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Encyclopedia > Horace Rumpole

Rumpole of the Bailey is a television series created and written by British writer John Mortimer, QC and starring Leo McKern as Horace Rumpole, an aging London barrister who defends any and all clients. It has been spun off into a series of short stories (and one novel, adapting a Rumpole telemovie), and two radio series.


Rumpole loves the courtroom. Despite attempts by his friends and family to get him to move on to a more respectable position for his age, he only enjoys the simple pleasure of defending his clients at The Old Bailey, London's criminal court. He often quotes Wordsworth and secretly calls his wife Hilda "She Who Must Be Obeyed". The stories combine Rumpole's humor with mystery and drama.


Rumpole's first television appearance was on December 3, 1975 in a BBC One Play for Today with Leo McKern in the title role. The BBC was not interested in developing the play into a series, but in 1978 it transferred to ITV as an hour-long Thames Television production with McKern returning to the role and Peggy Thorpe-Bates as Hilda. Hilda was later played by Marion Mathes. Other regular cast members included :

  • Patricia Hodge as Phillida Erskine-Brown, "the Portia of our Chambers";
  • Peter Bowles as Guthrie Featherstone, the former Head of Chambers who later becomes a Judge, with usually hilarious results;
  • Julian Curry as Claude Erskine-Brown, Phillida's husband, "opera buff and hopeless cross-examiner",
  • and Richard Murdoch as Uncle Tom, "the oldest member of chambers, who has not had a brief as long as any of us can remember".

Each season (seven in all, plus a television movie) was accompanied by a book adaptation, also written by John Mortimer. Although the television series ended on December 3, 1992, exactly 17 years after the broadcast of the pilot episode, the books have continued, now containing original stories.


Rumpole: The Splendours and Miseries of an Old Bailey Hack was broadcast by BBC Radio 4 in 1980. Maurice Denham starred as Rumpole and Hilda was played by Margot Boyd. Thirteen episodes were made of adaptations of the pilot episode and the stories from the first two seasons.


In the autumn of 2003 BBC Radio 4 broadcast four new 45-minute Rumpole plays by Mortimer, starring Timothy West as Rumpole and his wife Prunella Scales as Hilda.


External links

  • Horace Rumpole (http://www.thrillingdetective.com/eyes/rumpole.html) at The Thrilling Detective Website (includes comprehensive list of television episodes and books)

  Results from FactBites:
 
Rumpole of the Bailey (619 words)
Rumpole of the Bailey, a mix of British courtroom comedy and drama, aired on Thames Television in 1978.
Rumpole revels in lampooning his fellow colleagues whom he believes to be a group of twits.
Among Rumpole's colleagues he favors the savvy and stylish Phillida Neetrant Erskine-Brown (Patricia Hodge)--one feminist voice of the series who is married to Claude--and the endearing Uncle Tom (Richard Murdoch), an octogenarian waiting to have the good sense to retire--who, in the meantime, practices his putting in chambers.
Law Spot - Rumpole's Last Stand (1101 words)
Horace, of course, had a solid grasp of Shakespeare, but for those few who can't remember the plot of that play, Portia was the character who cross-dressed and made the famous speech: "…the quality of mercy is not strained…".
Rumpole was also the beneficiary of the generations-old feud between the Timsons and the Molloys (the English version of the Hatfields and McCoys).
Rumpole was retained by three generations of Timsons, who typified his view of the criminal world - the Timsons were "good" criminals, not taken to violence but inveterate (though honourable) thieves.
  More results at FactBites »


 

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