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Cold Feet



 
 
Cold Feet is a British
United Kingdom

The United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland, commonly known as the United Kingdom , the UK or Britain,is a sovereign state located off the northwestern coast of continental Europe....
 comedy drama television series produced by Granada Television
Granada Television

Granada Television is the United Kingdom ITV contractor for North West England. It previously held the "North of England" weekday franchise, which also covered most of Yorkshire, from 1954 until 1968 when its broadcast area was divided into two franchises....
 for ITV
ITV

ITV is a public service broadcasting in the United Kingdom television network of British television broadcasters, set up under the Independent Television Authority to provide competition to the BBC....
. It was created by Mike Bullen
Mike Bullen

Mike Bullen is a United Kingdom-born screenwriter. Bullen grew up in the West Midlands of England, attending the Solihull School and later Magdalene College, University of Cambridge....
, who also wrote most of the episodes, and produced by Christine Langan
Christine Langan

Christine Langan is an English people television producer and film producer. Her career began in the late 1980s when she worked for an advertising company....
, Spencer Campbell
Spencer Campbell

Spencer Campbell is an English television television producer and television director....
 and Emma Benson. The series began on 15 November 1998, following the successful one-off television pilot
Pilot (Cold Feet)

Cold Feet is a one-off British television comedy drama directed by Declan Lowney. It was produced by Granada Television for ITV's Comedy Premieres programming strand and broadcast in 1997....
 broadcast in 1997, and ran for 32 episodes
List of Cold Feet episodes

Cold Feet is a British comedy-drama television series that was written by Mike Bullen and produced by Christine Langan, Spencer Campbell and Emma Benson....
 until 16 March 2003. The series is set in Manchester
Manchester

Manchester is a city and metropolitan borough of Greater Manchester, England. Manchester was granted City status in the United Kingdom in 1853....
 and follows three couples, played by an ensemble cast
Ensemble cast

An ensemble cast is a cast in which the principal performers are assigned roughly equal amounts of importance in a dramatic production. This kind of casting became more popular in television series because it allows for flexibility for writers to focus on different characters in different episodes....
, who have trouble with committing to each other however hard they try.

The cast were not widely known before their appearances in the series but their careers received significant boosts; most of the actors received British Comedy Award nominations and James Nesbitt
James Nesbitt

James Nesbitt is a Northern Irish actor. Born in Ballymena, County Antrim, Nesbitt grew up in Broughshane and Coleraine, County Londonderry. Although he made acting appearances with the Riverside Theatre, Coleraine in his teenage years, he wanted to become a teacher, like his father....
 won Best TV Comedy Actor three times.






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Encyclopedia


Cold Feet is a British
United Kingdom

The United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland, commonly known as the United Kingdom , the UK or Britain,is a sovereign state located off the northwestern coast of continental Europe....
 comedy drama television series produced by Granada Television
Granada Television

Granada Television is the United Kingdom ITV contractor for North West England. It previously held the "North of England" weekday franchise, which also covered most of Yorkshire, from 1954 until 1968 when its broadcast area was divided into two franchises....
 for ITV
ITV

ITV is a public service broadcasting in the United Kingdom television network of British television broadcasters, set up under the Independent Television Authority to provide competition to the BBC....
. It was created by Mike Bullen
Mike Bullen

Mike Bullen is a United Kingdom-born screenwriter. Bullen grew up in the West Midlands of England, attending the Solihull School and later Magdalene College, University of Cambridge....
, who also wrote most of the episodes, and produced by Christine Langan
Christine Langan

Christine Langan is an English people television producer and film producer. Her career began in the late 1980s when she worked for an advertising company....
, Spencer Campbell
Spencer Campbell

Spencer Campbell is an English television television producer and television director....
 and Emma Benson. The series began on 15 November 1998, following the successful one-off television pilot
Pilot (Cold Feet)

Cold Feet is a one-off British television comedy drama directed by Declan Lowney. It was produced by Granada Television for ITV's Comedy Premieres programming strand and broadcast in 1997....
 broadcast in 1997, and ran for 32 episodes
List of Cold Feet episodes

Cold Feet is a British comedy-drama television series that was written by Mike Bullen and produced by Christine Langan, Spencer Campbell and Emma Benson....
 until 16 March 2003. The series is set in Manchester
Manchester

Manchester is a city and metropolitan borough of Greater Manchester, England. Manchester was granted City status in the United Kingdom in 1853....
 and follows three couples, played by an ensemble cast
Ensemble cast

An ensemble cast is a cast in which the principal performers are assigned roughly equal amounts of importance in a dramatic production. This kind of casting became more popular in television series because it allows for flexibility for writers to focus on different characters in different episodes....
, who have trouble with committing to each other however hard they try.

The cast were not widely known before their appearances in the series but their careers received significant boosts; most of the actors received British Comedy Award nominations and James Nesbitt
James Nesbitt

James Nesbitt is a Northern Irish actor. Born in Ballymena, County Antrim, Nesbitt grew up in Broughshane and Coleraine, County Londonderry. Although he made acting appearances with the Riverside Theatre, Coleraine in his teenage years, he wanted to become a teacher, like his father....
 won Best TV Comedy Actor three times. The series was and remains critically acclaimed, winning multiple British Comedy Awards, TRIC Awards, and the British Academy Television Award for Best Drama Series
British Academy Television Award for Best Drama Series

The British Academy Television Award for Best Drama Series is one of the major categories of the British Academy Television Awards , the primary awards ceremony of the British television industry....
. It maintained consistently high viewing figures, regularly beating other channels in head-to-head ratings battles.

Bullen, an inexperienced screenwriter, developed the series as something for people of his class and generation—middle-class thirty-somethings—to watch, as an alternative to soap operas and costume drama
Costume drama

A costume drama is a period piece in which elaborate costumes, Set constructions and Theatrical property are featured in order to capture the ambiance of a particular era....
s. Other British screenwriters, including Danny Brocklehurst
Danny Brocklehurst

Danny Brocklehurst is a BAFTA winning England screenwriter. Brocklehurst worked as a journalist for several years before becoming a full-time screenwriter....
, cite Cold Feet as an influence on their writing. The series was a springboard for the careers of many directors, including Tom Hooper
Tom Hooper (director)

Tom Hooper is an English people film director and television director....
. It has been broadcast in over 34 countries and the format sold to producers in the United States and Italy; American network NBC co-produced a version
Cold Feet (U.S. TV series)

Cold Feet is an United States television series produced by Kerry Ehrin Productions and Granada_Productions#Granada_America for NBC. Based on the United Kingdom series Cold Feet, the series follows three Seattle couples, each at different stages of their romantic relationships....
 that was cancelled after four episodes were aired. Spin-off merchandise has been released, including DVDs, books and soundtracks.

Production

The award-winning pilot
Pilot (Cold Feet)

Cold Feet is a one-off British television comedy drama directed by Declan Lowney. It was produced by Granada Television for ITV's Comedy Premieres programming strand and broadcast in 1997....
 was conceived when Granada Television
Granada Television

Granada Television is the United Kingdom ITV contractor for North West England. It previously held the "North of England" weekday franchise, which also covered most of Yorkshire, from 1954 until 1968 when its broadcast area was divided into two franchises....
's head of comedy Andy Harries
Andy Harries

Andrew Harries is a British television producer and film producer. After graduating from Hull University in the 1970s, Harries began his television career on the Granada Television current affairs series World in Action, before moving on to freelance work....
 sought a television series that would reflect the lives of people from his generation; young professionals who were moving in together for the first time and settling down into family life. Mike Bullen
Mike Bullen

Mike Bullen is a United Kingdom-born screenwriter. Bullen grew up in the West Midlands of England, attending the Solihull School and later Magdalene College, University of Cambridge....
 had written a one-off comedy drama in 1995 called The Perfect Match that features characters from the age group Harries was looking for, so a meeting was set up between Bullen and Granada producer Christine Langan
Christine Langan

Christine Langan is an English people television producer and film producer. Her career began in the late 1980s when she worked for an advertising company....
. Bullen pitched Cold Feet as "boy meets girl, boy loses girl, boy wins girl back", using a series of "cutaway gags" and flashbacks to tell the same story from a different point of view. The initial pitch was based around Adam and Rachel, which would have limited a series appeal, so Harries suggested adding self-contained plots for the other four characters that could be continued should a series be commissioned. Bullen admits to having "tacked on" the plots to the finished script.

The pilot was directed by Declan Lowney
Declan Lowney

Declan Lowney is an Irish television and film director....
 and filmed in 1996, before being shelved for a year by ITV Network Centre. It was broadcast late on 30 March 1997, getting only 3.5 million viewers and little critical attention. Harries submitted it to the jury at the Montreux Television Festival and it was awarded the Rose d'Or
Rose d'Or

The Rose d'Or is a television award. It has been given annually in spring since 1961 at the Festival Rose d'Or. Since 2004, the festival has been held in Lucerne, Switzerland....
, the highest accolade of the festival. A six-part series was commissioned by ITV in late 1997 for broadcast in November 1998.

Casting

The original six cast from the pilot episode returned to the series, all playing the same characters. John Thomson had appeared in The Perfect Match in what Bullen describes as a "proto-Pete role" and Langan "begged him to write a role with [him] in mind". Throughout 1998 Helen Baxendale
Helen Baxendale

Helen Baxendale is an English people actress, known for her roles in Cold Feet, Friends and Cardiac Arrest ....
 (Rachel) had appeared as a recurring guest on the American situation comedy
Situation comedy

A situation comedy, usually referred to as a sitcom, is a genre of comedy programs which originated in radio. Today, sitcoms are found almost exclusively on television as one of its dominant narrative forms....
 Friends
Friends

Friends is an American situation comedy created by David Crane and Marta Kauffman, which premiered on NBC on September 22, 1994. The series revolves around a group of friends in the area of Manhattan, New York City, who occasionally live together and share living expenses....
, considerably raising her profile in the UK. Robert Bathurst
Robert Bathurst

Robert Guy Bathurst is a United Kingdom actor. Bathurst was born in Ghana and raised in Republic of Ireland and England. He took up amateur dramatics while at boarding school and continued acting with the Cambridge Footlights at university, alongside reading for a degree in law....
 (David) had displayed a "disciplined comic energy" as the lead character in the mid-1990s sitcom Joking Apart
Joking Apart

Joking Apart is a BBC television British sitcom written by Steven Moffat about the rise and fall of a relationship. It juxtaposes a couple, Mark and Becky , who meet and fall in love before getting separated and finally divorced....
, while Fay Ripley
Fay Ripley

Fay Ripley is an English people actor, known for her role in the ITV drama Cold Feet....
 (Jenny) and Hermione Norris
Hermione Norris

Hermione Norris is an English actress. Norris attended the London Academy of Music and Dramatic Art in the 1980s before taking small roles in theatre and on television....
 (Karen) had established themselves in smaller roles. Since the pilot aired James Nesbitt
James Nesbitt

James Nesbitt is a Northern Irish actor. Born in Ballymena, County Antrim, Nesbitt grew up in Broughshane and Coleraine, County Londonderry. Although he made acting appearances with the Riverside Theatre, Coleraine in his teenage years, he wanted to become a teacher, like his father....
 (Adam) had made several appearances in the BBC Northern Ireland
BBC Northern Ireland

BBC Northern Ireland is the main public service broadcaster in Northern Ireland.The organisation is one of the three national regions of the BBC, together with BBC Scotland and BBC Wales....
 series Ballykissangel
Ballykissangel

Ballykissangel was a BBC television drama set in Ireland, produced in-house by BBC Northern Ireland. The original story revolved around a young English priest as he became part of a rural community....
. The first series added Jacey Salles
Jacey Sallés

Jacey Sall?s is a United Kingdom actor probably best known for her recurring role as Ramona Ramirez on the ITV programme Cold Feet. In addition to this she has also appeared in Murder Most Horrid, Birds of a Feather and My Family....
 as Ramona Ramirez, Karen and David's eccentric Spanish
Spanish people

Spanish people or Spaniards are a nation or ethnic group native to Spain, in the Iberian Peninsula of southwestern Europe. They are often considered an amalgam of different ethnic groups, rather than an ethnic group by itself....
 nanny. She had appeared in another Granada production, The Misadventures of Margaret (playing another eccentric Spaniard), and was cast after she "did a bit of comic bastardisation of the English language" in her audition. Initially contracted for only two episodes, Salles appeared in 27 of the series' 32 episodes.

Recurring characters appeared throughout the run of the series, including characters played by Lennie James
Lennie James

Lennie James is an English people actor and playwright.CareerJames attended the Guildhall School of Music and Drama, graduating in 1988....
, Mel Martin
Mel Martin

Mel Martin is an England actor. Her father was the Painting Frank Martin .She has appeared in many British television programmes and films including The Pallisers, Love for Lydia, Bergerac, Adam Dalgliesh, Inspector Morse, Lovejoy , Cadfael and Midsomer Murders ....
 and Ben Miles
Ben Miles

Ben Miles is an England actor, best known for his starring role as Patrick Maitland in the United Kingdom TV comedy Coupling , from 2000 to 2004....
. Doreen Keogh
Doreen Keogh

Doreen Keogh is an Republic of Ireland actor. Keogh left school at the age of 15 to train with the Abbey Theatre School, before moving to London....
 played Pete's mum Audrey in a first series episode and was brought back three more times based on the successful on-screen chemistry between her and Thomson. During production of the fourth series Ripley announced she was quitting to pursue other projects, so a replacement actress was found by Spencer Campbell
Spencer Campbell

Spencer Campbell is an English television television producer and television director....
, who travelled to Los Angeles
Los Angeles, California

Los Angeles is the largest city in the U.S. state of California and the List of United States cities by population in the United States. Often abbreviated as L.A. and nicknamed The City of Angels, Los Angeles is rated as a beta global city, has an estimated population of 3.8 million and spans over in Southern California....
 to audition Australia-based actress Kimberley Joseph
Kimberley Joseph

Kimberley Joseph is a Canadian-Australian actor who is based in the United States. Joseph was raised on the Gold Coast, Queensland in Australia and was educated in Switzerland....
. Joseph was hired to play Jo Ellison, the new love interest for Pete.

Writing

An inexperienced screenwriter, Bullen was aided by several script editors during the first series. He based the characters and situations on experiences from his own life; Pete was based on a friend he had known since childhood, and Karen and David on a couple he knew. Rachel was written as a combination of the qualities Bullen saw in a "fantasy girlfriend" while Adam was based on how Bullen himself behaved in his twenties. Storylines were also drawn from the lives of the production crew; the midlife crisis experienced by David in the second series was inspired by an unnamed crew member and the ICSI
Intracytoplasmic sperm injection

Intracytoplasmic sperm injection is an in vitro fertilization procedure in which a single spermatozoon is injected directly into an ovum. This procedure is most commonly used to overcome male infertility problems, although it may also be used where eggs cannot easily be penetrated by sperm, and occasionally as a method of in vitro fertiliza...
 storyline in the third series was inspired by a similar process that Harries and his wife went through.

By the time pre-production on the third series began, Bullen had grown tired of writing the series single-handedly and believed all the stories that could be told had been told. ITV were keen to increase the number of episodes per series to 15 but Granada refused, though did agree to add two more, bringing the total to eight. A writing team of five was assembled, overseen by Bullen. Four of the scriptwriters were deemed not good enough and they parted company with Granada. David Nicholls
David Nicholls (writer)

David Nicholls is an English people novelist and screenwriter....
 remained, scripting four of the eight third series episodes (Bullen wrote the other four, his interest in the series revived). Nicholls did not return for the fourth and fifth series and was replaced by Mark Chappell
Mark Chappell

Mark Chappell is a UK sitcom writer and screenwriter. His credits include My Life in Film , Tony Blair, Rock Star Perfect Day, The Millennium and Cold Feet of Cold Feet ....
 and Matt Greenhalgh
Matt Greenhalgh

Matt Greenhalgh is an English people screenwriter. He created and wrote the BBC television series Burn It, and the television film Legless....
, who each co-wrote an episode with Bullen.

Filming

Filming took place at Granada's Manchester studios and on location around the city for five months a year. Standing sets were constructed in a large warehouse and were designed by Chris Truelove to reflect the characters; Karen and David's home was designed as a spacious detached house intended to be located in Bowdon
Bowdon, Greater Manchester

Bowdon is a village and Wards of the United Kingdom in the Altrincham area of the Trafford, in Greater Manchester, England....
, Greater Manchester
Greater Manchester

Greater Manchester is a metropolitan county in North West England, with a population of List of ceremonial counties of England by population. It encompasses one of the largest metropolitan areas in the United Kingdom and comprises ten metropolitan boroughs: Metropolitan Borough of Bolton, Metropolitan Borough of Bury, Metropolitan Borough of...
, while Pete and Jenny, and Adam and Rachel had smaller middle-class abodes intended to be located in the fictional "Clough End" suburb of Manchester. Langan was keen to avoid a generic sitcom style of filming, citing the formulae of such programmes as "tired and dreary" and lacking emotional depth. To achieve this goal, she and Harries recruited directors with little background in television. These included Nigel Cole
Nigel Cole

Nigel Cole is a United Kingdom film director and television director, who directed the films "Saving Grace ", Calendar Girls and A Lot Like Love....
, who came from an advertising background and was keen to use the two episodes of the first series he was alloted to "make his mark" and establish himself as a serious director. Cole won an audience award at the 2000 Sundance Film Festival
Sundance Film Festival

The Sundance Film Festival is a film festival that takes place annually in the state of Utah, in the United States. It is the largest Independent film cinema festival in the U.S....
 for his work on Saving Grace
Saving Grace (2000 film)

Saving Grace is a Golden Globe-nominated 2000 in film Great Britain comedy film, directed by Nigel Cole and based on a screenplay by Mark Crowdy and Craig Ferguson....
. Other directors included Tom Hooper
Tom Hooper (director)

Tom Hooper is an English people film director and television director....
, who won an Emmy Award
Emmy Award

The Emmy Award, also known as the 'Emmy', is a television production award, similar in nature to the Peabody Awards but more focused on entertainment, and is considered the television equivalent to the Academy Awards....
 in 2006 for his direction of Elizabeth I
Elizabeth I (TV series)

Elizabeth I is a 2005 in television United Kingdom television miniseries directed by Tom Hooper . The screenplay by Nigel Williams concentrates on the last 25 years of the nearly 45-year-long reign of Elizabeth I of England....
, and Ciaran Donnelly
Ciaran Donnelly (director)

Ciaran Donnelly is an Irish people film director and television director. His works include the ITV drama series Cold Feet and Donovan and the BBC One drama Spooks....
 who won an Irish Film and Television Award in 2007 for his serial Stardust.

Exterior location filming in Manchester city centre incorporated many modern buildings and settings as a backdrop, taking advantage of the economic boom the city went through in the 1990s. A successful location shoot on Lindisfarne
Lindisfarne

Lindisfarne is a tidal island off the north-east coast of England also known as Holy Island, the name of the civil parish. It has a population of 162 ...
 for the final episode of the second series lead to the producers agreeing to film away from Manchester at least once a series. This lead to a stag weekend storyline being filmed in Portrush
Portrush

Portrush is a seaside resort town in County Antrim, Northern Ireland, on the County Londonderry border. The main part of the old town, including the Portrush railway station as well as most hotels, restaurants and bars, is built on a mile–long peninsula, Ramore Head, pointing north-northwest....
 for the third series, a location suggested by James Nesbitt, who spent his childhood summers there. Between the third and fourth series, Bullen and Harries did a speaking tour in the Far East
Far East

The Far East is a term current in English language to refer to the countries of East Asia. The term is often expanded to also include Southeast Asia and South Asia, for economic and cultural reasons, for example because Buddhism is common to East Asia, Southeast Asia and South Asia....
 and Australia. As a result, they decided to work a trip to Sydney into the storyline of the fourth series because Australia was "a nice place to go". The main cast and a skeleton production crew were flown out to Sydney to film on location in 2001.

Music

Space's single "Female of the Species
Female of the Species

"Female of the Species" is a song by Space , released as the band's fourth single and second single proper from their debut album Spiders on May 27, 1996, making #14 in the UK charts....
" continued to be used as the theme tune after it was used in the pilot. Langan selected the track after hearing it on The Chart Show
The Chart Show

The Chart Show was an hour-long music video programme which ran in the United Kingdom on Channel 4 between 1986 and 1988, then on ITV between 1989 and 1998....
 and remained in overall charge of music featured in the series during her time as producer. Mark Russell
Mark Russell (composer)

Mark Russell is a British composer whose works include music for the television series Cold Feet, Murder City and Kingdom . He presented Mixing It on BBC Radio 3 from 1990 to 2007, when the programme ended....
 scored incidental music and an alternative main theme, which was nominated for a BAFTA Award for Best Original Television Music in 1999.

Plot summary

The first series
Cold Feet (series 1)

The first series of the British comedy drama television series Cold Feet was first broadcast on the ITV network from 15 November to 20 December 1998....
 opens with the characters addressing the viewer, recapping the events of the pilot episode and aided by clips from it. A continuing plot of the first series depicts Adam and Rachel settling down together as they move into their first home. Pete and Jenny bring up Baby Adam, born in the first episode, and Karen and David hit a rocky patch in their marriage when each almost commits adultery. A brief romantic moment is established between Jenny and Adam in the final episode when they kiss. Rachel discovers that she is pregnant and leaves Manchester and Adam. The second series, broadcast a year later, establishes that nine months have passed on screen. Rachel returns to Manchester and tells Adam she had an abortion, apparently ending their relationship for good. The two reconcile in the fifth episode. Pete has an affair with a colleague after Jenny tells him she no longer loves him, and Karen and David cope following his redundancy.

Pete moves out in the third series as he and Jenny go through a trial separation. She starts seeing businessman Robert Brown while Pete goes to Salsa
Salsa (dance)

Salsa is a dance for Salsa music created by Spanish language-speaking people from the Caribbean and their immigrant communities in the US. Salsa dancing mixes African and European dance influences through the music and dance fusions that are the roots of Salsa: Cuban SonGuaguanc?, Spanish Rumba, Boogaloo, Pachanga, Guaracha, Plena, Bomba, ....
 classes with Ramona, the Marsden's nanny
Nanny

A nanny or childminder is a person who looks after the child or children of another family. Childminding differs from nannying in that a nanny goes to the house of the child in order to care for it; childminders look after the child in the childminder's home....
. Adam and Rachel decide to get married and he almost gets cold feet
Cold feet (metaphor)

Cold feet is a term used to characterize apprehension or doubt strong enough to prevent a planned course of action.It is used to show when someone has lost the courage to do something....
 when he meets an ex-girlfriend on his stag weekend. David has an affair with political activist Jessica Barnes, which is revealed at Adam and Rachel's wedding reception. The repercussions continue through the fourth series
Cold Feet (series 4)

The fourth series of the British television drama Cold Feet aired on the ITV network from 18 November to 10 December 2001. Eight episodes were broadcast over four weeks and the final episode was extended to 72 minutes....
; Karen asks David to move out of the house and turns to alcohol
Alcoholism

Alcoholism is a term with multiple and sometimes conflicting definitions to describe the detrimental effects of alcohol intake.In common and historic usage, alcoholism refers to any condition that results in the continued consumption of alcoholic beverages despite health problems and negative social consequences....
, eventually embarking on an affair with a publisher. Jenny moves away and Pete starts seeing Rachel's friend Jo, who proposes to him in Australia. The two marry in the extended finale and Rachel gives birth in the same episode.

The fourth series was intended to be the last but pressure on Mike Bullen resulted in it coming back for a final series
Cold Feet (series 5)

The fifth series of the United Kingdom comedy drama television series Cold Feet, about three couples, was broadcast on the ITV network from 23 February to 16 March 2003....
 of four episodes in 2003. Adam and Rachel learn parenting skills as they bring up baby Matthew. Their family life is interrupted when Adam's father makes unwanted contact with him. Pete and Jo's fledgling marriage deteriorates when she sleeps with a co-worker. Karen and David seek a divorce from one another, beginning new lives without each other. Rachel is killed in a car accident in the penultimate episode and each of the characters mourn her. The characters each go their separate ways in the finale, and Jenny returns to be with Pete.

Characters

The six core characters were devised to be "regular people, not distinguished by their careers or by crime" and were based on people from Mike Bullen's life. All were introduced in the pilot episode, though the main plot of that focuses mostly on Adam and Rachel, with little screentime given to the other four characters. Occasionally the characters break the fourth wall
Fourth wall

The fourth wall is an element of fiction. Originally, the term referred to the imaginary "wall" at the front of the stage in a proscenium theater, through which the audience sees the action in the world of the Play ....
, addressing the viewers.
  • Adam Williams (played by James Nesbitt
    James Nesbitt

    James Nesbitt is a Northern Irish actor. Born in Ballymena, County Antrim, Nesbitt grew up in Broughshane and Coleraine, County Londonderry. Although he made acting appearances with the Riverside Theatre, Coleraine in his teenage years, he wanted to become a teacher, like his father....
    ) is a womanising "systems analyst" in the pilot, who meets and settles down with Rachel Bradley. Nesbitt was keen to play the role "with no political baggage", believing there to be few Irish characters in contemporary British drama with no connection to The Troubles
    The Troubles

    The Troubles was a period of ethno-political conflict in Northern Ireland which spilled over at various times into England, the Republic of Ireland and Continental Europe....
    . Over the run of the series Adam recovers from testicular cancer
    Testicular cancer

    Testicular cancer is cancer that develops in the testicles, a part of the male reproductive system.In the United States, between 7,500 and 8,000 diagnoses of testicular cancer are made each year....
     and commits to Rachel, despite frequent infidelity with ex-girlfriends and women he meets in bars.
  • Rachel Bradley (played by Helen Baxendale
    Helen Baxendale

    Helen Baxendale is an English people actress, known for her roles in Cold Feet, Friends and Cardiac Arrest ....
    ) meets Adam after crashing her car into his in a supermarket car park. Baxendale had no experience in comedy and was criticised for her lack of comic range. Rachel works for an advertising company, though this features little in the storylines. Her one-night-stand with her ex-husband in the first series leads to an abortion, which causes friction between her and Adam. She gives birth to her first child in the fourth series and dies in the final series after a car accident.
  • Pete Gifford (played by John Thomson) is a childhood friend of Adam's, who often joins his friend at the pub. Pete has often lived in the shadow of his more popular friend and the two have a brief fall-out in the second series over Adam's attraction to his wife Jenny. His affair with a co-worker in the second series eventually leads to his and Jenny's divorce in the fourth series, though they are reunited in the final episode.
  • Jenny Gifford (played by Fay Ripley
    Fay Ripley

    Fay Ripley is an English people actor, known for her role in the ITV drama Cold Feet....
    ) is Pete's unglamorous wife, played by Ripley to be "slightly unlikeable". Jenny gives birth to hers and Pete's first child in the first episode and much of the first series revolves around bringing up the child in his first few months. Following Pete's affair they have a trial separation in the third series, and she starts seeing a dot-com
    Dot-com

    Dot com may refer to:*.com , the generic top-level domain used on the Internet's Domain Name System*dot-com company, a company which does most of its business on the Internet...
     millionaire. Seeing no future in Manchester, she takes a job in New York City
    New York City

    The City of New York is the List of United States cities by population in the United States, while the New York metropolitan area ranks among the List of urban areas by population....
     in the fourth series, taking her son and leaving Pete. She returns in the final episode after a bad break up. Thomson and Ripley describe the Giffords as "all ego and vanity" in reference to the large amount of personal photographs they keep around their house.
  • David Marsden (played by Robert Bathurst
    Robert Bathurst

    Robert Guy Bathurst is a United Kingdom actor. Bathurst was born in Ghana and raised in Republic of Ireland and England. He took up amateur dramatics while at boarding school and continued acting with the Cambridge Footlights at university, alongside reading for a degree in law....
    ) was undeveloped in the pilot script, with a single character note explaining his "high figure earnings". His relationship with his wife Karen deteriorates in the first series after both consider infidelity but improves in the second series when he is made redundant. Taking up community politics in the third series, he has an affair with a local activist, to the detriment of his marriage. He begins divorce proceedings with Karen in the fifth series, and starts a new relationship with his solicitor.
  • Karen Marsden (played by Hermione Norris
    Hermione Norris

    Hermione Norris is an English actress. Norris attended the London Academy of Music and Dramatic Art in the 1980s before taking small roles in theatre and on television....
    ) is a housebound mother in the first series, returning to work as a publisher in the fourth episode. Following David's affair, she starts seeing another man in the fourth series, and the two divorce in the fifth series. Due to Baxendale's absence in a fourth series episode, Karen is the only female character to appear in all episodes.
  • Jo Ellison (played by Kimberley Joseph
    Kimberley Joseph

    Kimberley Joseph is a Canadian-Australian actor who is based in the United States. Joseph was raised on the Gold Coast, Queensland in Australia and was educated in Switzerland....
    ) is introduced in the first episode of the fourth series as one of Rachel's co-workers. She and Karen become friends and she moves in with a single Pete when she is evicted. The two marry in the final episode of the fourth series but he asks for a divorce in the fifth series when she sleeps with a colleague. Jo was originally scripted as a "truck-driving lesbian" type, but the character was toned down when Bullen met Joseph.


An assortment of recurring characters were established, starting with Ramona, Karen and David's nanny, played by Jacey Salles
Jacey Sallés

Jacey Sall?s is a United Kingdom actor probably best known for her recurring role as Ramona Ramirez on the ITV programme Cold Feet. In addition to this she has also appeared in Murder Most Horrid, Birds of a Feather and My Family....
, in the first series. Ramona is portrayed as unaccustomed to English social functions, spending hours making long-distance phone calls to her mother in Spain and having loud subtitled
Subtitle (captioning)

Subtitles are textual versions of the dialog in films and television programs, usually displayed at the bottom of the screen. They can either be a form of written translation of a dialog in a foreign language, or a written rendering of the dialog in the same language, with or without added information to help viewers who are deaf and hard-o...
 arguments with her boyfriend Javier. Bathurst and Salles established an upstairs-downstairs relationship between their characters; Bathurst would never look Salles in the eye during a scene in order to maintain an artificial distance between David and Ramona, while the scripts depicted David speaking to Ramona indirectly through other people. A larger storyline was written for Ramona in the third series and Salles was added to the opening credits in the fourth. Ben Miles and Yasmin Bannerman
Yasmin Bannerman

Yasmin Bannerman is an English people actor of Ghanaian and distant Scotland ancestry. She is descended from the Ghanaian Lieutenant Governor of the former British Gold Coast, James Bannerman, whose mother was a Fanti from Cape Coast and whose father was a Scot from Edinburgh....
 appeared throughout most of the third series as major characters, playing Robert Brown and Jessica Barnes respectively. Sean Pertwee
Sean Pertwee

Sean Pertwee is an England actor.Pertwee was born in London, the son of Ingeborg and Jon Pertwee. He is also the brother of British television actress Dariel Pertwee, grandson of actor/screenwriter Roland Pertwee and more distantly related to actor Bill Pertwee....
 appeared as Mark Cubbit for four fourth series episodes and two fifth series episodes, and Lucy Robinson
Lucy Robinson (actress)

Lucy Robinson is a United Kingdom actress working mostly in television. She has had roles as Robyn Duff in Cold Feet of Cold Feet, Mayoress Christabel Wickham in season two of The Thin Blue Line and Pam Draper in Suburban Shootout....
 and Richard Armitage
Richard Armitage (actor)

Richard Armitage is an England actor....
 played Robyn Duff and Lee, respectively, in the final series.

Reception


Critical reaction

Early reviews of the series were negative; discussing the first episode on The Late Review, Germaine Greer
Germaine Greer

Germaine Greer is an Australian-born writer, academic, journalist and scholar of early modern English literature, widely regarded as one of the most significant Feminism voices of the later 20th century....
 called Nesbitt "especially awful" and Tony Parsons
Tony Parsons (British journalist)

Tony Parsons is a United Kingdom journalist and author.Born in Romford, Parsons grew up on an Essex council estate and began his career as a Music journalism on the New Musical Express, writing about punk music and "taking drugs with the Sex Pistols"....
 expressed disappointment that Nesbitt had not fallen from a scissor lift, that Adam appeared on in the opening scene, and fallen to his death. Offended by the comments, Nesbitt rebutted in an interview with comments about Parsons' attitude. Nicholas Barber, a writer for The Independent
The Independent

The Independent is a United Kingdom Compact newspaper published by Tony O'Reilly's Independent News & Media. It is nicknamed the Indy, with the Sunday edition, The Independent on Sunday, being the Sindy....
, criticised the characters as smug and suggested that Bullen had no imagination when reviewing the first episode, though praised Ripley's performance in other first series episodes. Reviews picked up in the first year as critics grasped the comedy-drama format; Paul Hoggart
Paul Hoggart

Paul Hoggart is a United Kingdom television critic and columnist. He is the youngest son of Richard Hoggart and brother of political journalist Simon Hoggart....
 in The Times
The Times

The Times is a daily national newspaper published in the United Kingdom since 1785 when it was known as The Daily Universal Register.The Times and its sister paper The Sunday Times are published by Times Newspapers Limited, a subsidiary of News International....
 praised the impotence storyline and compared the direction of the episodes to This Life
This Life

This Life was a BBC television drama, produced by World Productions and screened on BBC Two, running for two series in 1996 and 1997 and a reunion special in 2007....
, and previewed the second series with positive remarks about the series trademark fantasy scenes.

The fantasy cutaway scenes, added by Bullen for sophistication and credence, were positively received by critics. In the Journal of British Cinema and Television Greg M. Smith identifies them as having matured considerably by the fourth series and cites (among other examples) David's blind ambition for his family to emigrate to Australia as an example of how the fantasies polarise viewers to ally with a particular character. Smith also describes the fantasies as being less common in serials as they are in soap operas.

In a 2007 feature for The Guardian
The Guardian

Sorry, no overview for this topic
, screenwriter Danny Brocklehurst
Danny Brocklehurst

Danny Brocklehurst is a BAFTA winning England screenwriter. Brocklehurst worked as a journalist for several years before becoming a full-time screenwriter....
 discussed the impact the series has had on British television, including inspiration for one of his programmes, Talk to Me
Talk to Me (TV series)

Talk to Me is a United Kingdom television serial produced by Company Pictures for ITV. The four-part serial began on June 10, 2007 and stars Max Beesley as Mitch Moore, a womanising radio host whose producer is also his best mate and about to get married to Claire ....
. He opined that there had not been a significant television series depicting "the wants and needs of ordinary young adults" since the American series Thirtysomething concluded its run in 1991. Brocklehurst developed Talk to Me in the same manner as Bullen developed Cold Feet, namely by basing its characters on his own experiences and friends. Both Brocklehurst and television critic Mark Lawson
Mark Lawson

Mark Gerard Lawson is an English people journalist, broadcaster and author....
 have discussed similar "copycat" series, including Hearts and Bones, Metropolis, Couples and Wonderful You. Brocklehurst noted that these series "lacked [Cold Feet's] warmth and believability" adding that they were "unrealistic and cynical".

Other critics hailed it as "the British answer to Thirtysomething", precursing Brocklehurst's comments; in 1998, Meg Carter wrote in The Independent, "More than 10 years on, Granada Television has finally produced a modern show that mines the rich seam of a generation that is as confused as it is liberated by increased choice and freedom, and that caters for an audience which has not, traditionally, watched very much ITV". Lawson compared it to the American sitcom Friends
Friends

Friends is an American situation comedy created by David Crane and Marta Kauffman, which premiered on NBC on September 22, 1994. The series revolves around a group of friends in the area of Manhattan, New York City, who occasionally live together and share living expenses....
, a series that is also based around three men and three women and featured Helen Baxendale in a guest role. When he questioned Bullen on whether Friends influenced Cold Feet, Bullen explained that the connection was made by media as "a useful shorthand", that he was irritated by the characters in Friends and "would liked to have taken a baseball bat to them".

Awards

The series won over 20 awards, including the British Comedy Award for Best TV Comedy Drama in 1999, 2000, and 2003. Three of the cast received Best Comedy performance nominations at the 2001 ceremony but did not win, though the series was awarded the AOL People's Choice Award. Mike Bullen was awarded the Writer of the Year award at the 2003 ceremony, and he, Campbell and Harries collected the prestigious British Academy Television Award for Best Drama Series
British Academy Television Award for Best Drama Series

The British Academy Television Award for Best Drama Series is one of the major categories of the British Academy Television Awards , the primary awards ceremony of the British television industry....
 in 2002. The Royal Television Society
Royal Television Society

The Royal Television Society is a United Kingdom-based society for the discussion, analysis and preservation of television in all its forms, past, present and future....
 presented the production staff with the award for Best TV Situation Comedy/Drama in 1999 and the prize for Best Sound in a Drama in 2001. The Broadcasting Press Guild
Broadcasting Press Guild

The Broadcasting Press Guild is a United Kingdom association of journalists who specialise in writing and broadcasting about television, radio and the Mass media generally....
 presented it with the Best Entertainment gong in 1999 (jointly with the BBC sketch comedy
Sketch comedy

Sketch comedy consists of a series of short comedy scenes or vignettes, called "sketches," commonly between one and ten minutes long. Such sketches are performed by a group of comedic actors, either on stage or through an audio or/and visual medium such as broadcasting....
 Goodness Gracious Me
Goodness Gracious Me (TV & radio)

Goodness Gracious Me is a BBC English language sketch comedy show originally on BBC Radio 4 and later televised on BBC Two based on four British Asian actors: Sanjeev Bhaskar, Kulvinder Ghir, Meera Syal and Nina Wadia....
). The Television and Radio Industries Club
Television and Radio Industries Club

The Television and Radio Industries Club is a United Kingdom institution chartered in 1931 to "promote goodwill in the television and radio industries"....
 named it TV Comedy Programme of the Year in 2000.

International versions

Granada Entertainment USA, the American arm of Granada Productions
Granada Productions

Granada Productions is one of Europe's leading commercial television production and distribution companies.Since January 2006, the company has used the name ITV Productions when making programmes for the ITV family of channels....
, tendered the series format to American networks and cable channels from late 1997. The format was sold to NBC, which commissioned 13 60-minute episodes in May 1999 for the fall season, to be produced in association with Kerry Ehrin Productions. The U.S. series
Cold Feet (U.S. TV series)

Cold Feet is an United States television series produced by Kerry Ehrin Productions and Granada_Productions#Granada_America for NBC. Based on the United Kingdom series Cold Feet, the series follows three Seattle couples, each at different stages of their romantic relationships....
 starred David Sutcliffe
David Sutcliffe

image = Replace this image male.svg only free-content images are allowed for depicting living people. Non-free and "fair use" images, e.g. promo photos, CD/DVD covers, posters, screen captures, etc., will be deleted - see...
 as Adam Williams and Jean Louisa Kelly
Jean Louisa Kelly

Jean Louisa Kelly is an United States actress and singer. She was born in Worcester, Massachusetts, Massachusetts, United States.Her father was a high school English teacher and her mother taught piano....
 as Shelley Sullivan (the Rachel role). Low ratings lead to the series being cancelled after four episodes. In 2003 the format was sold to Italian network Mediaset
Mediaset

Mediaset is an Italy commercial television network and it has headquarters in Milan, Lombardy. The network was founded by Silvio Berlusconi, but today it is controlled by his family through Fininvest which has as major shareholder Silvio Berlusconi himself....
 for a 2004 broadcast. In 2008, Polish
Poland

Poland , officially the Republic of Poland , is a country in Central Europe. Poland is bordered by Germany to the west; the Czech Republic and Slovakia to the south; Ukraine, Belarus and Lithuania to the east; and the Baltic Sea and Kaliningrad Oblast, a Russian Enclave and exclave, to the north....
 broadcaster TVN
TVN (Poland)

TVN is a major Poland commercial television network, founded by Mariusz Walter and launched on October 3 1997. TVN belongs to the TVN S.A. Group which in turn is controlled by the ITI_Group, the largest Polska media company, holding around 62% ownership interest as of September 2008....
 secured the rights to a remake from Granada International.

Merchandise

The first of four tie-in books was released in 1999 by André Deutsch Publishing, under licence from Granada Media. Cold Feet: A Guide to Life (ISBN 0233997326) is "flipbook" format, compiled by Jonathan Rice from Bullen's script and presented as if written by the characters. Rice compiled a similar book, published in 2002, called The Little Book of "Cold Feet": Life Rules (ISBN 0233050884). Geoff Tibballs, who had previously written television tie-in books, compiled Cold Feet: The Best Bits (ISBN 0233999248), featuring behind-the-scenes information from the first two series, and script extracts. Shortly after the series concluded, Granada Media published The Complete Cold Feet Companion (ISBN 023300999X) in hardback, written by Rupert Smith and billed as "Everything you ever wanted to know about Cold Feet!" The book sold 961 copies in the first week of publication, making tenth position on the hardback non-fiction chart.

Four soundtracks have been released, featuring music from and "inspired by" the series; Global TV released Cold Feet: The Official Soundtrack and More Cold Feet in 1999 and 2002 respectively, UMTV released The Very Best of Cold Feet in 2003 and EMI Gold released Cold Feet in 2006. Cheatwell Games issued a licensed board game in 2001, which is no longer produced.

Video Collection International (VCI) released all five series on video and DVD in the UK between 1999 and 2003. A complete series box set was released in two versions in November 2003; one collects the individual DVD releases in a cardboard case and the other is an 11-disc set that was sold exclusively by Play.com
Play.com

Play.com is a Jersey-based online retailer of DVDs, Compact Discs, Books, gadgets, video games, digital rights management-free mp3 downloads, and other electronic products, as well as clothing and fashion accessory....
. The bonus disc contains the retrospective documentary Cold Feet: The Final Call as well as new interviews with John Thomson, Andy Harries and Spencer Campbell. A short documentary presented by Thomson provides an overview of the locations used in the series. The 11-disc set was repackaged and put on general release in 2006, published by Granada Ventures Ltd. Another re-release occurred on 1 September 2008 as part of ITV DVD's "ITV Icons" range. The first three series were released in North America by Acorn Media and all series have been released in Australia by Universal.

Series Episodes VHS release date DVD release date
Region 2 Region 1 Region 4
  The Pilot and Complete 1st Series 6 15 November 1999 25 September 2000 25 January 2005 4 February 2002
  The Complete 2nd Series 6 10 April 2000 16 October 2000 26 April 2005 5 December 2006
  The Complete 3rd Series 8 5 November 2001 5 November 2001 26 July 2005 2 February 2007
  The Complete 4th Series 8 25 November 2002 25 November 2002  3 April 2007
  The Complete 5th Series 4 24 March 2003 24 March 2003  1 June 2007
  The Complete Story 33  10 November 2003
26 March 2006 (re-release)
  


Bibliography



External links

  • at the British Film Institute
    British Film Institute

    The British Film Institute is a charitable organisation established by Royal Charter to:...