ToddB
Thursday 17th February 2011 1:35pm [Edited]
Townsville
563 posts
How sad it is that this sophisticated, subtle, warm and witty comedy drama will not be back for another series. There is such a list of 'English Village'-type shows out there, and this was something completely different.
There are the regular dramas, with a hint of comedy, that have run for years and years beyond their original cast's involvement in the show and past the use by date of the concept. They often become unbearably soapy and sentimental and yet are still commissioned to return.
Then there are the comedies which, like most popular comedies, rely on repetitive puns and gags, verbal humour consisting of increasingly silly similies that are sometimes funny, sometimes grating, and slapstick and toilet humour - in this case often involving farm animals and thier bodily functions - surely a recipe for hilarity! Often they are warm.
The third category implies that the hedgerows and woods of the English country are full of homicidal maniacs at a level that would place the UK alongside Iraq in terms of travel warnings.
Jam & Jerusalem was never meant to be a laugh-out-loud comedy. It was a keenly observed and unsentimental portrait of the English country designed to provoke a wry smile, an odd chuckle and the occasional tear. Why must all comedies have the same effect and be made in the same style? This was really intelligent writing - looking at the reality behind the grotesque masks of its characters. Sal's (Sue Johnston) coping with the death of her husband is one of the most honest portrayals of grief I've seen in television - no breaking down, just getting on with it as best as you can, making a brave face so that others do not worry too much and comforting those who have come to comfort you. There is, of course, humour in that irony!
Cancelling this show was a great loss - this was Jennifer Saunders demonstrating her unique versatility as a comedian and virtuousity as a writer.