Dream Stuffing

Dream Stuffing is a British television sitcom which aired on Channel 4 in early 1984.

Dream Stuffing
GenreSitcom
Created byPaul Hines &
Su Wilkins
Directed byJohn Kaye Cooper
StarringRachel Weaver
Amanda Symonds
Maria Charles
Ray Burdis
Theme music composerKirsty MacColl
Country of originUnited Kingdom
Original language(s)English
No. of series1
No. of episodes10
Production
Producer(s)Humphrey Barclay
Limehouse Productions
Running time30 minutes (inc. commercials)
Release
Original networkChannel 4
Original release6 January 
9 March 1984

The series followed the exploits of two working class young women, Mo (Amanda Symonds) and Jude (Rachel Weaver), who share a flat in a council tower block in London's East End, along with their three-legged cat, Tripod. Mo has a menial job in a glass eye factory, whilst Jude is on the dole.

Part way through the series, Mo loses her job and the two girls become a thorn in the side for employment review officer Mrs Tudge (Helen Brammer). Other characters include their gay neighbour Richard, (played by Ray Burdis), Mo's interfering mother May (Maria Charles), who runs the local launderette, Brenda (Caroline Quentin), who works with Mo at the glass eye factory, Bill (Frank Lee) and Mr Sharples (Allister Bain).

The series' theme tune, "London Girls", was written and performed by Kirsty MacColl.

The series was repeated once by Channel 4 in Summer 1985. It has so far not been released on video or DVD.

Critical reaction

Martin Walker in the Guardian attacked it as "heroically bad", finding it a painful attempt to construct an "up-to-date and relevant sitcom" that turned out close to a parody of Channel 4's right-on output of the time.[1]

gollark: There is no way around these things.
gollark: PotatOS can't stop you from putting it in a disk drive and deleting it, or from editing the files in `world`, or from adjusting the CC config so it doesn't work.
gollark: Well, yes, but anything is if you give yourself "root access".
gollark: That requires configuration and stuff though.
gollark: Then you can't update it.

References

  1. "Slice of life", Walker, Martin, The Guardian (1959-2003); 7 Jan 1984; pg. 9


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