Dear Ladies (TV Series 1983–1985) Poster

(1983–1985)

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7/10
a drag sitcom on the BBC!
didi-522 May 2009
Dr Evadne Hinge (George Logan) and Dame Hilda Bracket (Patrick Fyffe) were a well regarded and extremely funny drag act whose act revolved around anecdotes from the past and the occasional song - Dame Hilda having been in grand opera during the war and Dr Evadne having been a great pianist.

'Dear Ladies' was the first attempt to open out their act beyond the confines of the stage and give a sense of their background away from the bright lights. Co-written with Gyles Brandreth, it is undemanding, funny, and likable - much like their stage act. Here we see them shopping, attending the village fête, bickering over their house, and so on.

There's nothing offensive or ground-breaking here, and if you're familiar with the ladies' stage act, you'll probably like this. Fyffe in particular made a very convincing woman, and both had voices in perfect range for the popular standards and operetta they sang. This series should raise a few smiles and laughs if you're so inclined.
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Gentility and Innuendo
hernebay8 June 2001
Hinge and Bracket enjoy a well-deserved cult following in the UK for their extraordinary act. This consists of two quite obviously camp men pretending, with staggering verisimilitude, to be two bickering elderly spinsters who perform as a musical duo. Dame Hilda Bracket and Dr Evadne Hinge are singer and accompanist respectively, inhabiting a world of old-fashioned gentility in the fictional home-counties village of Stackton Tressell. It is difficult to convey the essence of their brilliant act, but it arises both from the tension between their creators' real and assumed identities, and that between the sexless gentility of their surroundings and the raunchy innuendo of their catty exchanges. "Dear Ladies" was an attempt to distil their stage act into a situation-comedy format. I was an avid admirer of the show when it was originally screened, but have not had the opportunity to re-view it, since it has never, to the best of my knowledge, been repeated. (I sincerely hope that the videotapes have not been wiped.) I do recall, however, that it was one of the most consistently hilarious comedy shows I have ever seen, and I would dearly love to see it again.
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10/10
Dear Ladies
andynwlad18 November 2006
Superb early 1980's comedy from the BBC, combing the gentle but often slightly caustic world of Dr Evadne Hinge and the wonderful Dame Hilda Bracket (sadly no longer with us) a crying shame that this has never been released on DVD, thank goodness for the Hinge and Bracket fan club for us fans. If you ever get the chance to see these episodes, look out for a pre corrie Kevin Kennedy and Beverly Callard in minor roles. My favourite moments are Dame Hilda's many conflicts with the ever shssshing librarian. As Dame Hilda herself would have said..ah quality. So settle down with a glass of sherry and a roaring fire to enjoy those dear ladies at their very best.
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10/10
From start to finish, this is an absolute joy.
Sleepin_Dragon4 January 2019
Dear Ladies is a quite wonderful BBC sitcom, made at a time when the BBC knew how to make a sitcom, provide escapism, and knew how to make us laugh.

The series focuses on the goings on at Utopia Ltd, a country cottage, home to Dame Hilda Bracket and Doctor Evadne Hinge, set in the quirky fictional village of Stackton Tressel.

Patrick Fyffe and George Logan are just magical as the comedy duo. Their delivery is flawless, the situations always hilarious, it is just feel good comedy. For me, the biggest enjoyment comes from Dame Hilda's constant jibes towards Evadne, always putting her down, in the most wonderful, caustic manner. I always love the phone calls to Teddy, and the subsequent acid remarks towards poor Peggy.

My DVD's are so overplayed I should consider investing in a second set, it doesn't matter on my mood, this duo always make everything seem so much better, a vision of a gentler, more simple life.

Classic comedy, 10/10
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1/10
Awful
welshNick7 January 2008
Warning: Spoilers
In what has to be one of the truly terrible series ever made on television we, the license paying viewers, were subjected to a quite awful drag act. I have never enjoyed drag acts anyway but I do accept that they have their place in some cabaret shows and obviously in 'certain' clubs. Where this all went so badly wrong is the fact that they tried, very unsuccessfully, to actually portray themselves as women. It centred around these 2 'women' being portrayed as musical spinsters.The only way a drag act can ever work is if the performer makes no secret of the fact that he/she is portraying themselves as the opposite sex. I believe this show ended up on the radio before dying a death. One never knows in todays society of political correctness whether or not more shows like this will be encouraged ..... one hopes not !!!! Avoid at all costs though it was such rubbish I doubt it will ever get repeated.
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