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In Sickness and in Health is a BBC television sitcom that ran between 1 September 1985 and 3 April 1992. It is a sequel to the successful Till Death Us Do Part, which ran between 1966 and 1975, and Till Death..., which ran for one series of six episodes in 1981.
Earlier episodes were produced in black-and-white; all episodes after Series 3 are in colour. The original videotapes of nearly all episodes prior to Series 4 were wiped, although complete or partial recordings of some episodes have been found. Recordings exist of all episodes from Series 4 and later.
[2] [3] Slant felt that the episode's initial conceit of a woman receiving a note stating that she was marrying a serial killer could have been "a pretty good hook for a Hitchcockian melodrama along the lines of Suspicion were Salva actually interested in telling that particular story" but that "it quickly becomes obvious that the whole thing ...
Till Death Us Do Part started airing on That's TV [11] on 4 September 2022, as part of a nightly BBC sitcom double bill with The Fall and Rise of Reginald Perrin, [12] with four 'lost episodes' ("Intolerance", "In Sickness and In Health", "State Visit" and "The Phone") [13] included as part of the run by the channel.
Winston, the home help, made his first appearance during the first series of In Sickness and in Health in 1985, a series in which Dandy Nicholls (Else Garnett) did perform though it was to be her last. Her final episode was the Christmas show of 1985 where Winston is pushing her wheelchair at the church meal which they were all invited to.
This led writers, trying to help him, to write Darrin's appearance in at the beginnings and ends of episodes. The situation came to a head while he was filming an episode in February 1969.
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Based on extensive research by a wide variety of academics, public health experts and medical practitioners, the seven-part series explores how class and racism can have greater impacts on one's health outcomes than genetics or personal behavior. The opening 56-minute episode, "In Sickness and In Wealth", presents the series' overarching themes.