The Sunday Post (Newcastle)

We can’t get enough of partners in crime

AFTER months of waiting, the final series of detective drama Broadchurc­h finally starts next Monday on ITV1. As David Tennant’s DI Alec Hardy and Olivia Colman’s DS Ellie Miller tackle one last case, we take a look at 10 of the other classic cop partnersh

- By Bill Gibb bgibb@sundaypost.com

BARNABY & JONES

When: Midsomer has proved Britain’s deadliest county for 20 years now.

Who: John Nettles’ Tom Barnaby seamlessly handed over to cousin John (Neil Dudgeon), with Jason Hughes as the sidekick.

Most likely to say: “He’s been killed by a giant cheese?”

CAGNEY & LACEY

When: Girl power ruled for seven years in the 1980s as blonde bombshell Christine Cagney and mumsy Mary Beth Lacey showed women could nick bad guys too.

Who: Sharon Gless and Tyne Daly made history by winning Emmys six years in a row.

Most likely to say: “Hey Harv, can you look after the kids?”

MORSE & LEWIS

When: There were 33 episodes from 1987 with Morse’s red Jaguar dotting round dreamy Oxford.

Who: John Thaw and Kevin Whately became huge pals and, after Thaw’s death, Whately came back as Lewis, now with his own sidekick Hathaway.

Most likely to say: “You’re driving, Lewis – I’ll have a pint.”

HOLMES & WATSON

When: From A Study In Pink in 2010, the modern day Sherlock became a global smash. But last month’s The Final Problem could indeed be the end.

Who: Benedict Cumberbatc­h and Martin Freeman both shot to movie star status as the rude genius and his genial sidekick.

Most likely to say: “I’m not a psychopath – I’m a high-functionin­g sociopath.”

SCOTT & BAILEY

When: There hadn’t been such a strong women pairing since Cagney and Lacey when these Manchester detectives hit our screens in 2011.

Who: Suranne Jones, who played hard-drinking Rachel Bailey, came up with the idea with pal Sally Lindsay. Pregnant Lindsay was replaced by Lesley Sharp before shooting started.

Most likely to say: “I need a bar of chocolate and a cup of tea with far too much sugar in it, OK?”

CROCKETT & TUBBS

When: The yuppie late ‘80s was the perfect time for the flash world of Miami Vice’s two undercover cops and their cool soundtrack.

Who: Don Johnson as Sonny Crockett and Philip Michael Thomas’s Rico Tubbs rolled up the sleeves of their fancy suits to crack drug crime.

Most likely to say: “The secret to success, whether it’s women or money, is knowing when to quit. I oughta know – I’m divorced and broke.”

POIROT & HASTINGS

When: Agatha Christie’s Belgian detective was a screen fixture from 1989 to 2013.

Who: David Suchet filmed every single Christie tale before the character’s death, usually with Hugh Fraser’s bumbling Captain Hastings exclaiming: “Good grief!”

Most likely to say: “The leetle grey cells have been at work.”

REGAN & CARTER

When: The Sweeney’s pounding ’70s theme music signalled a rough, tough change of image for British telly coppering with boozing, birds and barneys.

Who: Before he was posh Morse, John Thaw was guntoting Jack Regan, Flying Squad guv’nor of reliable sergeant George Carter.

Most likely to say: “Get yer trousers on, you’re nicked.”

TAGGART & JARDINE

When: Taggart started with a one-off called Killer in 1983 and became the UK’s longest-running cop show.

Who: James McPherson was the long-suffering foil to Mark McManus’s grumpy Jim Taggart, before becoming the lead cop himself after McManus’s untimely death. Most likely to say: “There’s been a murdurrrr!”

STARSKY & HUTCH

When: Between 1975 and ’79 the buddy-buddy California cop series was just about the hottest show in the world.

Who: Paul Michael Glaser and David Soul became heart-throbs. Glaser kept threatenin­g to quit, while Soul was a chart-topping singer.

Most likely to say: “What do you hear on the street these days, Huggy?”

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