Citizen Smith

1977

Seasons & Episodes

  • 4
  • 3
  • 2
  • 1
  • 0

EP1 Bigger than Guy Fawkes May 23, 1980

After the failure of their coup, Wolfie and the gang are stuck in jail.

EP2 Changes May 30, 1980

Wolfie and the gang are released from prison and notice that Tooting has changed a lot, so Wolfie thinks of a plan to try and change things back to normal.

EP3 The Final Try Jun 06, 1980

Wolfie plans to try and disrupt a proposed tour of the UK by a multi-racial rugby team from South Africa.

EP4 The Letter of the Law Jun 13, 1980

Wolfie turns up for jury duty and finds out that the trial is for Ronnie Lynch.

EP5 Prisoners Jun 20, 1980

When some unexpected visitors call at the house, it looks like everyone will have a night that they won't forget in a hurry.

EP6 Casablanca Was Never Like This Jun 27, 1980

The Tooting Popular Front hire a private detective to prove that Speed is innocent of the crime that he has been accused of commiting.

EP7 Sweet Sorrow Jul 04, 1980

Trying to save the town that he loves gets Wolfie in a lot of trouble.
7| 0h30m| en| More Info
Released: 12 April 1977 Ended
Producted By:
Country: United Kingdom
Budget: 0
Revenue: 0
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Synopsis

Citizen Smith is a British television sitcom. The show was written by John Sullivan, who later wrote Only Fools and Horses. The pilot was transmitted on 12 April 1977 in the Comedy Special series of one-off plays, and the series proper ran from 3 November 1977 to 31 December 1980. Citizen Smith starred Robert Lindsay as "Wolfie" Smith, a young Marxist "urban guerrilla" living in Tooting, South London, who is attempting to emulate his hero Che Guevara. 'Wolfie' is a reference to the Irish revolutionary Wolfe Tone who used the pseudonym Citizen Smith in order to evade capture by the English. Wolfie is the self-proclaimed leader of the revolutionary Tooting Popular Front, the goals of which are "Power to the People" and "Freedom for Tooting". In reality, he is an unemployed dreamer and petty criminal whose plans fall through because of laziness and disorganisation.

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RaspberryLucozade John Sullivan was working at the BBC as a scenery shifter when he came up with this amusing series about a would-be Marxist who doesn't seem to realise that the '60's are over. During a conversation with producer Dennis Main Wilson, Sullivan told him of a script he had written as a pilot for a sitcom entitled 'Citizen Smith'. Wilson snapped it up and ordered that it be put into production straight away. The pilot, broadcast as part of the 'Comedy Special' series on 12/04/77, was so well-received that a full series followed just seven months later.Robert Lindsay ( who up until this point was best-known for his role as Jakey Smith in ITV's 'Get Some In' ) played freedom fighter Wolfie Smith - leader of the Tooting Popular Front ( who really are not all that popular ). Members of the front include practising Buddhist Ken ( Mike Grady ), clinically depressed Tucker ( Tony Millan ) who according to Wolfie has had 'more kids than 'The Waltons'', violent nut-case Speed ( George Sweeney ) and his tarty girlfriend Desiree ( the gorgeous Anna Nygh ). Stephen Grief played local protection racketeer Harry Fenning but was replaced in the final series by David Garfield as Ronnie Lynch.Wolfie's girlfriend was the lovely Shirley Johnson ( played by Lindsay's then wife, the gorgeous Cheryl Hall ) who still lived at home with her parents - the cantankerous Charles ( who was played by three different actors. Artro Morris in the pilot, Peter Vaughan in series 1 & 2 and Tony Steedman in series 3 & 4 ) and dim-witted Florence ( the much missed Hilda Braid ). Later, Wolfie and Ken ended up lodging with them.The first two series boasted some very funny episodes such as 'Guess Who's Coming To Dinner?' ( Wolfie meets Shirley's parents for the first time ), 'The Hostage' ( Wolfie and the gang endeavour to kidnap an M.P but instead accidentally kidnap Fenning ) and 'Speed's Return' ( Speed is released from jail and is horrified to learn that his girlfriend may be pregnant ) but the final two series, plus the concluding special were rather below-par. Sullivan should have stopped when Hall decided to leave.I personally would not go as far as to say that 'Citizen Smith' was a particularly brilliant show, but it was fun, at first anyway. One episode was titled 'Only Fools & Horses', which went on to become the title of Sullivan's next sitcom. Anyone ever heard of it?
francisdaffyd Was the word Katanga ever used by Wolfie after "Power to the people" quote? I watched the series for all episode 1977 onward. The series brilliantly depicted the many small rebel groups of the era. Wolfies character was exceptional, Shirl his girlfriend was played to perfection and her father and mother were typical of the Old Ways are best Brigade of the time. Any change from the norm was viewed with suspicion and was considered against society and only harm could come from such thoughts and actions. Wolfie and his comrades were a magnificent creation depicting urban unrest in the UK with humour, pathos and with a certain amount of sincerity in the beliefs that society should be changed. Even Wolfies avid avoidance of work in any shape or form and his bumming for drinks and money was humorous and extremely funny. Need to know about Katanga to settle argument.
ShadeGrenade The nearest British television ever got to a 'Fonzie'-type character was Walter Henry 'Wolfie' Smith. In his 'Freedom For Tooting!' T-shirt, khaki jacket, braces, jeans and black beret, he was an ineffectual youthful rebel somehow left over from the '60's, marvellously played by talented Robert Lindsay, fresh from I.T.V.'s 'Get Some In!'. Marxist Wolfie worshipped Che Guevara, and dreamt of 'the glorious day' when the downtrodden working classes rose up en masse and threw off the shackles imposed on them by their capitalist masters. Each episode began with 'The Red Flag' and concluded with Wolfie bellowing: "Power to the people!" often to the bemusement of passers-by. The excellent song over the end credits was sung by Lindsay.Also in the 'Tooting Popular Front' were Buddhist Ken ( Mike Grady ), sad cowboy Tucker ( Tony Millan ), and psychotic criminal Speed ( George Sweeney ). Luckily, Wolfie had an understanding girlfriend in the shape of Shirley ( Cheryl Hall, then Lindsay's wife ), who worked in a record shop. Her father Charles Johnson ( Peter Vaughan ) - a Tory voting chief security guard at Haydon Electronics - didn't see Wolfie's appeal, and disparaged him constantly as 'that long-haired Yeti in plimsolls!". Charlie's wife was Florence, who had an unfortunate habit of saying the wrong thing at the wrong time ( marvellously played by Hilda Braid ). Wolfie stood no chance of realising his dream. When he ran in a local by-election, he only polled six votes. But, rather than simply accept defeat, he ploughed on.This was the first major sitcom to be penned by the great John Sullivan. As you would expect, it is marvellously funny. One of the best episodes was 'The Hostage' in which the T.P.F. kidnapped a man they thought to be their local Tory M.P., only to discover that they had nabbed by mistake protection racketeer Harry Fenning ( Stephen Grief )!Cheryl Hall left after Season 2, as did Peter Vaughan. Shirley went to Italy to work, but her Dad was still around ( played by Tony Steedman ). Stephen Grief's 'Harry Fenning' was replaced in Season 3 by David Garfield's 'Ronnie Lynch'. Arguably the most famous episode was the final one of Season Three, in which the T.F.B. found an abandoned Scorpion tank on Salisbury Plain, and tried to take the reins of power by storming Parliament. But it was a summer recess and the M.P.'s were on holiday. After being in prison for a year, they came back for one final series, which concluded with Wolfie fleeing Tooting, having angered Lynch. 'Citizen Smith' had a good run, and is fondly remembered ( Lindsay was appearing on Broadway some years ago when someone in the crowd yelled "Freedom for Tooting!" ). He may have done other things since, but to me he'll always be 'Wolfie'. Sullivan's next series was the even more successful 'Only Fools & Horses'.We are still waiting for Smith's vision of a socialist utopia to come true. Where are you when we need you, Wolfie?
vella-1 Citizen Smith was my favourite 70s sitcom.The first review on this gives an accurate picture of what it was about, and the people involved.Wolfie is one of lifes eternal losers, with visions of socialist political power (to the people).the most memorable scene I remember was when they launched a protest, and broke into the houses of parliament in order to vioce their disaproval, only to discover that all the MPs were on holiday.There are many similarities between 'Smith' and 'Only Fools & Horses' - the writing in both was superb.Perhaps the BBC & Robert Lindsay would consider a revival of this series, although I feel it is probably better left as it was - simply perfect!