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<p style="text-align:center">If you wish to contribute, please read our [[Coronation Street Wiki:Manual of style|manual of style]] first.</p> <p style="text-align:center">Pages which need creating are listed as "wanted pages" below</p> |
<p style="text-align:center">If you wish to contribute, please read our [[Coronation Street Wiki:Manual of style|manual of style]] first.</p> <p style="text-align:center">Pages which need creating are listed as "wanted pages" below</p> |
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<p style="text-align:center">[[Corriepedia|Overview]] | [[:Category:Browse|Browse]] | [[:Special:Categories|Categories]] | [[Special:Wantedpages|Wanted pages]] | [[Coronation Street Wiki:List of Corriepedia contributors|Users]] | [[Forum:Index|Discussion]] | [[Corriepedia:To_Do_List|To do list]] | [[Special:Random|Random page]]</p> |
<p style="text-align:center">[[Corriepedia|Overview]] | [[:Category:Browse|Browse]] | [[:Special:Categories|Categories]] | [[Special:Wantedpages|Wanted pages]] | [[Coronation Street Wiki:List of Corriepedia contributors|Users]] | [[Forum:Index|Discussion]] | [[Corriepedia:To_Do_List|To do list]] | [[Special:Random|Random page]]</p> |
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Revision as of 13:53, 3 June 2020
This wiki was created on 21st May 2008, and currently has 25,963 articles.
If you wish to contribute, please read our manual of style first.
Pages which need creating are listed as "wanted pages" below
Overview | Browse | Categories | Wanted pages | Users | Discussion | To do list | Random page
Coronation Street is a British soap opera which chronicles the lives of the residents of a backstreet terrace in Weatherfield, a fictional town in the north of England. Created by Tony Warren and produced by Granada Television and then ITV plc for the country's main commercial network, it was first transmitted on 9th December 1960 and is the world's longest-running television drama series.
~ 1982 ~
The new outdoor set was ready for filming by May. Costing £170,000 to build, the backlot was a scaled up version of the one at Grape Street in most respects, with the main differences being the new No.7, and an alleyway between the Rovers Return and No.1. The houses were proper concrete-and-brick structures but nevertheless still too small and impractical to permit shooting interior scenes there. The new house, built by Len Fairclough within the programme's narrative, was designed by Peter Shuttleworth, winner of an office competition at BDP. Shuttleworth drew up plans for a modern brick house in light morter with Georgian-style windows, marking it out from the rest of the row.
The set was officially opened by Queen Elizabeth II and the Duke of Edinburgh on 5th May. The royal visit was organised by the Lord Lieutenant of Lancashire when planning the Queen's route in the Castlefield area of Manchester when she was in the city to open a new library. Escorted by Granada executives David Plowright and Sir Denis Forman, the Royal couple made their way down the length of the street, meeting and greeting Tony Warren, producer Bill Podmore, writer H.V. Kershaw, the programme's original designer Denis Parkin, and the entire cast, who were stood outside the houses where their characters either lived or worked (where applicable) and wearing their characters' best clothes.
To celebrate 60 years of Coronation Street on television, we're going through the programme's entire history a year at a time. The full version of this article can be found here. Check back on 10th June for 1983!
Josie Clarke
Josie Clarke was a short-term Coronation Street resident who moved into No.5 with Don Brennan after his marriage to Ivy ended. In 1996, Josie and Don were scammed into buying MVB Motors at an inflated price by Mike Baldwin, who employed Josie as office manager at his factory Baldwin's Sportswear. When the garage went into receivership due to Don's poor business decisions, Don turned against Josie, causing her to leave him. Away from Don, Josie's life improved and as of 1997 she was married to a doctor.
Previous featured characters: Evelyn Plummer; Jacob Hay; Zoe Tattersall; Ivy Brennan; Oliver Battersby; Summer Spellman.
...that Anthony Schaeffer holds the current record of most roles in the programme with fifteen credited to date?
...that the first episode of the programme ever transmitted that did not feature any of the original cast members from 1960 was Episode 1428 (23rd September 1974)?
...that Stanley Wood, who wrote Episode 1237 (22nd November 1972), was the father of comedian Victoria Wood?
...that in Episode 1183 (17th May 1972), the character of Rita Bates gave her maiden name as "Foster" and not the later-established "Littlewood"?
...that although the character of Armistead Caldwell had died in 1935, his voice was heard in Episode 1256 (29th January 1973)?
...that the first ever repeat of an episode of Coronation Street was on Friday 10th February 1961 when strike action prevented the transmission of that night's edition and Episode 1 was shown in its place?
"Out! You're poison, Tanya, always were and always will be. I was a fool to have ever given you a second chance. I want you out of here now, and I never want to see your evil little face in my pub ever again!"
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Bet Gilroy to Tanya Pooley |
Refresh for another quote
19th April 1999: On the eve of her wedding to Roy Cropper, Hayley Patterson was despondent that none of her friends seemed bothered about a hen night but she was delighted when the girls took her round to 5 Coronation Street and unveiled a party with plenty of food and drink to consume and - a special gift - a train specially made in Underworld to go with her wedding dress. Far less happy when he returned home after the party was Les Battersby who found that his house had been used as a venue for "that freak" but that was nothing compared to when Janice gleefully told him that she had sold his prized record collection to pay for the party. Les swore vengeance...
- For more information see Episode 4597 (19th April 1999).
Coronation Street transmission patterns by country:
Australia
- New episodes: Monday-Friday & Sunday 7.15pm (UKTV)
- Current Pace: Two weeks behind UK broadcast
Canada
- New episodes: Monday to Friday 7.00pm and 12.00am - two episodes on Fridays (CBC)
- Omnibus: Sunday 8.00am
- Current Pace: Two weeks behind UK broadcast
Ireland
- New episodes: simulcast with UK (UTV Ireland and Virgin Media One)
- Weekly episodes repeated on Sunday afternoons
New Zealand
- New episodes: Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday 9.30pm (TVNZ 1)
- Current Pace: One week behind behind UK broadcast
United States
- New episodes: Released to stream just after UK broadcast (BritBox)
- Current Pace: In line with UK schedule
United Kingdom
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