Birmingham Post

Mother superiors

Who is your favourite TV mum? MARION McMULLEN looks at some of the top Mother’s Day contenders

- Laura Watson Staff Reporter

LIFE was always “perfick” for Ma Larkin in The Darling Buds Of May. Pam Ferris played the mother-of six in the 1990s ITV comedy drama based on the books by H E Bates with Sir David Jason as her common-law husband Pop Larkin. They had a 22-acre smallholdi­ng and easy-going Ma liked nothing better than baking and cooking for her large family. David Jason described the relationsh­ip between the two characters as “loving, cheeky, generous, trusting” but said he did put on excess weight because of all the food on set. He had to scoff five breakfasts of bacon and eggs during the filming of one episode. Catherine Zeta Jones played the couple’s oldest daughter Mariette followed by Montgomery, Primrose, twins Zinnia and Petunia and Victoria. ITV is currently planning a TV comeback for The Darling Buds Of May – this time as The Larkins – with Bradley Walsh and Joanna Scanlan as Pop and Ma Larkin. When it comes to playing telly mums Wendy Craig ticks all the boxes. She certainly has had plenty of practice. She played a mother-ofthree in 1960s sitcom Not In Front Of The Children, followed it with And Mother Makes Three and then And Mother Makes Five in the 1970s before appearing as the mum of two strapping sons in the form of a young Nicholas Lydnhurst and Andrew Hall in BBC comedy Butterflie­s.

She played bored housewife Ria Parkinson who feared life was passing her by in the comedy from the pen of Liver Birds creator Carla Lane. Ria’s dentist husband Ben (Geoffrey Palmer) was clueless that anything was wrong on the family front, but Ria was a rare character at the time – a woman who dared to question her lot and was a disaster when it came to cooking family meals.

Carla Lane also brought viewers the formidable Ma Boswell in popular BBC comedy Bread. Jean Boht brought Nellie Boswell to life in 1986, a matriach who remained fiercely protective of her five grownup children over the years.

Bread pulled in 21 million viewers at its height and followed the life of Nellie and her kids Joey, Jack, Adrian, Aveline and Billy after husband Freddie walked out on them. Jean said of Carla: “She changed my life. She had the greatest humanity and care and when she wrote about real people, she made you love them.”

Things were a little more unconventi­onal on the home front for mother-of-two Morticia Addams. The Addams Family began as a series of cartoons from American artist Charles Addams before making the switch to television in 1964. Carolyn Jones and John Astin played Morticia and Gomez Addams and named their two children Wednesday – after the rhyme Wednesday’s child is full of woe – and Pugsley.

Carolyn had to spend two hours a day in the make-up chair to achieve Morticia’s deathly pallor and a wig made of human hair completed the gothic look. Morticia encouraged her children to play with guillotine­s, experiment with poison and perfect their torture skills on each other.

Carolyn said: “Morticia was the perfect role for me because my sense of humour is just slightly off centre.”

American TV series The Brady Bunch offered a more wholesome family picture. It began in 1969 and followed the fortunes of a widow and widower who marry to create one large family of six children. Florence Henderson played TV mother Carol Brady in more than 100 episodes and in TV movies and specials.

She once said: “Sometimes my kids would say to me ‘How come you don’t scream at those kids on television like you do us?’ I said ‘because they’re not my real kids and you are and I want you turn out to be wonderful human beings’.” In feelgood 1970s show The Partridge Family, Shirley Jones played the mother of a talented fivestrong brood of young performers led by her real-life step son David Cassidy as Keith Partridge.

She said at the time: “It’s almost like playing myself. Shirley Partridge could just as easily be Shirley Cassidy. It’s like going into my own home every day.

“The thing I don’t like is getting up at 5.30am every day and getting home at seven.”

Marge Simpson has had the longest stretch at TV motherhood. She has been bringing up Bart, Lisa and Maggie since The Simpsons began 33 years ago... and they still show no signs of leaving the nest.

Julie Kavner is the voice of Homer’s blue-haired long-suffering wife and Marge is the glue that keeps the family together.

Marge once explained: “Stick it out, my mother said, even if you picked a loser. To the bitter end.”

BUSINESSES in the West Midlands saw a marginal upturn in activity in February, a new report has revealed.

The latest NatWest West Midlands PMI data, which measures the month-on-month change in the combined output of the region’s manufactur­ing and service sectors, showed that businesses in the region returned to expansion territory last month, rising from 41.5 to 51.1.

It comes after West Midlands firms signalled a sharp contractio­n at the start of the year. Firms reporting growth attributed it to the clearing of backlogs, projects in the pipeline and reduced uncertaint­y.

Meanwhile, the amount of new work companies took on in February fell marginally with firms blaming this on the national restrictin­g sales.

That said, 66 per cent of West Midlands companies expect to grow over the next 12 months, with confidence pinned on hopes the Covid-19 vaccinatio­n programme will curb the spread of infections, leading to the lifting of restrictio­ns and a recovery in demand.

The data also shows that employment in the West Midlands decreased in February, stretching the current sequence of contractio­n to 13 months.

The fall in headcounts in the region was more pronounced than at the UK level.

Anecdotal evidence suggested that job shedding stemmed from retirement­s and redundanci­es but the overall pace of reduction eased to the weakest in a year as some firms took on extra workers to fulfil

lockdown demand needs and clear backlogs of work.

Elsewhere, private sector firms in the West Midlands signalled a second successive monthly drop in unfinished work halfway through the opening quarter of 2021.

The rate of depletion was moderate, despite quickening from January, and much softer than the UK average.

Amid reports of material shortages as well as higher prices for freight, metals, packaging and plastics, average input costs at West Midlands companies increased in February.

The rate of inflation was sharp and the second-fastest in over two-anda-half years – behind December 2020.

February data highlighte­d a ninth successive monthly rise in prices charged for goods and services across the West Midlands.

Survey members that hiked their fees indicated that additional cost burdens had been shared with clients.

John Maude, a member of NatWest’s Midlands regional board, said: “Despite the ongoing national lockdown, West Midlands companies managed to lift business activity in February as some diverted resources towards the completion of backlogs of work.

“This is welcome news, particular­ly after January’s marked fall in output and given that contractio­ns had been sustained across many other UK regions.

“The vaccinatio­n programme has lifted spirits, with West Midlands firms strongly optimistic towards growth prospects. The upbeat sentiment failed to translate into job creation but employment declined only slightly in February.”

THE Midlands branch of trade body Women in Property has appointed a new chairwoman.

Sophie Smith, who has been a member of the networking group for four years, has taken on the chair’s role this month for a one-year tenure, replacing Kelly McDonnell, a business developmen­t manager with property services firm CLS.

In her day job, Ms Smith is a land manager for Solihull-based housebuild­er Spitfire Homes and specialise­s in the acquisitio­n of land for new developmen­ts.

She said: “As a branch, we are continuing to work together to ensure the industry stays resilient and attracts many more people to the property sector.

“We hope the range of events and webinars alongside the support that we offer as an organisati­on will assist in doing so.

“We have all seen remarkable courage and resilience across the property and constructi­on industry and in wider society.

“It can be tough stepping outside of our personal comfort zones but inevitably this is what gives us the confidence to thrive.

“This has a lot to do with inclusion and working together and we will be building on the great work our members have been doing to improve inclusion and diversity.

“I look forward to broadening our networks across this region, to work towards a more sustainabl­e future.”

 ??  ?? fed and cared for
by Ma
Rockin’ it: Shirley Partridge
fed and cared for by Ma Rockin’ it: Shirley Partridge
 ??  ?? Ma Boswell was fiercely protective of her brood
Ma Boswell was fiercely protective of her brood
 ??  ?? Morticia Addams, not your average mother
Morticia Addams, not your average mother
 ??  ?? The Larkins were a loving
family, well
The Larkins were a loving family, well
 ??  ?? Carol Brady with her bunch
Carol Brady with her bunch
 ??  ?? Well practised – Wendy Craig
Well practised – Wendy Craig
 ??  ?? Marge Simpson
Marge Simpson
 ??  ?? > Sophie Smith
> Sophie Smith

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