Sun Club
BACK TO SCHOOL

Grange Hill creator Phil Redmond begs BBC to bring back school drama ‘to end knife crime’

GRANGE Hill's creator believes the BBC need to resurrect the classic school drama to help beat knife crime.

TV supremo Phil Redmond, who also created Brookside, thinks the edgy kids show - which ran from 1978-2008, could educate today's generation about important issues.

Advertisement
.

"But underscoring them would be the root causes -self worth, bullying, loneliness, isolation. Now, though, they'd be illustrated through the pressures of social media."

And Phil has even come up with an idea for how the show could be resurrected.

Advertisement
Grange Hill was set in a North London compCredit: BBC
The show tackled drug abuse with Zammo's storyline

“It could be threatened with closure. But a few of the old characters come together to save it," he revealed.

“Zammo (Lee MacDonald) could lead the campaign, remembering how his friends at school brought him back from the brink.”

Advertisement

Grange Hill was set in a fictional North London secondary school and regularly brought in more than 12 million viewers.

Several of its stars went on to become household names, including Todd Carty who played Tucker and graduated to star as Mark Fowler in EastEnders.

EastEnders Patsy Palmer got her big break on the showCredit: BBC

Another Albert Square legend who got her start in Grange Hill was Susan Tully, aka Michelle Fowler, who played Suzanne Ross in the teen show.

Advertisement

The cast of Grange Hill famously released an anti-drugs song, Just Say No, in 1986, to coincide with the character of Zammo getting hooked on heroin.

The track hit number 5 in the UK charts and even saw the cast visit the White House in the US to spread their message.

MOST READ IN TV & SHOWBIZ

READY TO ROCK?
Glasto fans think 70s band will perform 2yrs after playing with A-lister
PRECIOUS CARGO
Laura Anderson slammed as she moans about flying first class with baby AGAIN
DRAKE SPEAKS
Drake breaks silence after Kendrick Lamar’s Super Bowl halftime show diss
PRICEY NOSE
Katie Price's new nose revealed in first pics without bandages

Grange Hill was axed in 2008 after 30 years, with the BBC claiming the series no longer reflected children's lives.

Children's BBC controller Anne Gilchrist said: "The lives of children have changed a great deal since Grange Hill began and we owe it to our audience to reflect this."

Advertisement
machibet777.com