Still Open All Hours
Still Open All Hours is a British sitcom created by Roy Clarke as a sequel to the 1970s–1980s series Open All Hours, starring David Jason as Granville, the former apprentice who now runs the eccentric corner grocery shop following the death of his uncle Arkwright.[1] First broadcast on BBC One as a Christmas special on 26 December 2013, the show aired for six series totaling 41 episodes until its final run in 2019, although a seventh series commissioned in 2019 was ultimately cancelled in 2023.[1][2] Produced by BBC Studios, it was filmed at locations such as Dock 10 in Salford and Teddington Studios.[1] The series centers on Granville's daily struggles to keep the struggling shop afloat amid quirky customers and his unrequited affection for widow Mavis, while employing his laid-back son Leroy and dealing with meddlesome locals like the gossipy Madge (Mavis's sister) and the flirtatious Mrs. Featherstone.[1] Key cast members include James Baxter as Leroy, Maggie Ollerenshaw as Mavis, Brigit Forsyth as Madge, Stephanie Cole as Mrs. Featherstone, and Johnny Vegas as the gluttonous Gastric.[1] Retaining the gentle, character-driven humor of the original, the show updates the setting to contemporary times while preserving the Yorkshire town vibe and themes of thriftiness and community oddities.[1] Although initial reviews were mixed, praising David Jason's performance but noting challenges in filling Ronnie Barker's shoes as Arkwright, the 2013 special drew a peak audience of over 10 million viewers, making it BBC One's highest-rated Boxing Day program that year.[3] Subsequent series maintained solid ratings, contributing to its six-season run and cult following among fans of traditional British comedy.[3]Overview
Premise
Still Open All Hours is a British sitcom serving as a sequel to the classic series Open All Hours, focusing on the everyday operations and antics within a traditional corner shop. The narrative centers on Granville, who has taken over the management of the store following the death of his uncle Arkwright, balancing the demands of running the business with his ongoing romantic interest in longtime neighbor Mavis. Granville employs clever, often convoluted schemes to offload stock, reflecting his inherited frugality while navigating the interference of nosy locals and eccentric regulars.[4][5] Set in the Yorkshire town of Balby, a suburb of Doncaster in South Yorkshire, the grocer's shop sells everyday items at marked-up prices through Granville's inventive sales tactics, such as bundling odd bargains or fabricating product virtues to entice customers. Recurring comedic elements include malfunctioning gadgets devised by Granville or his assistant, endless gossip among the shop's patrons that sparks chain reactions of mishaps, and Granville's relentless thriftiness, which frequently backfires in humorous ways. These dynamics highlight the shop's transformation into a lively community gathering spot where trivial disputes and whimsical events unfold.[6][5] Over the series, the premise evolves to emphasize the shop as a enduring hub for neighborhood camaraderie and lighthearted chaos, with Granville's persistent courtship of Mavis providing an emotional thread amid the farcical business dealings and social interactions. This setup maintains the warm, observational humor of small-town life, where the store's door remains perpetually open to both commerce and comedy.[4][5]Background and connection to Open All Hours
Still Open All Hours serves as a direct sequel to the original BBC sitcom Open All Hours, which aired from 1976 to 1985 and featured Ronnie Barker as the miserly shopkeeper Albert Arkwright and David Jason as his nephew and assistant Granville.[7][8] The original series, comprising four seasons and 26 episodes following a 1973 pilot, centered on the daily antics in Arkwright's corner shop in a Doncaster suburb, emphasizing the uncle-nephew dynamic and the shopkeeper's eccentricities.[7][8] It concluded without resolving Arkwright's fate, leaving room for future developments in the storyline.[8] The revival was conceived by writer Roy Clarke, the creator of the original, as a one-off Christmas special in 2013 to commemorate the 40th anniversary of the 1973 pilot episode.[8] In this continuation, Granville, now portrayed by David Jason in an older role, has inherited and taken over the shop following Arkwright's death sometime after the original series ended.[8][9] Clarke's script advances the narrative nearly three decades later, positioning Granville as the new shop owner while preserving the setting and core comedic elements of the predecessor.[8] To update the family structure for contemporary audiences, the special introduced Leroy, Granville's adult son from a past relationship, played by James Baxter.[10] This addition shifts the generational interplay from uncle-nephew to father-son, injecting fresh relational humor while echoing the original's themes of familial obligation and eccentricity.[10] The 2013 special, which drew 12.2 million viewers on BBC One, led to the commissioning of a full six-episode series in 2014 due to its strong reception as the year's top-rated comedy broadcast.[9] The series maintains continuity with Open All Hours through its reliance on Clarke's signature style of verbal wordplay, puns, and situational comedy arising from small-town shop life, ensuring the revival honors the original's lighthearted British humor without altering its foundational tone.[8][9]Cast and characters
Main cast
David Jason reprises his role as Granville, the frugal and inventive shopkeeper who has taken over Arkwright's corner grocery store following the death of his miserly uncle, evolving from the long-suffering nephew of the original series into a beleaguered father figure managing both the business and his reluctant son.[11][12] Granville continues his tradition of devising quirky contraptions and schemes to boost sales or cut costs, all while awkwardly pursuing his long-standing romantic interest in neighbor Mavis amid the daily chaos of small-town life.[10] James Baxter portrays Leroy, Granville's long-lost son from a one-night stand in Blackpool, who reluctantly adapts to life as the shop's assistant after being summoned to help run the family business.[13] As a modern young man with a preference for an easier lifestyle, Leroy often contrasts his father's old-fashioned ways, dreaming of escape from the drudgery of shop duties while occasionally contributing ideas shaped by contemporary habits.[14] Maggie Ollerenshaw returns as Mavis, Granville's enduring love interest and widowed neighbor who remains a fixture in the local community, engaging in gossip with other regulars and providing occasional assistance in the shop.[5] Her relationship with Granville is marked by tentative romantic advances frequently interrupted by family and town events, highlighting her role as a kind-hearted yet hesitant participant in the shop's orbit.[15] Stephanie Cole embodies Mrs. Delphine Featherstone, the wealthy and domineering widow known as the "Black Widow" for her flirtatious advances toward Granville and her tendency to disrupt the shop with extravagant demands and chaotic interference.[12] Her interactions with the main characters often inject tension and humor, as her bold personality clashes with the shop's modest routines while pursuing her affections for the owner.[16]Supporting and recurring characters
Brigit Forsyth (died 1 December 2023)[17] portrays Madge, the overprotective and meddlesome sister of Mavis, who frequently interferes in her sibling's potential romance with Granville by offering unsolicited commentary and creating family tensions within the small-town community.[18] Madge's bitter outlook, stemming from her own failed relationships, often leads to comedic clashes as she guards Mavis from suitors, amplifying the awkward dynamics around the shop.[19] Lynda Baron (died 5 March 2022)[20] plays Nurse Gladys Emmanuel, a longstanding community figure and Arkwright's former love interest, who returns in the 2013 Christmas special and the first two series to dispense wry, practical advice amid the shop's daily mishaps.[21] Her character adds a layer of nostalgic warmth and subtle humor through interactions that highlight lingering affections and local gossip. Baron did not appear from series 3 onward due to scheduling conflicts with her role in EastEnders.[22] Geoffrey Whitehead depicts Mr. Newbold, an elderly regular customer introduced in series 2 and continuing through series 6, whose frequent misunderstandings—often exacerbated by his age—generate situational comedy during shopping visits.[21] Newbold's escapades, such as awkward romantic pursuits or evading nosy neighbors, contribute to the ensemble's chaotic energy without dominating the central narrative.[23] Tim Healy embodies Gastric, a bumbling handyman and occasional helper around the shop, appearing recurrently from series 1 to provide slapstick relief through his inept repairs and well-meaning but disastrous interventions.[24] Other recurring locals, including Mrs. Hussein (Nina Wadia) and Mrs. Rossi (Sue Holderness), function as gossiping patrons whose chatter and petty rivalries escalate the everyday pandemonium in Granville's store, fostering a sense of vibrant community interplay.[21]Episodes
Series overview
Still Open All Hours is a British sitcom that aired on BBC One from 2013 to 2019, consisting of a total of 41 episodes across six series.[25] The programme commenced with a one-off Christmas special on 26 December 2013, which drew strong viewership and prompted the BBC to commission further episodes.[9] This was followed by series 1 (2014–2015) with six episodes, series 2 (2015–2016) with six episodes, series 3 (2017) with seven episodes, series 4 (2018) with seven episodes, series 5 (2018) with seven episodes, and series 6 (2019) with seven episodes.[25] Episodes typically run for approximately 30 minutes each and centre on the daily operations of Granville's corner shop, where narratives explore his ongoing challenges in balancing business demands with personal relationships.[26] Over the course of the series, storylines progressively incorporate more intricate dynamics among the shop's regulars and Granville's extended family, reflecting evolving community interactions while maintaining the core focus on the grocer's entrepreneurial endeavours.[27] The commissioning evolved from the initial special's success, leading to full series runs that sustained the show's format. Starting with series 4, production shifted to closed sets due to scheduling constraints with the cast, resulting in the addition of laughter tracks recorded from screened audiences for series 4 through 6.[28]Special episodes and recent developments
The series began with a Christmas special broadcast on BBC One on 26 December 2013, serving as a one-off revival of the original sitcom.[8] This 30-minute episode re-established Granville as the shop owner following the death of his uncle Arkwright, while introducing his son Leroy as a new character assisting in the store.[29] In 2019, the BBC commissioned a seventh series of Still Open All Hours, but production was delayed by the COVID-19 pandemic starting in 2020.[30] The series was ultimately cancelled in February 2023, amid BBC budget constraints and challenges with cast availability.[2] To mark the 50th anniversary of the original Open All Hours in 2025, a retrospective documentary titled Open All Hours: Inside Out was announced on 12 September 2025 for broadcast on U&GOLD in 2026.[31] Fronted by David Jason reprising his role as Granville, the 90-minute special features archival footage from the original series and its sequel, alongside interviews with cast and crew.[32] It includes a new short scene written by series creator Roy Clarke, then aged 95, but does not constitute a full new episode.[33]Production
Development and commissioning
The revival series Still Open All Hours was conceived by writer Roy Clarke, who served as its sole screenwriter across all episodes, adapting elements from his original Open All Hours scripts—such as the miserly corner-shop dynamics and character quirks—while incorporating contemporary updates like the introduction of Granville's adult son, Leroy, to explore generational contrasts and family tensions for modern audiences.[34][35] The BBC greenlit a one-off Christmas special in 2013, several years after Ronnie Barker's death in 2005, with David Jason returning as Granville, now the shop's owner following his uncle Arkwright's passing. Aired on Boxing Day 2013, the special drew 12.2 million viewers, prompting the BBC to commission a full six-part series in January 2014.[9][3] Production encountered several challenges over the years, including the aging of the principal cast, which led to adjustments such as Lynda Baron's reduced appearances in later series and her death on 7 March 2022 at the age of 82.[36] Additionally, a seventh series commissioned in 2019 was indefinitely delayed by the COVID-19 pandemic, which disrupted filming plans, and ultimately cancelled in 2023 amid shifts in the BBC's comedy programming priorities, with the broadcaster confirming no further episodes were planned.[2][37] David Jason actively advocated for the series' continuation, repeatedly urging the BBC for a proper finale in interviews, expressing frustration over the abrupt halt and emphasizing unfinished storylines; separately, in September 2025, a script by Roy Clarke for a new short scene featuring Jason as Granville was approved for inclusion in the 2026 retrospective special Open All Hours: Inside Out on U&GOLD, marking 50 years since the original show's debut.[38][39][31]Filming and production details
Exterior shots for Still Open All Hours were filmed at a real grocer's shop located at 15 Lister Avenue in Balby, Doncaster, South Yorkshire, the same location used as a stand-in for Arkwright's shop in the original Open All Hours series to maintain authenticity.[40][6] This choice preserved the visual continuity and nostalgic feel of the setting in the small-town grocer's environment.[41] Interior scenes were primarily recorded using a multi-camera setup at various studios, including Pinewood Studios for later series and Teddington Studios for earlier ones, allowing for efficient capture of the ensemble comedy dynamics in front of a live audience during the initial seasons.[42][43] The series was directed primarily by Dewi Humphreys across its run, though production adjustments occurred due to scheduling constraints with the cast.[44] Starting with series 4, filming shifted to a closed set format, with a laughter track introduced by screening episodes to an audience for reactions, emulating the original series' live-audience energy while accommodating remote filming trends and availability issues.[28] Guest appearances, such as Barry Chuckle as Mr. Marshall in a 2013 special, were coordinated around the main cast's schedules to integrate fresh comedic elements without disrupting core production timelines.[13]Broadcast and distribution
Original broadcast
Still Open All Hours premiered on BBC One with a one-off Christmas special on 26 December 2013, attracting 12.2 million consolidated viewers. This was followed by the first full series, which aired six episodes weekly from 26 December 2014 to 25 January 2015 in the evening slot of approximately 7:30 PM.[26] Subsequent series maintained a similar format of short runs, typically six to seven episodes, broadcast on Sunday evenings between 7:00 PM and 8:30 PM, often commencing around the Christmas period and extending into early the following year.[45][46] The show's scheduling featured notable gaps between series, such as nearly eleven months from the end of series 1 in January 2015 to the start of series 2 on 26 December 2015, and similar intervals thereafter until series 5 began earlier on 7 October 2018.[26] Christmas specials were routinely integrated into the later series, serving as season finales, including the 2019 special on 23 December that concluded series 6 and marked the last new episode.[47] No full series aired after this, with a planned seventh series postponed due to the COVID-19 pandemic and ultimately cancelled; the BBC confirmed in February 2023 that there were no plans for new episodes.[2] During their original runs, all episodes were made available on-demand via BBC iPlayer shortly after broadcast.[27] Repeats of episodes frequently aired on BBC Two in subsequent years, providing additional viewings for audiences.[48]| Series | Air Dates | Episodes | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Christmas Special (Pilot) | 26 December 2013 | 1 | Premiere special on BBC One. |
| 1 | 26 December 2014 – 25 January 2015 | 6 | Weekly Sundays, ~7:30 PM. |
| 2 | 27 December 2015 – 24 January 2016 | 6 | Included Christmas opener. |
| 3 | 26 December 2016 – 5 February 2017 | 7 | Extended into February. |
| 4 | 28 December 2017 – 11 February 2018 | 7 | Post-Christmas start. |
| 5 | 7 October 2018 – 23 December 2018 | 7 | Autumn start with Christmas finale. |
| 6 | 18 October 2019 – 23 December 2019 | 7 | Final series, COVID-impacted plans for continuation. |