
The Rag Trade
1 9 6 1 - 1 9 6 3 (UK)
37 x 30 minute episodes
1 9 7 7 - 1 9 7 8 (UK)
22 x 30 minute episodes
Some
British workers adopted a new mood of militancy in 1961, all because of
a comedy series. The Rag Trade featured Peter Jones as Mr Fenner,
harassed boss of East-End 'sweatshop' Fenner Fashions and Reg Varney as
his foreman, Reg.
Leading the workers was Miriam Karlin starring as trade union shop
steward, Paddy, who with a blast on her whistle was only too happy to
declare "Everybody out!".
Rag Trade regulars were Barbara Windsor, Wanda Ventham, Esma
Cannon as little Lily (who used to be good at buttonholes but wasn't the
same once zips came in) and Sheila Hancock.
In her book Ramblings of an Actress, Sheila Hancock recalls
how she used to suffer badly from nerves before performances. She said
that she and Miriam Karlin would 'take one of those lovely purple
heart-shaped pills a nice doctor gave us' with a bath and a glass of
champagne to help the nerves. It subsequently took Sheila months to
shake off her addiction!
Although most episodes involved a conflict between the boss and the
staff, the plots were usually resolved by having everyone pull together,
which kept the atmosphere at Fenner Fashions comfortable rather than
hostile.

Peter Jones's role typically was as straight man to the women, and
Reg Varney fared little better as his foreman, stuck in the dichotomous
position of having a foot in both camps - management and workforce.
Minor cast changes occurred from season to season, but major
restructuring was necessary for the third series, after the departure of
Cannon and Hancock. Barbara Windsor, who had played a minor role in the
first series, returned to become Judy, Reg's love interest; and Irene
Handl was cast as Reg's chatty mother who came to work as Fenner's
bookkeeper.
Scriptwriters Ronald Wolfe and Ronald Chesney went on to create a new
series for Reg Varney (On The Buses), before returning with a
revival of The Rag Trade in 1977.
The BBC rejected the new series and the writers took it to LWT, but
only Miriam Karlin and Peter Jones returned in their original roles.
Anna Karen reprised her On The Buses role of Olive in the new Rag
Trade, with the cast also featuring Gillian Taylforth (who went on
to fame as Kathy Beale in EastEnders).
The decade had changed but things were much as before at Fenner's and
the central storylines still revolved around the conflicts between
Fenner and paddy. Reg was replaced by the young and naive Tony (played
by Christopher Beeny - best known as Edward from Upstairs Downstairs
- and a Barbara Windsor type (Diane Langton) played the buxom Kathy.
After fifteen girls had been sacked at a real-life Derbyshire
electronics firm, the stewards ordered an all-out strike. The firm's
boss lamented "I think this is a case of the girls watching too
much Rag Trade". Other fashion bosses complained that the
series gave a poor impression of the industry and working conditions.
A stage version of The Rag Trade (with most of the TV cast)
ran at the Piccadilly Theatre in London in 1962 and 1963, and the series
has been remade around the world under various other titles, including
Scandinavia's Fredericksson's Fabriks (1989-94), Belgium's Freddy
Tex (1994) and Portugal's Trapos and Company (1995).
A 1978 US version (The Rag Business) failed to go beyond the
ABC pilot.
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