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Telly addicts

RIOT WOMAN - sun bbc 1 9pm - TV PACE NO SPOILERS

388 replies

Blondeshavemorefun · 06/10/2025 23:47

New drama for 6w which sounds like it will be a right laugh with singing music pmt drink drugs and rock and roll !!

every Sunday for 6w

The Happy Valley creator has turned her darkest hour into a rebellious tale of midlife women uniting in musical anarchy. The team behind the highly awaited drama talk vodka, rock’n’roll and hot flushes

Riot Women, Sally Wainwright’s hotly awaited new drama, will be billed as a menopause show, and that’s fine – a show can be proud of such a shorthand in 2025, and besides, there’s a lot of menopause in it.

Lorraine Ashbourne stars as Jess, a smart-mouthed pub landlady, leading her best life (house full of grown kids and grandkids, a boyfriend who does literally everything she says. “I have, in Jerry, written a weak man,” says Wainwright, contemplatively, as if it’s the first time that’s ever happened. “But he’s very likable”).

Nonetheless, Jess is overwhelmed – like all of us – by the state of the world, and decides to start a rock band for a refugee fundraiser.

She needs bandmates, naturally, so enter Tamsin Greig as Holly, a retiring police officer

Joanna Scanlan as Beth, a ground-down teacher and

Amelia Bullmore (https://www.theguardian.com/stage/amelia-bullmore) as Yvonne, a midwife with a stick up her arse.

They’re joined by Rosalie Craig as Kitty, a very hard-living shoplifter, significantly younger than the others

– she’s late 30s/early 40s in this role, the others are all mid-to-late 50s – but also menopausal.

Her USP is incredible charisma and a stunning voice, belted out at pub karaoke with vivacious rage, when she isn’t drinking neat vodka straight from the bottle or vandalising cars.

Riot Women, the band, come together at once – the show starts off with the energy of a one-last-heist drama.

They’re planning to do an Abba cover, until Beth rebels. She’s absolutely done with being nice. She’s been a competent pianist, accompanying school choirs all her life; she wants their music to express what they’re actually feeling. The songs they end up with – composed for the show by indie-punk two-piece ARXX – land in the bit of the Venn diagram where punk meets the menopause: an absolutely uncompromising “fuck you”.

Across the six episodes, we're set to see how their journey to punk-rock stardom goes from penning their first original song to discovering that they've got a hell of a lot to say.

As per the series synopsis: "As they juggle demanding jobs, grown-up children, complicated parents, husbands who’ve buggered off, and disastrous dates and relationships, the band becomes a catalyst for change in their lives, and it’s going to make them question everything

The six-part series is a testament to the power of friendship, music, and the resilience of women who refuse to be silenced by age or expectation.

"As the story progresses, it’s more than music that binds them; a deeply potent, long-buried secret begins to surface – one that unexpectedly entangles Kitty and Beth, the two unlikely creative masterminds behind the band, in a complex triangle – and threatens to tear everything apart."

The series boasts a batch of familiar faces including Lorraine Ashbourne (Sherwood (https://www.radiotimes.com/tv/drama/sherwood-season-3-renewed-newsupdate/)), Amelia Bullmore (The Buccaneers), Rosalie Craig (Moonflower Murders (https://www.radiotimes.com/tv/drama/magpie-murders-season-2-release/)) and Tamsin Greig (Friday Night Dinner), as well as Joanna Scanlan (After Love), Taj Atwal (Line of Duty), Chandeep Uppal (Holby City) and Macy-Jacob Seelochan (Shadow and Bone).

Further casting includes Anne Reid (The Sixth Commandment), Sue Johnston (The Royle Family), Peter Davison (Doctor Who), Claire Skinner (Outnumbered), Angel Coulby (Merlin), Jonny Green (White Lines) and Ellise Chappell (Yesterday).

Tony Hirst (Hollyoaks), Shannon Lavelle (The Hardacres), Mark Bazeley (Broadchurch), Amit Shah (Happy Valley), Rick Warden (Red Eye), Ben Batt (Domina) and Natalia Tena (Harry Potter) also star.

Completing the cast are Melanie La Barrie (& Juliet), Oliver Huntingdon (Sherwood), Richard Fleeshman (The Sandman), Olwen May (A Very British Scandal), Kevin Doyle (Downton Abbey), Nicholas Gleaves (Bodyguard) and Thomas Flynn (Masters of the Air).

OP posts:
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Blondeshavemorefun · 13/10/2025 08:21

I really enjoyed it - after the first scene and again sorry to @gottamoveon 💐 to be in the suicide group n one wants to be in

I think as they are my age apart from shoplifter and the way they showed her having her period bless her on sofa - that I gelled with them

its rare that SW ever writes crap so it’s a good Sunday night drama

or Sunday afternoon for me due to work

OP posts:
Myblueclematis · 13/10/2025 08:41

I watched first episode and really not sure whether I liked it or not. I will have to watch another episode on iPlayer and make up my mind then.

Really good actresses appearing so I am hoping I will like it enough to continue with the series.

MyOtherProfile · 13/10/2025 08:52

Love your name @ThePieceHall by the way. Showing your Yorkshire credentials there!

TheCountessofFitzdotterel · 13/10/2025 09:37

I really enjoyed it!
I had to watch it because a friend of mine is in one of the Leicester punk bands. But in any case I love Sally Wainwright, her observation and humour are second to none. She does sometimes feel clunky in dialogue and plotting, I agree, but her ability to pull you into the story makes up for that.
Can’t decide whether to watch the rest weekly or binge….

onceuponatimeinneverland · 13/10/2025 10:23

Not sure why some commentators on here are setting a higher standard for SW when most (all?) TV drama are chock full of tropes of one sort or another and don't acknowledge where they've come from.

I liked it because SW put you straight into the drama. The chaos, the loneliness, the hopelessness and yes the invisibility. I've got a bit fed up with the slow burn of some TV dramas.

I'd be quite interested to know the ages of the naysayers. Are they younger than the demographic portrayed? Do they feel that SW is over dramatising things and things are too concentrated in to top few characters?

In my personal (smallish) friendship group there are all SWs characters portrayed to one extent or another. Separation, job stagnation, long term ill family members, grandchildren care, busy working lives, menopause symptoms, mental health, stroppy children, estranged children, trying to refund self etc etc. Maybe not all at the same time.

The actresses are all fab. To be honest I don't mind if some of them just sit there and are a physical presence rather than in the thick of the action. It's just nice to see them.

I liked the male characters as well, supportive and not supportive. But they were very much in the background. Which was good.

onceuponatimeinneverland · 13/10/2025 10:25

Oh, and I'm not binging I'm going to savour. I'm normally a massive binger though so who knows!

FurForksSake · 13/10/2025 10:30

Slight derail - is last tango in Halifax worth searching out? I think it’s on iPlayer and it’s another Sally Wainwright so I thought there might be some opinions!

onceuponatimeinneverland · 13/10/2025 10:47

FurForksSake · 13/10/2025 10:30

Slight derail - is last tango in Halifax worth searching out? I think it’s on iPlayer and it’s another Sally Wainwright so I thought there might be some opinions!

Yes. It's got Sarah Lancashire in it which is always a bonus I feel.

TheCountessofFitzdotterel · 13/10/2025 10:58

FurForksSake · 13/10/2025 10:30

Slight derail - is last tango in Halifax worth searching out? I think it’s on iPlayer and it’s another Sally Wainwright so I thought there might be some opinions!

It’s not as gritty as some of her later work and can feel a bit twee and goes on a bit- it doesn’t have the tight plotting of something like Happy Valley and I don’t think dh and I ever finished it.
That said, it still has Sally Wainwright’s trademark warmth and observation, and Sarah Lancashire is of course brilliant.

ThePieceHall · 13/10/2025 11:05

I have a very personal interest in the story as I am a single adopter of two and my elder AD is about to turn 18 and there is some sort of reunification on the cards with a close birth relative. Adoption has not been kind to me so I will be interested to see how SW portrays this story. I may even have to invest in a TV licence so I can watch the remaining episodes!

Sidebeforeself · 13/10/2025 11:08

onceuponatimeinneverland · 13/10/2025 10:23

Not sure why some commentators on here are setting a higher standard for SW when most (all?) TV drama are chock full of tropes of one sort or another and don't acknowledge where they've come from.

I liked it because SW put you straight into the drama. The chaos, the loneliness, the hopelessness and yes the invisibility. I've got a bit fed up with the slow burn of some TV dramas.

I'd be quite interested to know the ages of the naysayers. Are they younger than the demographic portrayed? Do they feel that SW is over dramatising things and things are too concentrated in to top few characters?

In my personal (smallish) friendship group there are all SWs characters portrayed to one extent or another. Separation, job stagnation, long term ill family members, grandchildren care, busy working lives, menopause symptoms, mental health, stroppy children, estranged children, trying to refund self etc etc. Maybe not all at the same time.

The actresses are all fab. To be honest I don't mind if some of them just sit there and are a physical presence rather than in the thick of the action. It's just nice to see them.

I liked the male characters as well, supportive and not supportive. But they were very much in the background. Which was good.

Well I’m a 56 year old from Leeds and I’m a naysayer! I just think the writing isn’t as good as her previous stuff. And let’s face it she’s held to a higher standard because her great work in the past is what gets her other stuff commissioned, attracts audiences and big name actors.

1975wasthebest · 13/10/2025 11:16

FurForksSake · 13/10/2025 10:30

Slight derail - is last tango in Halifax worth searching out? I think it’s on iPlayer and it’s another Sally Wainwright so I thought there might be some opinions!

I adored the first two series’s but then it went a bit shit after that. Definitely worth a go.

ThePieceHall · 13/10/2025 11:20

onceuponatimeinneverland · 13/10/2025 10:47

Yes. It's got Sarah Lancashire in it which is always a bonus I feel.

I went to the premiere in Hebden Bridge and there was a Q&A session. Unfortunately, the audience was not allowed to ask questions. Mine, quite simply, would have been: ‘Was Sarah Lancashire busy?’

DiscoBob · 13/10/2025 11:22

I loved the scene in the supermarket. As soon as I saw her I thought 'she's my favourite character!'

CrossPurposes · 13/10/2025 11:26

FurForksSake · 13/10/2025 10:30

Slight derail - is last tango in Halifax worth searching out? I think it’s on iPlayer and it’s another Sally Wainwright so I thought there might be some opinions!

I loved the first series. See also the first series of Gentleman Jack.

Donttellempike · 13/10/2025 11:27

Zingy123 · 07/10/2025 11:02

Hate the capitals there is no need whatsoever. The bits that should be in capitals such as the date and channel aren't.

Create your own thread then. Rude!

CrossPurposes · 13/10/2025 11:33

ThePieceHall · 13/10/2025 11:20

I went to the premiere in Hebden Bridge and there was a Q&A session. Unfortunately, the audience was not allowed to ask questions. Mine, quite simply, would have been: ‘Was Sarah Lancashire busy?’

Too busy doing Yorkshire Tea adverts? Maybe Sarah isn't musical. The question I would love to ask Sally is would/could she write for Sarah Smart again. I really miss her spikiness.

diddl · 13/10/2025 11:58

Anyone remember Sarah Lancashire in All the Small Things?

MrsLargeEmbodied · 13/10/2025 12:10

TheCountessofFitzdotterel · 13/10/2025 10:58

It’s not as gritty as some of her later work and can feel a bit twee and goes on a bit- it doesn’t have the tight plotting of something like Happy Valley and I don’t think dh and I ever finished it.
That said, it still has Sally Wainwright’s trademark warmth and observation, and Sarah Lancashire is of course brilliant.

i f ound it long and didnt manage to finish.
also has nicola walker who is popular with a lot of people on mn
and of course anne reid and derek jacobi
last tango in halifax i mean

1975wasthebest · 13/10/2025 12:16

SL sung and danced in Betty Blue Eyes and was nominated for an Olivier award for her performance. I don’t know if she can play a musical instrument but a few of the other cast members couldn’t so playing one wasn’t a prerequisite to getting cast. Perhaps she was offered a role and passed on it.

PuppyMonkey · 13/10/2025 12:18

I watched it and thought it was okay but nothing particularly wow about it. More like a soapy vibe going off imho. Can’t say it made me want to rush over to iplayer and binge it. So many other great shows out there these days, this seems quite meh. I’m 58 going on 59 age wise btw.

beguilingeyes · 13/10/2025 12:20

Sarah Lancashire played Adelaide in a West End production of Guys and Dolls, which I tragically missed. I bet she was amazing.

CrossPurposes · 13/10/2025 12:21

1975wasthebest · 13/10/2025 12:16

SL sung and danced in Betty Blue Eyes and was nominated for an Olivier award for her performance. I don’t know if she can play a musical instrument but a few of the other cast members couldn’t so playing one wasn’t a prerequisite to getting cast. Perhaps she was offered a role and passed on it.

I came across that when I was wondering if she could sing. I should have known better!

TheCountessofFitzdotterel · 13/10/2025 12:28

Perhaps Sarah Lancashire simply wasn’t right for any of the roles. There’s such a theme of women’s invisibility and it’s harder to believe in Sarah Lancashire being invisible.

dontcallmelen · 13/10/2025 12:36

I’m usually a lurker on Blondes tv threads as can’t always watch day/time when the episodes are scheduled, will definitely give this a go as I like SW work it did feel slightly clichéd a great cast so will stick with it, promise I haven’t binged I reckon Kitty could turn out to be Toms mum popped into my head when I read the synopsis “ a secret that connect two members of the band” & saw last nights episode, probably way out on my guess anyone else had the same thought?