L'inspecteur Jack Frost est un policier non conventionnel avec de la sympathie pour l'opprimé et un instinct pour la justice morale. Débraillé, désorganisé et irrespectueux, il attire les en... Tout lireL'inspecteur Jack Frost est un policier non conventionnel avec de la sympathie pour l'opprimé et un instinct pour la justice morale. Débraillé, désorganisé et irrespectueux, il attire les ennuis tel un aimant.L'inspecteur Jack Frost est un policier non conventionnel avec de la sympathie pour l'opprimé et un instinct pour la justice morale. Débraillé, désorganisé et irrespectueux, il attire les ennuis tel un aimant.
- A remporté le prix 2 BAFTA Awards
- 12 victoires et 14 nominations au total
Histoire
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesFrost was a chain smoker in the novels. In his 2013 autobiography "My Life" David Jason revealed they decided to make Frost a non-smoker in the television series as he had recently quit smoking cigarettes in real life.
- GaffesAssuming that Frost had joined the police as a young man, he would have been too short. David Jason is 5'6" and the minimum height for a male police officer in England was at least 5'8" (5'10" in some forces) until 1990.
- Citations
[Frost's wife has just died]
Frost: The other night I sat there. All night I sat there, trying to feel something. She was my wife, and she was dying, and I couldn't feel anything for her. Things started to go wrong for us God knows how many years ago. When we found out she couldn't have kids, I don't know, she just changed. We changed. She suddenly became all house proud. Everything had to be clean and neat and tidy. Well, you've only got to take one look at me. With my job. I'm a street copper, that's where I belong. But that wasn't good enough for her now. She wanted me to go for promotion, to be ambitious, to make something of myself. She wanted something to be proud of, you see. And what the poor cow got was me. She came to despise me in the end. I know she did. I used to dread going home, to see that look of disappointment in her face. So I stopped going home. You know, it was any excuse. Anyway, I, uh... I met someone else. When don't you? I made up my mind to leave her. On the very day that I plucked up the courage to tell her, her doctor phoned me at the station. "She's got cancer. Eighteen months to live", so they reckon. She always had trouble with her stomach. She thought it was nerves, or one thing or another. Anyway, she wanted to know. She hoped she could cope. She went to pieces. She clung to me for the first time in years, her whole body shaking. "You will look after me, Billy? You will look after me, Billy? You'll look after me, won't you?" I said, of course I'll look after you. Of course I'll stay and take care of you. I went out and I got so drunk, and I was still drunk when this call came through about this nutter with a gun. And before they could stop me, I was moving in on him. Do you know what I was thinking? All I was thinking was, "Go on, you bugger, shoot me. 'Cause I don't give a damn one way or the other." And for this outstanding act of heroism, I got a medal. I think that was the happiest day of her life, you know. She was standing next to me in my top hat at Buckingham Palace. At last I'd done something to make her proud of me. And I wasn't even there when she died. She would have liked that. "You even let me down on that, Billy. Can't trust you to do anything."
- ConnexionsFeatured in The Greatest: 100 Greatest TV Characters (2001)
- gvgelder
- 17 janv. 2005
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