exacerbate class tensions within the City of London. Characters navigate cutthroat takeovers and personal deceptions, such as insider trading and romantic entanglements, revealing how ambition erodes traditional bonds in an era of unchecked excess.[11][12] Redemption arcs emerge as figures like Crane confront the consequences of their actions, shifting from confident manipulators to more vulnerable individuals amid mounting debts and emotional fallout.[5] These elements underscore the societal critique of 1980s materialism, where personal gain frequently overrides communal or familial obligations.[11] Stylistically, Chancer blends dark comedy, suspense, and drama to deliver a cynical tone that lampoons the excesses of the yuppie boom just before the 1990s recession. The narrative's witty manipulations and psychological games provide humorous relief, yet maintain tension through escalating betrayals and moral dilemmas, critiquing the era's superficial glamour.[12][5] Settings serve as symbolic backdrops, with banks representing the impersonal greed of modern finance, car factories embodying the decline of traditional British industry, and stately homes illustrating the strained aristocracy burdened by economic realities.[5] These locations reinforce the series' commentary on class divides and the erosion of old-world values in the face of 1980s financial opportunism.[11][12]Cast and characters
Principal cast
The principal cast of Chancer featured Clive Owen in the lead role of Stephen Crane, also known as Derek Love, an ambitious and ingenious conman navigating London's financial world while concealing a troubled family past that influences his moral code.[3] Owen, born in 1964 in Coventry, England, had begun his acting career in local youth theater productions before training at the Royal Academy of Dramatic Art (RADA), where he honed his skills in stage roles prior to television.[13] This series marked Owen's breakout performance on British television, showcasing his ability to portray a charismatic yet brooding anti-hero after years of theater and minor TV appearances.[14] Simon Shepherd portrayed Piers Garfield-Ward, Crane's loyal yet naive best friend and the owner of a struggling family-owned car dealership facing bankruptcy, whose trust in Crane drives much of the plot's tension.[3] Shepherd, an established television actor by 1990, brought prior experience from roles such as Patrick Simmons in the 1985 BBC adaptation of Agatha Christie's A Murder is Announced and a supporting part in Kenneth Branagh's 1989 film Henry V, which helped him capture Piers' vulnerability and upper-class demeanor.[15] Susannah Harker played Joanna "Jo" Franklyn, a sophisticated woman entangled in Crane's elaborate schemes through her romantic involvement with him and her family's business interests, adding emotional depth to the series' exploration of deception and desire.[3] Harker, in the early stages of her career at age 25, had recently gained attention for her role as the ambitious journalist Mattie Storin in the 1990 BBC political thriller House of Cards, earning a BAFTA nomination and highlighting her talent for complex, intelligent female characters.[16] Leslie Phillips embodied James Blake, the ruthless and calculating banker serving as the primary antagonist, whose cutthroat financial maneuvers clash with Crane's opportunistic plays.[3] Phillips, a veteran performer since the 1940s, drew on his long-established persona as a suave, upper-class figure with a comedic edge, honed through iconic roles in the Carry On film series (such as Carry On Nurse in 1959) and the Doctor in the House films, where he often played charming yet scheming authority types.[17] The cast's chemistry underscored key plot dynamics, particularly Crane's manipulative rivalry with Blake, whom he outwits through bold deceptions to protect his interests, and his steadfast loyalty to Piers, whom he aids in salvaging the car firm despite personal risks.[18] These relationships propelled the narrative's themes of betrayal and redemption across both series.[8]Supporting characters
Peter Vaughan plays Tom Franklyn, the formidable industrialist and father of Joanna Franklyn, serving as a key antagonist who exerts influence over the Douglas Motors company and heightens tension through his ruthless business tactics and custody battles over his grandson Joseph.[19] (Vaughan died in 2018.) Tom Bell guest-stars as John Love, Stephen Crane's estranged father and an ex-convict whose limited appearances reveal Crane's troubled upbringing and connections to London's criminal underworld, providing crucial backstory that underscores the protagonist's moral ambiguities. (Bell died in 1992.)[20] Caroline Langrishe portrays Penny Nichols, a sharp-witted member of the Douglas family and business ally to Piers, whose involvement introduces romantic tensions and supports subplots involving corporate alliances and personal betrayals within the firm's operations. Stephen Tompkinson recurs as Markus Worton across the first series, a cunning associate in early episodes who aids in navigating corporate intrigue and financial maneuvers, often facilitating Crane's schemes while adding layers of betrayal and opportunism to the ensemble dynamics.[19] Ralph Riach embodies Willy Stebbings, the Douglas family's solicitor, whose recurring presence handles the legal intricacies of deals and mergers, occasionally offering comic relief through his flustered reactions to the group's high-stakes deceptions. (Riach died in 2022.)[21] These supporting figures enhance the narrative by enabling the principal characters' elaborate cons and investments, exposing the undercurrents of crime and ambition, and amplifying conflicts in the yuppie-era world of cutthroat finance.[22]Production
Development
Chancer was created by screenwriter Guy Andrews, who drew inspiration from the 1980s financial scandals to satirize the culture of the City of London. The series was commissioned by Central Independent Television for ITV, with executive producer Ted Childs and producer Sarah Wilson overseeing the adaptation of Andrews' scripts into a television production.[3] Andrews penned most of the episodes, structuring the narrative as a serialized drama incorporating self-contained story arcs, with the initial pitch positioning it as a vehicle for emerging talent. During pre-production, Clive Owen was cast in the lead role following his success in theater, while the budget accommodated period-authentic recreations of 1980s sets within ITV's broader drama programming slate.Filming and locations
Filming for Chancer took place over an eight-month schedule for the first series in 1989–1990, produced by Central Independent Television for broadcast on ITV. The production emphasized practical locations across the United Kingdom to capture the gritty realism of 1980s financial and industrial environments, with directors Alan Grint and Laurence Moody leading the team, focusing on authentic period details to evoke the yuppie era.[2] Scenes were primarily set and filmed in London and its surrounding areas, including the financial district to portray the high-stakes business world of characters like Stephen Crane. For Series 1's storyline centered on saving a struggling car company, production utilized disused factories in the Midlands, such as sites in North Warwickshire, where exterior shots were captured at Lea Marston Purification Lakes in January 1990.[23] Series 2 shifted to more rural settings, with key interiors and exteriors for the stately home plot filmed at estates in Hertfordshire. Bank interiors, like those for the fictional Kleber's Bank, were simulated using a combination of on-location shooting and studio sets to maintain narrative flow under ITV's tight episodic production timeline. Production faced challenges in sourcing and integrating 1980s props and costumes to accurately reflect the yuppie aesthetic, including period-appropriate business attire, luxury cars, and office technology, all while adhering to the weekly broadcast schedule that demanded efficient on-location work and minimal reshoots. This approach contributed to the series' raw, immediate feel, distinguishing it from more polished studio-bound dramas of the era.Episodes
Series 1 (1990)
The first series of Chancer consists of 13 episodes and aired weekly on Tuesdays at 9:00 PM on ITV from 6 March to 29 May 1990. The episodes were directed by Alan Grint and Laurence Moody and written by Guy Andrews, Tony Grounds, and Simon Burke.[3][24] The storyline builds from protagonist Stephen Crane's dismissal from an investment bank following an insider trading scandal, leading him to orchestrate cons to rescue the struggling Douglas Motors car firm owned by the dysfunctional Douglas family. As Crane infiltrates the company, the narrative progresses through escalating tensions involving revenge from jilted associates, revelations about Crane's fabricated identity and family ties, illicit deals to secure funding, and a climactic battle against a hostile takeover bid, highlighting themes of deception and corporate intrigue unique to this series.[25]| No. | Title | Directed by | Written by | Air Date | Synopsis |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Weapons from the Wall | Alan Grint | Guy Andrews, Tony Grounds, Simon Burke | 6 March 1990 | When the Douglas Motors factory is destroyed in a suspected arson attack, Gavin Nichols, son-in-law of managing director Robert Douglas, calls upon an old friend, Stephen Crane, for help in salvaging the business.[25] |
| 2 | Killing Floor | Alan Grint | Guy Andrews, Tony Grounds, Simon Burke | 13 March 1990 | Crane attempts to save Douglas Motors by stealing £500,000 from his boss through an insider trading scam, while Robert hires a private detective to locate his wayward son Jamie.[25] |
| 3 | Hazard | Alan Grint | Guy Andrews, Tony Grounds, Simon Burke | 20 March 1990 | After being sacked from the bank along with colleague Jo, Crane maneuvers to secure a position at Douglas Motors to further his rescue efforts.[25] |
| 4 | Trust | Alan Grint | Guy Andrews, Tony Grounds, Simon Burke | 27 March 1990 | Desperate investor Blake seeks revenge on Crane by revealing details of his criminal past to Robert, while another figure, Tom, also plots retribution amid the company's financial woes.[25] |
| 5 | Pretenders | Alan Grint | Guy Andrews, Tony Grounds, Simon Burke | 3 April 1990 | The fallout from Blake's betrayal continues as Crane's assumed identity comes under scrutiny, forcing him to deepen his cons to maintain control over the Douglas Motors turnaround.[25] |
| 6 | Possessions | Alan Grint | Guy Andrews, Tony Grounds, Simon Burke | 10 April 1990 | Robert confesses to Crane about diverting bank funds to cover Jamie's gambling debts, complicating their alliance, while Jo begins a secret affair with Piers, straining team dynamics.[25] |
| 7 | Faith | Alan Grint | Guy Andrews, Tony Grounds, Simon Burke | 17 April 1990 | Victoria persuades Crane to execute a risky scam targeting a property developer for quick capital, as local residents protest Robert's proposal for a toxic waste dump near Stoneleigh.[25] |
| 8 | Lies | Alan Grint | Guy Andrews, Tony Grounds, Simon Burke | 24 April 1990 | Tom returns from Hong Kong seeking confrontation with Crane, but Crane's unexpected capitulation leads to a surprising business proposition that advances the firm's survival.[25] |
| 9 | Wreckage | Laurence Moody | Guy Andrews, Tony Grounds, Simon Burke | 1 May 1990 | The arrival of Crane's brother heightens risks to his cover story at the company, while Jamie's apparent suicide uncovers deeper family secrets tied to Douglas Motors' troubles.[25] |
| 10 | Sanctuary | Laurence Moody | Guy Andrews, Tony Grounds, Simon Burke | 8 May 1990 | Tom gains control of Douglas Motors through aggressive maneuvers, as retiring Blake plots final revenge unaware of Crane's emerging alliance with him.[25] |
| 11 | History | Laurence Moody | Guy Andrews, Tony Grounds, Simon Burke | 15 May 1990 | News of an unexpected death forces Crane to confront elements of his real past, impacting his strategies to protect the company from internal and external threats.[25] |
| 12 | Temptation | Laurence Moody | Guy Andrews, Tony Grounds, Simon Burke | 22 May 1990 | The death of the genuine Stephen Crane endangers Crane's impersonation, prompting Tom to offer a deal: aid in the takeover in exchange for leaving Douglas Motors intact.[25] |
| 13 | Love | Laurence Moody | Guy Andrews, Tony Grounds, Simon Burke | 29 May 1990 | Crane stakes everything on a perilous wager with Tom to secure Douglas Motors' future, but the victory comes at a personal cost that reshapes his relationships.[25] |
Series 2 (1991)
The second series of Chancer shifts focus to Stephen Crane, now living under his real name Derek Love after serving a prison sentence for his past crimes. Returning to aid his friend Piers Garfield-Ward, Love becomes entangled in efforts to preserve the Garfield-Ward family estate, Winterleigh Hall, from foreclosure amid financial desperation. The narrative arc traces Love's schemes to generate funds through illicit means, navigating aristocratic social circles, romantic complications, and escalating threats from powerful adversaries like casino owner Tom Franklyn, culminating in the resolution of paternity secrets, old debts, and Love's quest for redemption.[26] The series comprises seven episodes, broadcast weekly on Tuesdays at 9:00 pm on ITV from 23 April to 4 June 1991.[27]| No. | Title | Directed by | Written by | Original air date | Synopsis |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Jo | Alan Grint | Guy Andrews | 23 April 1991 | Out of prison and using his real name Derek Love, Crane resolves to win back the affections of his former lover Jo Franklyn, but his plans are upended by revelations about her life and his own lingering past.[28] |
| 2 | Ashes | Alan Grint | Guy Andrews | 30 April 1991 | Devastated by Jo's sudden death, Love falls under the manipulation of her father Tom Franklyn when a crucial letter about the paternity of Jo's son disappears, while private investigator James Blake continues his pursuit of a missing Anna.[29] |
| 3 | Secrets | Alan Grint | Guy Andrews | 7 May 1991 | As Tom Franklyn grows suspicious of Anna's possible involvement in Jo's death, Love scams Franklyn's casino for a substantial sum and offers to help Piers launch a venture to save the endangered Winterleigh estate from developers.[30] |
| 4 | Remembrance | Alan Grint | Simon Burke | 14 May 1991 | On the run from authorities, Anna confesses her love to Love; meanwhile, using stolen membership lists from Franklyn's operation, Love and Piers establish an underground gaming club at Winterleigh to generate quick revenue and avert the estate's sale.[31] |
| 5 | Blood | Alan Grint | Guy Andrews | 21 May 1991 | The paternity letter resurfaces in Love's possession, confirming ties to Jo's son Joseph, but conflicts over the gaming club with Piers and external pressures begin to dismantle Love's fragile alliances and expose his deceptions.[32] |
| 6 | Fall | Alan Grint | Simon Burke | 28 May 1991 | Tom Franklyn tempts Love with access to Joseph in exchange for employment, while discovering the secret gaming club at Winterleigh, he launches aggressive tactics to undermine Piers and seize control of the property.[33] |
| 7 | Sacrifice | Alan Grint | Guy Andrews | 4 June 1991 | Employed by Franklyn to revive his faltering "build British, buy British" campaign, Love leverages his cunning to attack skeptical bankers refusing funding, ultimately confronting the personal costs of his schemes and securing a bittersweet closure to the estate crisis.[34] |