The everyday lives of the people frequenting the frenetic Accident and Emergency department of Holby City Hospital.The everyday lives of the people frequenting the frenetic Accident and Emergency department of Holby City Hospital.The everyday lives of the people frequenting the frenetic Accident and Emergency department of Holby City Hospital.
- Won 7 BAFTA Awards
- 17 wins & 43 nominations total
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Did you know
- TriviaMinnie Driver, Orlando Bloom, and Kate Winslet all appeared in the series before they became famous.
- Quotes
John 'Abs' Denham: Nina, could you possibly run Ellen into town?
Nina Farr: No. But I can run her over.
- Crazy creditsDi Botcher (Jan Jenning) was credited as Jan Jennings (with an S) for some episodes.
- ConnectionsFeatured in Room 101: Episode #1.8 (1994)
Featured review
Good For It's First Several Years But Has Perhaps Gone On For Too Long
Casualty started in 1986 and was a brilliant show about the working lives of Holby City Accident & Emergency Department doctors and nurses. In my opinion, from 1986 to about 1999 it was consistently good drama. It was very realistic at times and showed us the bad side of Britain's National Health Service and the politics that governed it.
Casualty always provided entertainment. The main problem is, how do you continually top things? How do you push that envelope? Casualty has had plane crashes, train crashes, diseases, NHS cutbacks etc. In a way, the current series of Casualty are not as good. They have become victims of their own success. Perhaps they should have saved the bangs for later.
One criticism I do have of Casualty's later years is the focus on the staff's private lives. I do like to get a little glimpse of the doctors and nurses private lives but sometimes they overdo it (The Bill does the same and London's Burning too). If Casualty is to keep me as a viewer, then it will have to tone back on the private lives of the staff and focus more on the job itself. And it needs to stop axing popular characters. All characters run their course eventually but these last few years, Casualty has had a habit of axing characters before they've even been given a chance.
If it can try to focus more on the job and think before axing characters, then Casualty has a great future.
Casualty always provided entertainment. The main problem is, how do you continually top things? How do you push that envelope? Casualty has had plane crashes, train crashes, diseases, NHS cutbacks etc. In a way, the current series of Casualty are not as good. They have become victims of their own success. Perhaps they should have saved the bangs for later.
One criticism I do have of Casualty's later years is the focus on the staff's private lives. I do like to get a little glimpse of the doctors and nurses private lives but sometimes they overdo it (The Bill does the same and London's Burning too). If Casualty is to keep me as a viewer, then it will have to tone back on the private lives of the staff and focus more on the job itself. And it needs to stop axing popular characters. All characters run their course eventually but these last few years, Casualty has had a habit of axing characters before they've even been given a chance.
If it can try to focus more on the job and think before axing characters, then Casualty has a great future.
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- Big Movie Fan
- Dec 13, 2002
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- Country of origin
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- Also known as
- Casual+y
- Filming locations
- BBC Television Centre, Wood Lane, Shepherd's Bush, London, England, UK(Studio, Holby A&E Department: interior - Series 1)
- Production company
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
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