Sam Saturday | |
---|---|
Genre | Police procedural |
Created by | Alvin Rakoff |
Written by | Stanley Price Stuart Hepburn Arthur McKenzie John Milne |
Directed by | Alan Dossor Alvin Rakoff |
Starring | Ivan Kaye Peter Armitage Doreen Mantle Dennis Victory Michael Elwyn David Fleeshman Simon Slater |
Composer | Rick Wentworth |
Country of origin | United Kingdom |
Original language | English |
No. of series | 1 |
No. of episodes | 6 (list of episodes) Preview warning: Page using Template:Infobox television with "list_episodes" parameter using self-link. See Infobox instructions and MOS:INFOBOXPURPOSE. |
Production | |
Executive producers | Verity Lambert Nick Elliott |
Producer | Sharon Bloom |
Production locations | London, England |
Editor | Jake Bernard |
Running time | 50 minutes |
Production companies | Cinema Verity LWT |
Original release | |
Network | ITV |
Release | 27 June 8 August 1992 | –
Infobox instructions (only shown in preview) |
Sam Saturday is a British television police procedural series, broadcast between 27 June and 8 August 1992. The six-part series produced by Cinema Verity in association with LWT, broadcast on ITV, follows the work of DI Sam Sterne (Ivan Kaye), a Jewish police detective, as he struggles to balance the demands of the job with his private life.[1] The series was created by writer and director Alvin Rakoff, and was produced by the production company of executive producer Verity Lambert.[2] The series was just one of a number of commissions made by LWT controller of drama Nick Elliott in 1991, following the announcement that both The Ruth Rendell Mysteries and Inspector Morse were to cease production.[3]
The first episode of the series finds Sterne moving back in with his mother, Rita (Doreen Mantle), after a messy divorce. Three episodes of the series were written by acclaimed writer Stanley Price.[4] Despite good reception, in the light of both Inspector Morse and The Ruth Rendell Mysteries returning to the ITV schedules, a second series was never commissioned. In 2013, Kaye stated in an interview that he was grateful to have "his own series at 30", and explained how the series allowed him to break through into other television roles, as well as securing a leading West End role within six months of the programme's broadcast.[5]