Sugar Rush (British TV series): Difference between revisions
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{{Tone|date=December 2007}} |
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{{Infobox television |
{{Infobox television |
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| image = Sugar Rush.JPG |
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| image_size = 220 |
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| genre = [[Romance film|Romantic]]-[[dramedy]] |
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| image_size = 220px |
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| creator = Katie Baxendale |
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| runtime = 30 minutes (including adverts) |
| runtime = 30 minutes (including adverts) |
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| starring = [[Olivia Hallinan]] |
| starring = {{plainlist| |
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* [[Olivia Hallinan]] |
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* [[Lenora Crichlow]] |
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* [[Sara Stewart]] |
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* [[Richard Lumsden]] |
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* [[Sarah-Jane Potts]] |
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}} |
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| country = United Kingdom |
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| producer = {{plainlist| |
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* [[Johnny Capps]] (series 1–2) |
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| num_series = 2 |
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* Lowri Glain (series 2) |
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| first_aired = {{start date|2005|6|7|df=y}} |
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}} |
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| last_aired = {{end date|2006|8|17|df=y}} |
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| executive_producer = Julian Murphy |
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| opentheme = "[[One Way or Another]]" by [[Blondie (band)|Blondie]] |
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| based_on = {{based on|''[[Sugar Rush (novel)|Sugar Rush]]''|[[Julie Burchill]]}} |
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| num_episodes = 20 |
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| camera = [[Single-camera setup|Single-camera]] |
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| list_episodes = List of Sugar Rush episodes |
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| cinematography = Jim O'Donnell |
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| website = http://www.channel4.com/programmes/sugar-rush |
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| country = United Kingdom |
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| network = [[Channel 4]] |
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| num_series = 2 |
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| first_aired = {{start date|2005|6|7|df=y}} |
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| last_aired = {{end date|2006|8|17|df=y}} |
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| opentheme = "[[One Way or Another]]" by [[Blondie (band)|Blondie]] |
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| num_episodes = 20 |
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| list_episodes = List of Sugar Rush episodes |
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| company = [[Shine TV]] |
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}} |
}} |
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'''''Sugar Rush''''' is a British television comedy drama series developed by [[Shine TV]] and broadcast by [[Channel 4]], based on the [[Julie Burchill]] [[Sugar Rush (novel)|novel of the same name]]. It is centred on the life of |
'''''Sugar Rush''''' is a British television teen comedy drama series developed by [[Shine TV]] and broadcast by [[Channel 4]], loosely based on the [[Julie Burchill]] [[Sugar Rush (novel)|novel of the same name]]. It is centred on the life of 15-year-old lesbian Kim Daniels, who has moved from [[London]] to [[Brighton]] on the south coast of England. Throughout the series, Kim is forced to cope with her dysfunctional family; her burgeoning sexuality; and her infatuation with Sugar, a heterosexual girl. |
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== |
==Cast== |
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From the beginning of the first series, main character Kim is adamant that she is sexually obsessed with her best friend, Sugar. Her strong feelings for Sugar motivate her to do anything for her friend, even when Sugar takes advantage of Kim's eagerness. |
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* [[Olivia Hallinan]] - Kimberly Daniels, fifteen-year-old protagonist and narrator of the series |
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Kim enters Sugar's world of casual sex, cigarettes, the over-consumption of alcohol and illegal drugs. The main theme of series 1 is for Kim to accept her feelings for Sugar even though Sugar is heterosexual. The last episode of Series 1 exemplifies the lengths that Kim is willing to go to for her friend. In the next series, Kim attempts to build a relationship with a young woman, Saint. |
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* [[Lenora Crichlow]] - Maria 'Sugar' Sweet, a teenager who lives life without thinking of the consequences |
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* [[Sarah-Jane Potts]] - Saint (real name Sarah), lesbian sex-shop owner and part-time club DJ |
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* Kurtis O'Brien - Matt Daniels, Kimberly's confused and alienated younger brother |
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* [[Sara Stewart]] - Stella Daniels, Kimberly and Matt's mother |
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* [[Richard Lumsden]] - Nathan Daniels, Kimberly and Matt's father |
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* [[Andrew Garfield]] - Tom, Kimberly's next-door neighbour |
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* Jalaal Hartley - Mark Evans, Saint's ex-boyfriend |
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* [[Laura Donnelly]] - Beth, Kim's friend and love interest |
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* [[Neil Jackson]] - Dale, a handyman who has an affair with Stella |
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* [[Anna Wilson-Jones]] - Anna, a womaniser who seduces Kimberly |
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==Plot== |
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Sugar has little time for serious activities in her life and there is little which causes her to worry. She spends the majority of her time drinking alcohol, socialising and having casual sex with men. In spite of their different backgrounds, Sugar and Kim soon become close friends. |
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The first series of Sugar Rush opens with fifteen-year-old Kim (Hallinan) moving to Brighton with her family, and developing a crush on her best friend - heterosexual girl Sugar (Crichlow). Maria 'Sugar' Sweet loves reckless drinking, copious sex with men, and doesn't care for school. The series follows Kim as she tries to gain Sugar's affections, leading to Sugar taking advantage of her kindness. |
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Side plots of series one include Kim's mother Stella (Stewart) having an affair, Kim's brother Matt (O'Brien) thinking he's an alien, and Kim's neighbour Tom (Garfield) desperately trying to date her. |
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Sugar is accustomed to using her good looks in order to get what she wants. Sexy, sassy and street-wise, she becomes a bad influence on Kim. She encourages Kim to drink alcohol and eventually entangles Kim in a variety of situations. Sugar has an addictively electric personality that attracts people, especially Kim. It should also be stated that Kim's love for Sugar almost borders on obsession. Kim seems to be her only close friend and she rarely hangs out with any other girlfriends. She only has intermittent relationships with the men in her life. |
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In series two, eighteen months have passed and Kim learns to leave Sugar behind and go on dates with other women, particularly Saint (Potts), who becomes her serious girlfriend. However, Sugar remaining in Kim's life, albeit not romantically, causes friction in Kim's relationship with Saint. |
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Sugar constantly teases Kim about her sexuality. At times, it seems as if she does not realise the great extent to which her words hurt Kim. In Series 2, Sugar is incarcerated in a young offenders institute. She is in custody because she stabbed a man who was attempting to rape her. This occurred in the last episode of Series 1, where it is the first time she breaks down in tears. Sugar, however, is then quick to take charge of the situation by stealing a car with Kim and driving to London where they spend the night in a posh hotel. |
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Side plots in series two include Stella and Nathan (Lumsden) attending sex therapy and becoming more adventurous in their sex life, Sugar's problematic relationships, and Matt exploring his feminine side. Andrew Garfield does not reprise his role as Tom. |
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Sugar exhibits a more vulnerable side of her when she tells Kim that she feels really lonely in prison. She reveals that Kim is the only person in her life who has not abandoned her since she has been imprisoned. In the third episode of the second series, it is implied that Sugar slept with one of the female prison guards in order to have her sentence reduced. Whatever the case, Sugar is then released from prison. This causes friction between Kim, Sugar and Kim's new girlfriend, Saint. |
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In Episode 3 of Series 2, it is revealed that Saint is still friends with her ex-boyfriend, which causes some friction in her relationship with Kim. During Episode 5 of Series 2, Kim is caught cheating on Saint with rocker Montana which results in Kim overdosing on the beach. After several hallucinations, Kim repeatedly calls Saint apologising profusely before collapsing. When she awakes, Kim mistakenly believes Sugar saved her life. She later discovers that it was actually Saint who saved Kim's life. Sugar later confesses to Kim that it was actually Saint who saved her. Saint asks Kim to move in with her near the end of series two. Kim accepts although she has reservations. She confesses to Sugar that she does not want to move in with Saint because she always wondered what would have happened between herself and Sugar if the latter had not been arrested. When Sugar has convinced Kim that, although they 'have their moments,' they would argue too much. Kim returns to Saint and tells her that she will move in, leaving Sugar crying in a cafe. In episode 7 of series 2, Saint tells Kim she loves her. |
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==Character listing== |
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;Kimberly Daniels:Fifteen-year-old Kimberly (Kim) is the protagonist of the series. She narrates her experiences, which focus primarily on her sexuality and her quest for love. She is a lesbian. |
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;Maria "Sugar" Sweet:Sugar, whose real name on the show is Maria Sweet, is a teenager who lives life without thinking of the consequences. |
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;Saint:Saint (whose real name is Sarah) is a young woman who works during the day in a female-orientated [[sex toy]] shop (called ''The Munch Box'') and by night as a [[DJ]] at the CC (short for [[Clitoris|Clit]] Club{{citation needed|date=June 2011}}). She is described the protagonist as attractive, assertive and confident. Saint was introduced in the first episode of Series 2, where she bumped into Kim on the street. Both noticed that here was a certain chemistry between the two and after several failed attempts at dating, they become girlfriends. |
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;Matt Daniels:Matt is Kim's confused and alienated younger brother who believes he is from a different planet. Matt is desperate for attention from his parents and others. He does not appear to have any friends, although this changes in series 2. He goes to extreme lengths to get noticed, even to the point of turning everything he owns blue including himself and his hamster. He also shows a lack of knowledge when it comes to sexuality. For example, at one stage he believes that he is [[menstruating]]. |
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:As far as Kim is concerned, Matt is just her brother who wanders round with a goldfish bowl on his head. He completes a remarkable transformation into a goth for series two. He begins to experiment with cross-dressing. He even borrows Stella's underwear. In one episode Kim bribed him to stay in the house while she left to visit her girlfriend Saint while she was supposed to be babysitting him by trading her lip-glosses in return for his silence. |
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;Stella Daniels:Stella is married to Nathan and is Kim and Matt's mother. She seems to be more interested in having sex than being a mother. Stella rarely is seen to do anything meaningful and does not appear to have a profession. She often does not take the time to care for her children properly. Her cavalier attitude seems to hurt Matt more than Kim. |
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:She spends a lot of her time trying to cover the tracks of her extra-marital activities from Nathan, whom she still loves. She attempts to justify her behaviour by stating that 'when you've had two kids and you've been living with the same man for 15 years the sex isn't that great'. |
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;Nathan Daniels:Nathan is described by Kim as 'half man, half pinny'. Nathan endeavours to be a good father but is completely ignorant of anything going on around him especially when it comes to his family. He comes across as being very nervous all of the time. He appears to live life in his own dream world where his family is stereotypical- his wife is faithful, his son is normal, his daughter is straight and doing well at school, and Brighton is the perfect escape from London. |
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:Nathan has grown into an adult without realising, and has slowly become completely unexciting. He takes full responsibility for all of the cooking and the housework. He never asks Stella to help with the housework. For example, when he sees Stella attempting to wash her own clothes when she contracts scabies, Nathan is shocked because Stella does very little to help around the house. He has very nearly 'tidied himself out of a marriage', and does not have much luck when he decides to try to spice things up. When he makes his 'sexy dessert,' Stella ends up being admitted to the hospital. |
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There were a number of supporting characters. Tom is Kim's next-door neighbour, the son of two gay men who has to deal with being called names himself. After telling Kim that he's not gay, she tells him she is. Mark Evans is the ex-boyfriend of Kim's current lover, Saint. He sparks a confrontation between the pair when Kim accuses her of "pretending to be gay". Beth only appears for two episodes of the first series of Sugar Rush, but makes a strong impression on Kim. When we first meet her we think she's trying to "un-gay" herself at the church meeting, but we later learn it is just to see 'who she can pull'. She brings a normality to Kim's life, and seems really interested in Kim, which in turn causes Kim to believe she's over Sugar. She is in fact not, and the last time we see Beth she is alone on the pier, after being stood up. Dale appears in seven of the ten episodes in Series 1. He is a handsome [[handyman]] who embarks on an affair with Kim's mother Stella. He was portrayed as a slob and it seemed like he had no real feelings for Stella and was just seeing her for sex. Anna is a beautiful womaniser who can be charming when she wants to be. She wasted no time in seducing Kim and wasted even less time discarding her after they'd had sex together, leaving Kim feeling used and humiliated. She is described by Kim as a 'psycho bitch.' |
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==Background/production== |
==Background/production== |
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There were 2 series of the programme |
There were 2 series of the programme; the first airing in 2005 and the second in 2006. Each series consists of ten episodes, each 30 minutes long, including adverts. Episodes do not have individual titles. |
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Channel 4 stated that Sugar Rush |
In March 2007, Channel 4 stated that ''Sugar Rush'' would not be returning for a third series. A spokeswoman claimed that third and fourth series were never planned, but series producer Johnny Capps stated he was "surprised and disappointed at Channel 4's decision not to recommission ''Sugar Rush''". He claimed that he "certainly had lots of ideas of where to take the next series" and was "sad not to be able to finish Kim and Sugar's story properly". Capp stated despite Channel 4 claiming no further seasons were ever planned, he was told privately that the reason for the cancellation was that there was no scheduling spot for the show anymore.<ref name="cancellation">{{cite web|url=http://lovegirls.co.uk/articlecomments/12/Channel+4+Cancels+Sugar+Rush/|title=Channel 4 cancels Sugar Rush|publisher=Lovegirls.co.uk|access-date=2007-03-29|url-status=dead|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080515144650/http://lovegirls.co.uk/articlecomments/12/Channel+4+Cancels+Sugar+Rush/|archive-date=15 May 2008|df=dmy-all}}</ref> |
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Hallinan and Crichlow subsequently spoke out about the cancellation, saying, "the show was an asset to Channel 4. I don't think Channel 4 recognises ''Sugar Rush'' was a brave move and did really well for the channel," and adding that the cancellation, "was a last minute thing, especially the way we leave series two, it sets things up for series three."<ref>{{cite web|url=http://lovegirls.co.uk/articlecomments/21/Sugar+Rush+Interview+-+Part+2/|title=Sugar Rush Interview - Part 2|website=LoveGirls.co.uk|last=Turner|first=Toni|access-date=2008-06-05|url-status=dead|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080515144905/http://lovegirls.co.uk/articlecomments/21/Sugar+Rush+Interview+-+Part+2/|archive-date=2008-05-15|df=dmy-all}}</ref> |
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A decision had been made to allow new dramas to be made for each month in 2008. However, a spokeswoman confirmed that third and fourth series were never planned, and that the story of the girls had run its course.<ref name="cancellation"/> |
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Hallinan and Crichlow subsequently spoke out about the cancellation, saying, "the show was an asset to Channel 4. I don't think Channel 4 recognises ''Sugar Rush'' was a brave move and did really well for the channel," and adding that the cancellation, "was a last minute thing, especially the way we leave series two [i.e. with Sugar moving in with Kim and Saint and Stella's pregnancy], it sets things up for series three."<ref>{{cite web|url=http://lovegirls.co.uk/articlecomments/21/Sugar+Rush+Interview+-+Part+2/|title=Sugar Rush Interview - Part 2|website=LoveGirls.co.uk|last=Turner|first=Toni|access-date=2008-06-05|url-status=dead|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080515144905/http://lovegirls.co.uk/articlecomments/21/Sugar+Rush+Interview+-+Part+2/|archive-date=2008-05-15|df=dmy-all}}</ref> |
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==Cast information== |
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The main characters are Kimberly Daniels, her family and friends. Kimberly Daniels is played by [[Olivia Hallinan]]. Her father, Nathan, is played by [[Richard Lumsden]]. Kurtis O'Brien plays her younger brother Matt. [[Lenora Crichlow]] plays Maria "Sugar" Sweet. "Saint", Kim's girlfriend in series 2, is played by [[Sarah-Jane Potts]]. |
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There are several supporting characters. Kim's next-door neighbour Tom is played by [[Andrew Garfield]]. [[Jalaal Hartley]] is Saint's ex-boyfriend Mark Evans. [[Laura Donnelly (actress)|Laura Donnelly]] plays Kim's friend and love interest, Beth. Dale ([[Neil Jackson]]) embarked on an affair with Kim's mother Stella. Anna ([[Anna Wilson-Jones]]) seduced Kim and wasted no time discarding her |
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==Broadcast== |
==Broadcast== |
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The first episode of the second series was broadcast on Channel 4 on 15 June 2006, and the last episode was aired on 17 August 2006 on Channel 4, and on 10 August 2006 on digital channel [[E4 (channel)|E4]]. |
The first episode of the second series was broadcast on Channel 4 on 15 June 2006, and the last episode was aired on 17 August 2006 on Channel 4, and on 10 August 2006 on digital channel [[E4 (channel)|E4]]. |
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Series one currently airs on [[OutTV (Canada)|OUTtv]] in Canada. |
Series one currently airs on [[OutTV (Canada)|OUTtv]] in Canada. The whole show is available in the UK on the [[Channel 4 (VoD service)|Channel 4 streaming service]]. |
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==Reception== |
==Reception== |
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On 20 November 2006 Sugar Rush (A Shine Production for Channel 4, United Kingdom) was awarded the 34th International [[Emmy Awards|Emmy Award]] classified under "Children & Young People". It ran against "Boys Will Be Boys" (Monster Film for NRK, Norway), "Elias - The Little Rescue Boat" (Filmkameratene AS, Norway) and "Johnny and the Bomb" (Childsplay Television, United Kingdom). |
On 20 November 2006 ''Sugar Rush'' (A Shine Production for Channel 4, United Kingdom) was awarded the 34th International [[Emmy Awards|Emmy Award]] classified under "Children & Young People". It ran against "Boys Will Be Boys" (Monster Film for NRK, Norway), "Elias - The Little Rescue Boat" (Filmkameratene AS, Norway) and "Johnny and the Bomb" (Childsplay Television, United Kingdom). |
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It was nominated for the Best Drama Series [[BAFTA]] Television Award in April 2007 - along with ''[[Life on Mars (British TV series)|Life on Mars]]'' and ''[[Shameless (British TV series)|Shameless]]'' - but lost to ''[[The Street (British TV series)|The Street]]''.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.bafta.org/site/page129.html|title=BAFTA winners & nominees|publisher=Bafta.org|accessdate=2007-05-20}}</ref> |
It was nominated for the Best Drama Series [[BAFTA]] Television Award in April 2007 - along with ''[[Life on Mars (British TV series)|Life on Mars]]'' and ''[[Shameless (British TV series)|Shameless]]'' - but lost to ''[[The Street (British TV series)|The Street]]''.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.bafta.org/site/page129.html|title=BAFTA winners & nominees|publisher=Bafta.org|accessdate=2007-05-20}}</ref> |
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[[Lenora Crichlow]]'s portrayal of the central character Maria |
[[Lenora Crichlow]]'s portrayal of the central character Maria 'Sugar' Sweet inspired Burchill to write the 2007 sequel novel ''Sweet''.<ref>''[[The Independent]]'', 5 October 2007, [https://www.independent.co.uk/arts-entertainment/books/features/julie-burchill-where-a-wild-thing-went-395956.html Julie Burchill: Where a wild thing went]</ref> |
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== Discrepancies with the novel == |
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The TV series is a very loose adaptation of the 2004 novel of the same name, keeping only partial character names and the same overall location. Showrunner Katie Baxendale admitted in a 2015 interview that "we took the main characters from the book, basically, and changed the story completely''".'' Baxendale later remarked that upon reading the changes made to ''Sugar Rush,'' Burchill contacted her over email and encouraged her to alter the story more, saying "change what the bloody hell you want, I love it!''".''<ref>{{Citation |title=BBC Writersroom interviews: Katie Baxendale | date=11 October 2015 |url=https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=R_MEMHbzsLg |access-date=2023-12-28 |language=en}}</ref> As such, the series is barely connected to Burchill's novel. |
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In the novel, Kim Lewis (Daniels in the series) is portrayed as a judgemental 'posh-girl', who is forced to move from her private girls school to infamous local comprehensive Ravendene. There, she befriends Maria 'Sugar' Sweet, the most popular girl in school and the leader of a clique of mean-girls called the 'Ravers'. Sugar introduces Kim to the world of drink, drugs, and sex, leading to a rift between Kim and her childhood best friend, Zoe 'Saint' Clements. |
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The events of the novel take place almost entirely within Ravendene, with a narrative involving many high-school drama tropes. Kim's mother Stella is barely present in the novel, having moved to the Bahamas before the novel begins, with a younger man whom she met whilst decorating his house. Further discrepancies are present in the characteristics of Sugar and Saint; Sugar is white in the novel, and is portrayed as vapid and unintelligent, whilst Saint is a middle-class black girl, who Burchill describes through Kim as being ''<nowiki/>'<nowiki/>''black like Samantha Mumba's black''','' and having an 'unrealistic black accent' that she 'picked up off Jerry Springer'. Saint is Kim's long-time best friend in the novel, the two having known each other long before Sugar's appearance. |
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While the novel has been largely criticised for its prose, stereotyping, and poor characterisation,<ref>{{Cite news |last=Staff |first=AfterEllen.com |date=2006-06-14 |title=Another Summer Sugar Rush - AfterEllen |language=en-US |work=AfterEllen |url=https://afterellen.com/another-summer-sugar-rush/ |access-date=2023-02-20}}</ref><ref>{{Cite news |last=Cooke |first=Rachel |date=2004-09-04 |title=Her book is worse than her bite |language=en-GB |work=The Observer |url=https://www.theguardian.com/books/2004/sep/05/fiction.booksforchildrenandteenagers |access-date=2023-02-20 |issn=0029-7712}}</ref> the series has been conversely praised for its departure from the source material,<ref>{{Cite news |last=Warn |first=Sarah |date=2005-06-22 |title=A Different Kind of "Sugar Rush" - AfterEllen |language=en-US |work=AfterEllen |url=https://afterellen.com/a-different-kind-of-sugar-rush/ |access-date=2023-02-20}}</ref> with modern retrospectives regarding it as a landmark in sincere LGBT representation in British television.<ref>{{Cite web |title=Sugar Rush: the re-released lesbian sitcom reminds us that queer programming still has a long way to go |url=https://www.radiotimes.com/tv/drama/sugar-rush-the-re-released-lesbian-sitcom-reminds-us-that-queer-programming-still-has-a-long-way-to-go/ |access-date=2023-02-20 |website=Radio Times |language=en}}</ref> |
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==Media information== |
==Media information== |
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Both series |
Both series of ''Sugar Rush'' have been released on [[DVD]] box-sets. The first series' box-set was released on 15 August 2005. The second series box-set, and a combined series one and two box-set were released on 21 August 2006. An audio [[Compact Disc|CD]] compilation of some of the first series' licensed music was also released, but a similar release for series 2 was never made. |
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=== Home media differences === |
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The DVD releases of ''Sugar Rush'' almost entirely remove the licensed songs that make up the show's soundtrack, and have them replaced with royalty-free alternatives produced by stock music label Audio Network PLC. The version of the show on Channel 4's video-on-demand service retains the original soundtrack, and is to date the only official source of the show with its broadcast audio intact. |
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The DVD version also contains some additional dialogue, in the form of new narration asides from Kim that are conspicuously absent from the original broadcast and on-demand versions. The reason for this discrepancy is unknown. |
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==References== |
==References== |
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==External links== |
==External links== |
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* {{Official website|http://www.channel4.com/programmes/sugar-rush|Sugar Rush}} |
* {{Official website|http://www.channel4.com/programmes/sugar-rush|Sugar Rush}} |
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* [http://sugarrush.0catch.com The Sugar Rush Site] |
* [http://sugarrush.0catch.com The Sugar Rush Site] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20070518181312/http://sugarrush.0catch.com/ |date=18 May 2007 }} |
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* [https://web.archive.org/web/20061019014047/http://www.afterellen.com/TV/2006/7/sugarrush.html Article: Fans Hooked on Second Series of Sugar Rush] |
* [https://web.archive.org/web/20061019014047/http://www.afterellen.com/TV/2006/7/sugarrush.html Article: Fans Hooked on Second Series of Sugar Rush] |
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* [https://web.archive.org/web/20060929224001/http://www.iemmys.tv/index.html 34th International Emmy Awards] |
* [https://web.archive.org/web/20060929224001/http://www.iemmys.tv/index.html 34th International Emmy Awards] |
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* {{IMDb title|0452568|Sugar Rush}} |
* {{IMDb title|0452568|Sugar Rush}} |
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* {{tv.com show|sugar-rush-uk|Sugar Rush}} |
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{{InternationalEmmyAward Children and Young People}} |
{{InternationalEmmyAward Children and Young People}} |
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{{DEFAULTSORT:Sugar Rush (Tv Series)}} |
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[[Category:2005 British television series debuts]] |
[[Category:2005 British television series debuts]] |
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[[Category:2006 British television series endings]] |
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[[Category:2000s British |
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[[Category:2000s British sex comedy television series]] |
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[[Category:2000s British teen television series]] |
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[[Category:Television shows based on British novels]] |
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[[Category:Television shows set in Brighton]] |
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Latest revision as of 08:36, 14 December 2024
Sugar Rush | |
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Genre | Romantic-dramedy |
Created by | Katie Baxendale |
Based on | Sugar Rush by Julie Burchill |
Starring | |
Opening theme | "One Way or Another" by Blondie |
Country of origin | United Kingdom |
No. of series | 2 |
No. of episodes | 20 (list of episodes) |
Production | |
Executive producer | Julian Murphy |
Producers |
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Cinematography | Jim O'Donnell |
Camera setup | Single-camera |
Running time | 30 minutes (including adverts) |
Production company | Shine TV |
Original release | |
Network | Channel 4 |
Release | 7 June 2005 17 August 2006 | –
Sugar Rush is a British television teen comedy drama series developed by Shine TV and broadcast by Channel 4, loosely based on the Julie Burchill novel of the same name. It is centred on the life of 15-year-old lesbian Kim Daniels, who has moved from London to Brighton on the south coast of England. Throughout the series, Kim is forced to cope with her dysfunctional family; her burgeoning sexuality; and her infatuation with Sugar, a heterosexual girl.
Cast
[edit]- Olivia Hallinan - Kimberly Daniels, fifteen-year-old protagonist and narrator of the series
- Lenora Crichlow - Maria 'Sugar' Sweet, a teenager who lives life without thinking of the consequences
- Sarah-Jane Potts - Saint (real name Sarah), lesbian sex-shop owner and part-time club DJ
- Kurtis O'Brien - Matt Daniels, Kimberly's confused and alienated younger brother
- Sara Stewart - Stella Daniels, Kimberly and Matt's mother
- Richard Lumsden - Nathan Daniels, Kimberly and Matt's father
- Andrew Garfield - Tom, Kimberly's next-door neighbour
- Jalaal Hartley - Mark Evans, Saint's ex-boyfriend
- Laura Donnelly - Beth, Kim's friend and love interest
- Neil Jackson - Dale, a handyman who has an affair with Stella
- Anna Wilson-Jones - Anna, a womaniser who seduces Kimberly
Plot
[edit]The first series of Sugar Rush opens with fifteen-year-old Kim (Hallinan) moving to Brighton with her family, and developing a crush on her best friend - heterosexual girl Sugar (Crichlow). Maria 'Sugar' Sweet loves reckless drinking, copious sex with men, and doesn't care for school. The series follows Kim as she tries to gain Sugar's affections, leading to Sugar taking advantage of her kindness.
Side plots of series one include Kim's mother Stella (Stewart) having an affair, Kim's brother Matt (O'Brien) thinking he's an alien, and Kim's neighbour Tom (Garfield) desperately trying to date her.
In series two, eighteen months have passed and Kim learns to leave Sugar behind and go on dates with other women, particularly Saint (Potts), who becomes her serious girlfriend. However, Sugar remaining in Kim's life, albeit not romantically, causes friction in Kim's relationship with Saint.
Side plots in series two include Stella and Nathan (Lumsden) attending sex therapy and becoming more adventurous in their sex life, Sugar's problematic relationships, and Matt exploring his feminine side. Andrew Garfield does not reprise his role as Tom.
Background/production
[edit]There were 2 series of the programme; the first airing in 2005 and the second in 2006. Each series consists of ten episodes, each 30 minutes long, including adverts. Episodes do not have individual titles.
In March 2007, Channel 4 stated that Sugar Rush would not be returning for a third series. A spokeswoman claimed that third and fourth series were never planned, but series producer Johnny Capps stated he was "surprised and disappointed at Channel 4's decision not to recommission Sugar Rush". He claimed that he "certainly had lots of ideas of where to take the next series" and was "sad not to be able to finish Kim and Sugar's story properly". Capp stated despite Channel 4 claiming no further seasons were ever planned, he was told privately that the reason for the cancellation was that there was no scheduling spot for the show anymore.[1]
Hallinan and Crichlow subsequently spoke out about the cancellation, saying, "the show was an asset to Channel 4. I don't think Channel 4 recognises Sugar Rush was a brave move and did really well for the channel," and adding that the cancellation, "was a last minute thing, especially the way we leave series two, it sets things up for series three."[2]
Broadcast
[edit]The first series was broadcast in 2005 on Channel 4, at 10:50 p.m, but would sometimes air later due to Big Brother 6 UK over-running, with the next episode on E4 afterwards, sometimes overlapping the Channel 4 broadcast. The programme was shown significantly after the watershed.
The first episode of the second series was broadcast on Channel 4 on 15 June 2006, and the last episode was aired on 17 August 2006 on Channel 4, and on 10 August 2006 on digital channel E4.
Series one currently airs on OUTtv in Canada. The whole show is available in the UK on the Channel 4 streaming service.
Reception
[edit]On 20 November 2006 Sugar Rush (A Shine Production for Channel 4, United Kingdom) was awarded the 34th International Emmy Award classified under "Children & Young People". It ran against "Boys Will Be Boys" (Monster Film for NRK, Norway), "Elias - The Little Rescue Boat" (Filmkameratene AS, Norway) and "Johnny and the Bomb" (Childsplay Television, United Kingdom).
It was nominated for the Best Drama Series BAFTA Television Award in April 2007 - along with Life on Mars and Shameless - but lost to The Street.[3]
Lenora Crichlow's portrayal of the central character Maria 'Sugar' Sweet inspired Burchill to write the 2007 sequel novel Sweet.[4]
Discrepancies with the novel
[edit]The TV series is a very loose adaptation of the 2004 novel of the same name, keeping only partial character names and the same overall location. Showrunner Katie Baxendale admitted in a 2015 interview that "we took the main characters from the book, basically, and changed the story completely". Baxendale later remarked that upon reading the changes made to Sugar Rush, Burchill contacted her over email and encouraged her to alter the story more, saying "change what the bloody hell you want, I love it!".[5] As such, the series is barely connected to Burchill's novel.
In the novel, Kim Lewis (Daniels in the series) is portrayed as a judgemental 'posh-girl', who is forced to move from her private girls school to infamous local comprehensive Ravendene. There, she befriends Maria 'Sugar' Sweet, the most popular girl in school and the leader of a clique of mean-girls called the 'Ravers'. Sugar introduces Kim to the world of drink, drugs, and sex, leading to a rift between Kim and her childhood best friend, Zoe 'Saint' Clements.
The events of the novel take place almost entirely within Ravendene, with a narrative involving many high-school drama tropes. Kim's mother Stella is barely present in the novel, having moved to the Bahamas before the novel begins, with a younger man whom she met whilst decorating his house. Further discrepancies are present in the characteristics of Sugar and Saint; Sugar is white in the novel, and is portrayed as vapid and unintelligent, whilst Saint is a middle-class black girl, who Burchill describes through Kim as being 'black like Samantha Mumba's black', and having an 'unrealistic black accent' that she 'picked up off Jerry Springer'. Saint is Kim's long-time best friend in the novel, the two having known each other long before Sugar's appearance.
While the novel has been largely criticised for its prose, stereotyping, and poor characterisation,[6][7] the series has been conversely praised for its departure from the source material,[8] with modern retrospectives regarding it as a landmark in sincere LGBT representation in British television.[9]
Media information
[edit]Both series of Sugar Rush have been released on DVD box-sets. The first series' box-set was released on 15 August 2005. The second series box-set, and a combined series one and two box-set were released on 21 August 2006. An audio CD compilation of some of the first series' licensed music was also released, but a similar release for series 2 was never made.
Home media differences
[edit]The DVD releases of Sugar Rush almost entirely remove the licensed songs that make up the show's soundtrack, and have them replaced with royalty-free alternatives produced by stock music label Audio Network PLC. The version of the show on Channel 4's video-on-demand service retains the original soundtrack, and is to date the only official source of the show with its broadcast audio intact.
The DVD version also contains some additional dialogue, in the form of new narration asides from Kim that are conspicuously absent from the original broadcast and on-demand versions. The reason for this discrepancy is unknown.
References
[edit]- ^ "Channel 4 cancels Sugar Rush". Lovegirls.co.uk. Archived from the original on 15 May 2008. Retrieved 29 March 2007.
- ^ Turner, Toni. "Sugar Rush Interview - Part 2". LoveGirls.co.uk. Archived from the original on 15 May 2008. Retrieved 5 June 2008.
- ^ "BAFTA winners & nominees". Bafta.org. Retrieved 20 May 2007.
- ^ The Independent, 5 October 2007, Julie Burchill: Where a wild thing went
- ^ BBC Writersroom interviews: Katie Baxendale, 11 October 2015, retrieved 28 December 2023
- ^ Staff, AfterEllen.com (14 June 2006). "Another Summer Sugar Rush - AfterEllen". AfterEllen. Retrieved 20 February 2023.
- ^ Cooke, Rachel (4 September 2004). "Her book is worse than her bite". The Observer. ISSN 0029-7712. Retrieved 20 February 2023.
- ^ Warn, Sarah (22 June 2005). "A Different Kind of "Sugar Rush" - AfterEllen". AfterEllen. Retrieved 20 February 2023.
- ^ "Sugar Rush: the re-released lesbian sitcom reminds us that queer programming still has a long way to go". Radio Times. Retrieved 20 February 2023.
External links
[edit]- 2005 British television series debuts
- 2006 British television series endings
- 2000s British LGBTQ-related drama television series
- 2000s British romantic comedy television series
- 2000s British sex comedy television series
- 2000s British teen television series
- 2000s teen drama television series
- Television shows about adultery
- British surreal comedy television series
- British teen drama television series
- Television shows about casual sex
- Channel 4 television dramas
- British English-language television shows
- Lesbian-related television shows
- Television series about dysfunctional families
- British television series about teenagers
- Television series by Endemol
- Television shows based on British novels
- Television shows set in Brighton
- Television shows about virginity