All Creatures Great And Small
James Herriot's tales of his time as a country vet first
appeared on screen in a 1974 movie starring Simon Ward, followed
by a sequel, It Shouldn't Happen To A Vet, with John
Alderton in 1976.
For the TV series All Creatures Great And Small,
Christopher Timothy was cast as Herriot - a novice vet who joins
the practice of Siegfried Farnon (Robert Hardy) and his
easygoing brother Tristan (Peter Davison, later to become the
fifth incarnation of Doctor Who) in the fictional Yorkshire Dales
town of Darrowby in the 1930s.
The countryside around Askrigg in Yorkshire was used to provide
the location, but it proved difficult to find farm animals who
looked right for the 1930s setting (cows had horns back then).
Right from the start the actors found out what vets'' right
arms are for: shoving up animals'' backsides. Christopher Timothy
soon learned about getting to know a cow in depth, and several
unfortunate cows learned early how easy it is for a novice to take
a wrong turning! But luckily, viewers weren't shown the whole
process until the 1988 series - in which the actors seemed to do
very little else . . .
By 1978 the series had become one of the BBC's biggest
successes. It survived the small scandal of Christopher Timothy's
real romance with his leading lady, Carol Drinkwater, and it
helped to knock Bruce Forsyth's Big Night Out out of the
ratings.
The program came to an end in 1980 after three series'', with
Herriot and Tristan Farnon heading off to World War II. Two
Christmas specials followed in 1983 and 1985, and public pressure
succeeded in bringing about a return for the series in 1988.
The war was now over and Siegfried was married. A new vet,
Glaswegian Calum Buchanan, had joined the practice and Carol
Drinkwater''s Helen Herriot was replaced by Lynda Bellingham.
The sick animals seen in the stories were usually local beasts
with injuries courtesy of the makeup department. Sometimes
expensive shire horses and foals were tranquillised to look
lifeless, with anxious owners looking on.
But operations were genuine ones, actually performed (for
obvious reasons) by real vets, with the actors filmed doing easy
bits. Eddie Straiton, a vet who was friends with the real James
Herriot, was the consultant on the series for a long time.
He was reported as recalling only one occasion when an animal
was operated on unnecessarily. A mongrel dog had been brought into
his surgery to be put down. In the series, James was to operate on
a dog which had swallowed a ball. Straiton anaesthetised the dog,
cut a part of its throat and inserted a squashed ball for
Christopher to remove. The animal recovered completely and was
found a new owner, but the scene upset some of the technicians,
who claimed it was vivisection. Eddie agreed with them and
resolved "never again".
All Creatures Great And Small finished with another high
rating Christmas special in 1990.
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