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'''''Howards' Way''''' was a [[television]] drama series produced by [[BBC Birmingham]] and transmitted between [[1985]] and [[1990]]. The series dealt with the personal and professional lives of the yachting and business communities in the fictional town of Tarrant on the South Coast of [[England]], and was filmed on the [[River Hamble]] and the [[Solent]]. Most of the filming for the series was carried out in [[Bursledon]], [[Hamble-le-Rice]], [[Swanwick]], [[Warsash]], [[Hill Head]], [[Lee-on-the-Solent]], [[Southampton]] and [[Fareham]] - all in [[Hampshire]].
 
==The Series==
 
''Howards' Way'' was created and produced by [[Gerard Glaister]] at an intriguing point in the [[BBC]]'s history, when the organisation was making a concerted populist strike against [[ITV]] in its approach to programming. ''Howards' Way'' debuted on [[BBC1]] in [[1985]], the same year that the BBC launched their first ongoing [[soap opera]] ''[[EastEnders]]'' as a challenge to the ratings supremacy of ITV's ''[[Coronation Street]]''. Although ''Howards' Way'' is commonly cited as an attempt to provide a British alternative to glossy American sagas such as ''[[Dallas (TV series)|Dallas]]'' and ''[[Dynasty (TV series)|Dynasty]]'', it would be more accurate to describe the series as a continuation of plot themes explored in a previous Gerard Glaister series, ''[[The Brothers (TV series)|The Brothers]]'', which involved a family's personal and professional crises running a road haulage firm and embraced several soap opera touches in its characterisations and storylines.
 
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The main protagonists in the early episodes are the titular Howard family - Tom ([[Maurice Colbourne]]), wife Jan ([[Jan Harvey]]) and grown-up children Leo ([[Edward Highmore]]) and Lynne ([[Tracey Childs]]). Tom is made redundant from his job as an aircraft designer after twenty years and is unwilling to re-enter the rat race again. A sailing enthusiast, Tom decides to pursue his dream of designing and building boats, putting his redundancy pay-out into the ailing Mermaid boatyard, run by Jack Rolfe ([[Glyn Owen]]), a gruff traditionalist, and his daughter Avril ([[Susan Gilmore]]). Tom immediately finds himself in conflict with Jack, whose reliance on the bottle and resentment of Tom's new design ideas, threaten the business, but has an ally in Avril, who turns out to be the real driving force behind the yard with her cool, businesslike brain. Jan, who has spent the last twenty years raising the children and building the family home, is less than impressed with her husband's risky new venture and finds herself pursuing her own life outside the family through establishing a new marine boutique whilst working for flash "medallion man" Ken Masters ([[Stephen Yardley]]).
 
Other major characters introduced during the first series are Kate Harvey ([[Dulcie Gray]]), Jan's sensible and supportive mother, the suave, scheming millionaire businessman Charles Frere ([[Tony Anholt]]) and the wealthy but unhappy Urquhart family. Gerald ([[Ivor Danvers]]) is a financial wizard and the right-hand man of Charles Frere. Polly ([[Patricia Shakesby]]), a friend of Jan's, is a bored corporate wife preoccupied with preserving her social status and their daughter Abby ([[Cindy Shelley]]) is a socially awkward young woman who has returned to Tarrant after completing her education at a Swiss finishing school and who establishes a friendship with Leo Howard. Unlike the comparatively close and secure Howard family, the Urquharts have secrets to hide. Gerald and Polly's marriage is a sham - an arrangement to cover the fact that Gerald is bisexual to give him respectability in the business world and a name to Abby, Polly's illegitimate daughter after an affair at university. Abby herself is pregnant, after a brief relationship in Switzerland.
 
The first series establishes the narrative blueprint for the remainder of the programme's run: combining standard melodramatic storylines involving family drama, romance and extramarital affairs (Tom and Avril, Jan and Ken) with business-related plots of corporate intrigue and scheming for power, climaxing with an end-of-series cliffhanger. In the first series, Lynne Howard is seduced by the ruthless Charles Frere. She runs tearfully across the Tarrant harbour during a rainstorm after finding him in bed with another woman, trips and falls unconscious into the water... Later cliffhangers would involve a fatal water-skiing accident, a plane crash and an accident during a powerboat race.
 
By virtue of being transmitted during the late [[1980s]], ''Howards' Way'' could be described as almost a textbook time capsule of [[Thatcherite]] values, in its portrayal of the years of boom and bust, of individual aspiration and enterprise, and the conspicuous consumption of wealth. The class clashes during the decade were reflected in the character of Ken Masters, a [[nouveau riche]] chancer always involved in shady schemes to establish himself as a credible figure in the business world, but generally looked down upon by those with "old money" (for example Charles Frere and merchant banker Sir John Stevens ([[Willoughby Gray]]) and often used as an unwitting pawn in their wider power games. Whilst through the character of Jan Howard and her attempts to go it alone as a businesswoman through establishing her own fashion label, the series explored a standard 1980s melodramatic motif of female emancipation via capitalism cf. the characters of Alexis Colby in ''[[Dynasty (TV series)|Dynasty]]'' and Abby Ewing in ''[[Knots Landing]]'', and the [[ITV]] drama series ''[[Connie]]''.
 
Although derided by critics as a cheesy melodrama, ''Howards' Way'' nevertheless proved to be a hugely popular programme for the [[BBC]], both domestically and in overseas sales. Whilst the series was unable to compete with the likes of ''[[Dallas (TV series)|Dallas]]'' and ''[[Dynasty (TV series)|Dynasty]]'' in terms of opulence, its stylistic aspects did develop as it went on, with the staging of powerboat races and fashion shows and extensive ___location filming in [[Guernsey]], [[Malta]] and [[Gibraltar]] as the storylines dictated. A number of new characters were also introduced later in the series, such as Sarah Foster ([[Sarah-Jane Varley]]), a glamorous business partner for Ken Masters, Sir Edward Frere ([[Nigel Davenport]]), the rich tycoon father of Charles Frere, Orrin Hudson ([[Jeff Harding]]), the American father of Abby Urquhart's baby, Emma Neesome ([[Sian Webber]]), a beautiful engineer who came to work with Tom Howard and Jack Rolfe at the Mermaid yard and Vanessa Andenberg ([[Lana Morris]]), an elegant widow and old flame of Jack Rolfe. Perhaps in a conscious move to make ''Howards' Way'' seem more and more like a British ''[[Dynasty (TV series)|Dynasty]]'', actress [[Kate O'Mara]], who had previously starred in ''[[The Brothers (TV series)|The Brothers]]'' and had recently appeared in the American supersoap as Caress Morrell, was also brought in to play ruthless businesswoman Laura Wilde.
 
The roots for the demise of ''Howards' Way'' were sown in [[1989]] when, during the production of the fifth series, lead actor [[Maurice Colbourne]], who played central character Tom Howard, suddenly died from a heart attack during a break in filming. Episodes were hurriedly rewritten to explain the character's absence, before he was finally killed off at the beginning of the sixth and final series, commissioned to end the programme and to tie up all the storylines. Despite these tragic events, it could be legitimately argued that ''Howards' Way'' was such a quintessential part of the era in which it was produced that a continuation could not have been sustained. It is perhaps fitting then that the final episode of ''Howards' Way'' was transmitted on [[25 November]] [[1990]], three days before the resignation of [[Margaret Thatcher]] as the British [[Prime Minister]].
 
==Cast list==
 
[[Image:Hw_book.jpg|right|thumb|175px|Official guide book to the series published in 1988]]
 
*Tom Howard - [[Maurice Colbourne]] (Series 1-5)
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*David Relton - [[Richard Heffer]] (Series 6)
*Pierre Challon - [[James Coombes]] (Series 6)
 
The following actors also made guest appearances in the series: [[Kathleen Byron]], [[Tony Caunter]], [[Richard Wilson]], [[Bruce Boa]], [[Pamela Salem]], [[Burt Kwouk]], [[James Warwick]], [[Annie Lambert]], [[Stephen Greif]], [[Andrew Burt]] and [[Catherine Schell]].
 
[[Image:Howards'_Way_1.jpg|right|thumb|150px|''Howards' Way'' Series 1 DVD release]]
 
==Trivia==