The Vicar of Dibley is a British sitcom created by Richard Curtis, and mostly written by Curtis and Paul Mayhew-Archer. The show was written for its title actor, Dawn French.
The sitcom is about a small fictional village called Dibley that gets a female vicar (set after the real-life change in Church of England law allowing the ordination of women). It is a comedic study of the effect that this has on a small rural community. The Vicar of Dibley came third in a 2004 BBC poll to find 'Britain's Best Sitcom'.
In November 2005 BBC released a DVD boxset of the entire collection, including the 2004 Christmas specials and the 2005 Comic Relief special.
The show centres around eight main characters, seven of whom sit on the parochial church council (PCC):
Other guest appearances have been made by Sean Bean, Darcey Bussell, Johnny Depp, Kylie Minogue, Terry Wogan, and Rachel Hunter.
This series was broadcast across Christmas holiday period in 1999. "Autumn" followed Geraldine's relationship with David's brother Simon, played by Clive Mantle. "Winter" dealt with the village Christmas pageant and birth of Hugo and Alice's first child. "Spring" saw David asking Geraldine to marry him. "Summer" focused on the villagers' fight to stop Dibley from becoming a reservoir. Curtis had also used the metaphor of seasons in Notting Hill, which had been released that year. In The Vicar of Dibley DVD boxset, released in 2005 by Universal UK (not the BBC, who only had early VHS rights), this series is packaged as "Love and Marriage".
In 2004, to celebrate 10 years since the conception of the sitcom, the BBC commissioned two special episodes to lead the 2004 Christmas line-up on BBC One. Both episodes were filmed in mid-October 2004, and featured the original cast.
Rachel Hunter guest-starred in the first episode, "Merry Christmas", screened on Christmas Day, and is soon confused by Alice to be having a lesbian fling with Geraldine. The newsreader Brian Perkins appeared as the Archbishop of Canterbury; on the show, the Archbishop was said to be an old university friend of David Horton. The second, "Happy New Year," was screened on New Year's Day; at the end of the episode Geraldine shows a video of two poverty-stricken children on her laptop. This episode was one of many movements to introduce Make Poverty History to the general population. Both episodes were released on DVD following their Christmas screening, along with a special bonus episode filmed for Comic Relief 2005.
This news was confirmed on 6 July 2006 by Richard Curtis, however it came with the news that the series was coming to an end. While the reason given was that Richard Curtis wanted to give the show an proper ending and say goodbye, BBC governers would not comment on speculation that the series was axed on the back of government recommendation that BBC comedy series should be more mutli-cultural. There will be two episodes, to be broadcast over the Christmas season. It is likely that another Comic Relief special will be filmed at the same time, ready for broadcast in March 2007.
According to the statement released by the show's makers, the storyline of the special Christmas episodes is the Vicar's marriage to a new character, who will be introduced in the first episode.
The village of Turville has also been used for many other programmes and films such as numerous episodes of Midsomer Murders, the adaptation of Goodnight Mister Tom, and more recently, a Miss Marple episode.
Following the closing theme music and credits, Geraldine was shown telling a joke (usually off-colour) to Alice, which, rather than laughter, would elicit a literal translation from Alice; she would go on to explain to Geraldine in great detail why the premise of her joke was implausible.
Also, at the end of the theme songs in most episodes, there is usually a humorous depiction, eg. a woman knitting straight off the sheep.
Although it was commended for raising the issue of women priests, the show has been criticised for taking to extremes the worst stereotypes of rural communities and for showing people living in rural communities as being less intelligent. At least initially, some viewers found Geraldine's light-hearted approach to her vocation to be bordering on blasphemous. But while certainly bawdy, her theology is quite orthodox, believing that Jesus is the son of God and that the biblical miracles occurred.
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It uses material from the
"The Vicar of Dibley".
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