To kafe tis Charas

To kafe tis Charas (Greek: Το καφέ της Χαράς lit. Joy's café) is a Greek comedy-drama TV series that broadcast on ANT1 for three seasons from September 2003 to mid-2006, before being revived for a fourth season in December 2019. The show was originally broadcast at 21:00 local time immediately after ANT1 NEWS, while the fourth season is broadcast on Fridays at 21.45. Together with Romas' previous show Konstantinou kai Elenis, episodes of the first three seasons of Kafe tis Charas have been re-run almost daily since the end of the show's original run, making it one of the most popular and recognisable shows in the history of Greek television. The show is produced by Kostas Lychnaras and written and directed by Charis Romas and Anna Chatzisofia. The show stars Charis Romas (who also wrote and starred in Mama Mia, Oi Men Kai Oi Den and Konstantinou kai Elenis) as the ultraconservative mayor of a fictional village in Arcadia, who is obsessed with preventing Chara (lit. Joy) Chaska, an Athenian single mother, played by Renia Louizidou, from opening a café (the eponymous Kafe tis Charas) in his village. The series also stars Joyce Eveidi, Vassilis Chalakatevakis, Kostas Flokatoulas, Christina Tsafou, Foteini Demiri, Haris Grigoropoulos, Stelios Goutis, Rania Ioannidou, Sofia Moutidou, Periklis Lianos, Dimitris Tsakalas, Hara/Chara Ismirou/Ismyrou, Dimitrios Macheras and Giannis Papathanas(s)is.

To kafe tis Charas
Το καφέ της Χαράς
Created byCharis Romas
Anna Chatzisofia
Written byCharis Romas
Anna Chatzisofia
Directed byKostas Lychnaras
Takis Michael
StarringCharis Romas
Renia Louizidou
Joyce Eveidi
Gerasimos Skiadaresis
Opening theme"Beautiful Eggs" by Spike Jones
Country of originGreece
Production
Running timeapprox. 45 to 50 minutes (55 to 60 min with commercials)
DistributorStudio ATA
Release
Original networkANT1
Picture formatHDTV 1080i
Original releaseSeptember 3, 2003 
today
External links
Website

Reruns of Kafe tis Charas were one of the first Greek programs to air with closed captioning for the hearing impaired. In August 2018, Haris Romas announced that "To Kafe tis Charas" will return for a 4th Season in 2020.[1][2] The new season premiered on New Year's Eve 2019, to record ratings.[3]

Opening sequence

The instrumental opening of "Beautiful Eggs" by Spike Jones serves as the opening and closing theme song in Seasons 1-3 and as the opening theme as of Season 4.

The original opening credits show photos of the cast as children inside children's drawings of the village's buildings (the town hall, Chara's cafe, the bakery etc.), while a drawing of a hot air balloon flies above. The Season 4 opening credits feature the same children's drawings (without the childhood photographs), transforming one by one into updated 3D cartoon renderings, with exception of Chara's cafe, which is shown burning down (reflecting the fourth season's central plot point).

For the show's return in 2019, a new closing theme called "Put on a coffee" (Βάλε ενά καφέ), was recorded by Michalis Hatzigiannis, with lyrics by Haris Romas, and was a released as a single to coincide with the premiere of Season 4.

Plot

The story begins in Athens, with Chara Chaska (Renia Louizidou), a single mother who works at an advertising agency. When her boyfriend and fellow co-worker steals her ideas for a campaign and gets promoted instead of her, she decides to quit her job and move with her 10-year-old daughter Valia (Effie Rassia) to the remote mountain village of Kolokotronitsi (Κολοκοτρωνίτσι, named after Theodoros Kolokotronis), in Arcadia, where she has just inherited some property.

Chara's hopes for a peaceful life away from the cutthroat environment of the big city are quickly dashed when she meets the village's traditionalist and misogynist mayor Periandros Popotas (Περίανδρος Πώποτας), who has a pathological hatred of everything "modern" and views the very presence of an Athenian woman with an illegitimate child in his village as a threat to his idyllic community's motto of "Order and Morality" (Τάξις και Ηθική). A British-educated folklorist with a mysterious past, Periandros lives with his ten-year-old son Emmanuel, who develops a crush on Valia, and their housekeeper Tasia.

Popotas is particularly outraged at Chara's plans to open a modern cafeteria (which she calls "To cafe tis Charas", literally "The cafe of joy", a pun on her name) and rallies the villagers to boycott her.

The first season focuses on Chara's struggle to open her café against Periandros' machinations and follows her slowly winning the villagers over to her side, culminating in her attempt to unseat Popotas at municipal elections in the penultimate episode. The second season explores the protagonists' backstories, through the arrival in the village of various characters from their past. The third season has Chara and Periandros develop feelings for each other, and follows their doomed efforts to find a way to live to together despite their deeply contrasting beliefs. Season 4, set 14 years after the third season's cliffhanger ending, follows a now adult Valia returning to the village to investigate the cafés destruction in a mysterious fire.

Other characters include Periandros' sister, Stavroula, her adulterous, lazy and linguistically challenged husband, Vangellis, who as the village's coffee house owner is also Chara's main competitor, the village idiot Trelantonis whom Chara takes in, the bakers, Lefteris and Kanella, who have a long-running feud with the greengrocers, Tasos and Chaido over a fig tree (only to have their feud resolved when their children, Billy and Gogo get together and eventually marry), the village's priest Papa-Triantafyllos and his gossiping wife Marika and Aglaia, the wacky teacher who is madly in love with Periandros and fantasizes about marrying him.

About the village

The village features a square where its bakery, its greengrocers, its primary school and the city hall are all located. A number of neighboring villages are also mentioned many times in the series: Megalochori (lit. Big Village), the biggest village of the region, Ano and Kato Kremasta (lit. Upper and Lower Dangling) and Pera Rachoula.

Trivia

  • The fictionsl village of Kolokotronitsi is portrayed by Karia village in Argolis in the Peloponnese
  • Effie Rassia, the actress who plays Chara's daughter Valia, is the niece of protagonist Haris Romas in real-life
  • The scenes for the café were in fact shot in Kallithea, Athens
  • The actor who plays Trelantonis, Charis Grigoropoulos is actually married to Foteini Demiri that plays Kanela

Music

The show features an eclectic soundtrack which makes heavy use of tracks from classic movies, as well as mid-20th century Greek and foreign hits and classical music. Alan Silvestri, Joaquin Rodrigo and Jon Brion play a lot through the series. For example, in a scene where Aglaia performs voodoo, in order to make Periandros fall in love with her, Halloween (1978 movie) theme song plays in the background. A number of songs were also composed and recorded by various prominent Greek artists especially for the series, with lyrics written by Haris Romas.

Cast

CharacterCast
Mayor Periandros Popotas
Περίανδρος Πώποτας (Δήμαρχος)
Charis Romas
Chara Chaska
Χαρά Χάσκα
Renia Louizidou
Stavroula Fatsea
Σταυρούλα Φατσέα
Tzoys (Joyce) Eveidi
Vangelis Fatseas
Βαγγέλης Φατσέας
Gerasimos Skiadaresis
Trelandonis or Trelantonis
Τρελαντώνης
Charis Grigoropoulos
Kanela Poulopoulou
Κανέλα Πουλοπούλου
Foteini Demiri
Lefteris Poulopoulos
Λευτέρης Πουλόπουλος
Vasilis Chalakatevakis
Chaido Polymenea
Χάιδω Πολυμενέα
Christina Tsafou
Tasos Polymenas
Τάσος Πολυμενέας
Kostas Flokatoulas
Marika
Μαρίκα (Παπαδιά)
Rania Ioannidou
Papa-Triandafyllos
Παπα-Τριαντάφυλλος
Stelios Goutis
Aglaia
Αγλαΐα (Δασκάλα Α')
Sofia Moutidou
Theodoros (Mayor's Assistant)
Θεόδωρος (Βοηθός Του Δήμαρχου)
Periklis Lianos
Tasia
Τασία
Maria Kanellopoulou
Matoula
Ματούλα
Chara Smyrou
Billy Polymeneas
Μπίλλυ Πολυμενέας
Dimitris Tsakalas
Dionysis
Διονύσης
Dimitris Machairas (actor)
Emanouil Popotas
Εμμανουήλ Πώποτας
Paris Skartsolias
Vallia Chaska
Βάλλια Χάσκα
Efi Rasia
gollark: Not really.
gollark: > I mean if humans and robots have different rights, is a human-born cyborg human or robot?Well, as somewhat biological beings they should probably get base sophont rights + relevant partial biological being rights.
gollark: ...
gollark: SENTIENT just means conscious. SOPHONT approximately means "human-like thinking capacity" so they should definitely™ receive humanish rights.
gollark: > What about humans that have upgraded their body to be half robotic?Half-robotic humans should probably get human rights too.

References

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