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Thomas and Sarah

  • TV Series
  • 1979
  • 1h
IMDb RATING
6.5/10
169
YOUR RATING
Thomas and Sarah (1979)
Thomas & Sarah
Play trailer1:15
1 Video
19 Photos
Drama

This spin-off of Upstairs, Downstairs (1971) follows Sarah (parlour-maid) and Thomas (chauffeur) some time after leaving service with the Bellamys.This spin-off of Upstairs, Downstairs (1971) follows Sarah (parlour-maid) and Thomas (chauffeur) some time after leaving service with the Bellamys.This spin-off of Upstairs, Downstairs (1971) follows Sarah (parlour-maid) and Thomas (chauffeur) some time after leaving service with the Bellamys.

  • Stars
    • Pauline Collins
    • John Alderton
    • Graham Cull
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.5/10
    169
    YOUR RATING
    • Stars
      • Pauline Collins
      • John Alderton
      • Graham Cull
    • 15User reviews
    • 1Critic review
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Episodes13

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    TopTop-rated1 season1979

    Videos1

    Thomas & Sarah
    Trailer 1:15
    Thomas & Sarah

    Photos19

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    Top cast99+

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    Pauline Collins
    Pauline Collins
    • Sarah Moffat
    • 1979
    John Alderton
    John Alderton
    • Thomas Watkins
    • 1979
    Graham Cull
    • Tubby
    • 1979
    Maria Charles
    Maria Charles
    • Madge
    • 1979
    Norman Bird
    Norman Bird
    • Gilbert
    • 1979
    Charles West
    • Sir Joseph Weidler
    • 1979
    Peter Thornton
    • Charlie
    • 1979
    Zoe Bright
    • 1st Southern Belle - Dolly…
    • 1979
    Sheila Gish
    Sheila Gish
    • Polly
    • 1979
    Nigel Hawthorne
    Nigel Hawthorne
    • Wilson
    • 1979
    John Castle
    John Castle
    • Sid Pollitzer
    • 1979
    Anton Rodgers
    Anton Rodgers
    • Richard De Brassey
    • 1979
    Gary Raymond
    Gary Raymond
    • Eli Watkins
    • 1979
    Geoffrey Whitehead
    Geoffrey Whitehead
    • Sir George Truscott
    • 1979
    Sarah Badel
    Sarah Badel
    • Filly - Felicity Stokeleigh-Pomeroy
    • 1979
    Thora Hird
    Thora Hird
    • Mrs. Entwistle
    • 1979
    Norman Jones
    Norman Jones
    • Cyril Warboys
    • 1979
    Jessica Benton
    Jessica Benton
    • Grace Laughton
    • 1979
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews15

    6.5169
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    Featured reviews

    7Trellismay

    She's as good as she needs to be!

    We just watched the last episode and we were thoroughly charmed by the series. Each episode stands alone, but it's helpful to have watched Upstairs, Downstairs to have a bit of context. Settings, costumes, staging are all authentic and the scripts are witty and and plots are clever, if sometimes far-fetched. That said, each story is diverting and the relationships between Sarah and Thomas and their casts are well drawn and believable. You really care about the people and their predicaments.

    After leaving the Bellamy's, Sarah and Thomas have become equals, they push and pull and the plot lines seem to give each character equal worth. The idea that a woman could choose to simply travel and work and live with a man she's not married to is a surprise for that era. And the idea that a woman of that era not only challenges but succeeds in knocking back polite snobbish society is fun to watch.

    These period pieces are enjoyable and interesting, and Pauline and John are exceptional actors who've worked in theatre, TV, movies. They are attractive and adept in building their characters.

    If you're tired of screeching car chases, exploding body parts, pathologically abusive relationships that get more graphic with each episode... then you'll enjoy Thomas and Sarah.

    Give it a try!
    10bradstephan

    For me, Thomas & Sarah is Classic TV!

    Moments ago, I savored the final episode, after enjoying the entire series over the past couple of weeks. First I must confess, I was an immediate fan of both characters in Up/Down. For me, Pauline Collins as Sarah was my favorite, and certainly she was the most interesting and complex of the bunch. Then enters John Alderman (Sorry about that, chief. You know I meant Alderton!). From his very first lines, facial expression, voice tone and accent I was sold on this intriguing, semi-lovable rogue. You knew something was up, the plot had thickened, the game was afoot from his very first lines with "Miss Elizabeth" during the 'job interview.' From the first to the last, you were never quite sure if Thomas is being sincere, facetious or calculating! What a talent, and what a delightful viewing pleasure. Thank you, Pauline and John! (FYI - they are and have been married in 'real' life for many years - how cool is that! And, make sure to check out Pauline's rave success in 1989's, "Shirley Valentine".)

    In Thomas & Sarah, I love their ambiguous, dynamic relationship, and thought all the plots, situations and various characters were most entertaining. Entertainment, for me, on par with Up/Down -- again, possibly in large part due to my entrancement with the characters/actors (i.e., I have no interest in reading stories about T&S, as I need Pauline and John to be part of the equation). So much so that, I'm eagerly looking forward to watching them in "Wodehouse Playhouse," and hope that I can, someday,find "No, Honestly".

    Last comment: Most definitely, first get to know these two characters in Up/Down, before watching them in this classic, sadly-short TV series
    7marktayloruk

    not bad on the whole

    Thought struck me - possible sequel.Thomas and Sarah make fortune out of munitions in WW1, get to know the right people - Sir Thomas Watkins?
    zpzjones

    Only John Hawkesworth was missing

    How could anybody who has ever seen and loved the original Upstairs, Downstairs show not love Thomas & Sarah, the only spin-off series from the former show? In reading some of the other comments, viewers say T&S doesn't have this or didn't have that as opposed to what 'Updown' had. People!, it's not supposed to. If one remembers, the characters Thomas Watkins and Sarah Moffatt were the chauffeur and under-house parlour maid on the original Updown having left at the death of Edward VII, in May 1910. This new show is about them and their adventures, or misadventures, depending on how you look at it. It takes place roughly 1910-1912, but certainly before WW1. In Updown Sarah and many of the other characters always talked about their adventures away from 165 Eaton Place, where they had been, ...for instance James Bellamy had taken Sarah to Paris near the end of series one or earlier when Sarah had first left she had been with a circus for two years. But we never see her and James at Paris, just talking about it. Here in T&S much more is played out. T&S has more location photography that only some Updown episodes had ie the trip to Scotland in the final series. In T&S we get to see the kinds of things Sarah always bragged about to Rose in Updown when they used to share the same bedroom in the first Updown series. The decision to do more adventurous stories and location work is a good extension or extrapolation from the original Updown which was more studio bound, but couldn't help to be with a much larger cast and more subplots. The decision to shoot Updown & T&S on videotape is why these two period pieces are quite viewable today.

    Alfred Shaughnessy(1916-2005) is the main producer/writer T&S and in 1990s commentaries on Updown, we learn he had grown up in large wealthy houses and knew about the era just preceding his 1916 birth, the prewar era in which T&S takes place. It seems the only person missing is Shaughnessy's writing partner from Updown, John Hawkesworth. On his own and right after Updown ended in 1975, Hawkesworth produced "The Duchess of Duke Street", with as much attention to period detail as Updown and T&S. When T&S began in 1978 Hawkesworth was about to produce the excellent WW2 series "Danger UXB", so his absence from T&S is understandable. The final episode has a 'Jules & Jim' nature to it joining Thomas and Sarah with a grieving landowner named Richard De Brassey whom Sarah falls for and wants to marry. Others have commented on how this episode ends and what was later to be contemplated with a second series. The finale ends ambiguously with Thomas and De Brassey going into a burning barn. We later see Sarah at a graveside attending the burial of one of them, the name is not on the wooden coffin or is surrounded by a wreath or laurel of flowers. Just my opinion Thomas faked his death in the fire and used the opportunity to flee Sarah, leaving her to marry De Brassey, and go to America as he always wanted to seek his fortune.
    Pipeman_Toronto

    Thomas and Sarah - Last of its kind

    To answer the first comment - They aren't making series like this anymore because they've forgotten how. They did recently try with "Berkeley Square" about a group of governesses/nannies in 1902 London. Even though that series manages to work on its own terms, it doesn't come close to having the kind of heart that "Thomas and Sarah", and its predecessor "Upstairs Downstairs" did.

    I've noticed a trend with recent historical programming from Britain. They're now more concerned with making the characters (of whatever era is being depicted) have a more modern EDGE to them. The recent series about Henry VIII is a prime example. Since when did Henry VIII have a cool East-end London accent anyway? They no longer care about accurate costuming and period detail either. Costumes and settings reflect this theme of appearing more modern/relatable to today's viewers - and it all comes off looking like rubbish.

    I think one of the most tragic aspects of the kind of historical drivel being churned out by English TV these days is that they've forgotten a key component that made both "Thomas & Sarah" and UD work so well - HUMOUR! Humour is sadly missing from these badly scripted dramas that take themselves so damned seriously. Someone at the BBC needs to re-visit the vaults and see what real historical drama is!!

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    Related interests

    Mahershala Ali and Alex R. Hibbert in Moonlight (2016)
    Drama

    Storyline

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    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Preliminary work was done on the first four episodes of a second season were began, but a strike caused them to cancel it and the footage was taped over.
    • Connections
      Featured in 21 Years of Alright on the Night (1998)

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    FAQ14

    • How many seasons does Thomas and Sarah have?Powered by Alexa

    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • January 14, 1979 (United Kingdom)
    • Country of origin
      • United Kingdom
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Thomas och Sarah
    • Production companies
      • Alfred Shaugnnessy
      • London Weekend Television (LWT)
      • Sagitta Productions Ltd.
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h(60 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Mono
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.33 : 1

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