Dixon of Dock Green

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Dixon of Dock Green
Genre Police procedural
Creator(s) Ted Willis
Starring Jack Warner
Country of origin Flag of United Kingdom United Kingdom
No. of episodes 430
Production
Running time 25 minutes & 45 minutes
Broadcast
Original channel BBC
Original run 9 July 19551 May 1976
Links
IMDb profile

Dixon of Dock Green was a popular BBC television series, which ran from 1955 to 1976, and later a radio series. Despite being a drama series, it was initially produced by the BBC's light entertainment department.

The main character, Police Constable George Dixon, played by Jack Warner, was an old-style British "bobby" (policeman). The character had first appeared in a 1950 British film, The Blue Lamp, in which he was shot and killed by a criminal played by Dirk Bogarde. However, it was decided to bring him back to life for a television series, written by Ted Willis.

Each episode started with Dixon speaking directly to the camera. He always began with a salute and the greeting "Evening all!" (good evening, everyone), which has lived on in Britain as a jocular greeting to a group of people. In similar fashion, episodes finished with a few words from Dixon, often in the form of philosophy on the evils of crime.

Initially, Dixon continued in the same role as in the film The Blue Lamp, a constable based at the fictitious Dock Green police station, somewhere in the East End of London. The character of Andy Mitchell (played by Jimmy Hanley), the young constable in the film, became a detective named Andy Crawford (played by Peter Byrne), in the CID at Dock Green, and he was married to Dixon's daughter Mary (who did not appear in the film).

By the end of the series, Jack Warner was quite elderly, and George Dixon had been promoted to Station Sergeant and given a desk job. In the final series, made when Warner was eighty, Dixon had retired from the police.

In 2005, the series was revived for BBC radio, with David Calder as George Dixon, David Tennant as Andy Crawford, and Charlie Brooks as Mary Dixon. A second series followed in 2006, with Hamish Clark replacing Tennant due to the latter's Doctor Who filming commitments.

The Blue Lamp was produced by Michael Balcon, a former pupil of George Dixon School in Birmingham, which was in turn named after a local politician, George Dixon.

"George Dixon's" original greeting was, "Good Evening All", as it was thought at the time that a Police Constable should "speak correctly". The BBC changed it to "'Evening all" in the early 1970s.[1]

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