Holby City (series 3)

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Holby City series 3
Country of origin United Kingdom
No. of episodes 30
Release
Original network BBC One
Original release 5 October 2000 (2000-10-05) – 5 June 2001 (2001-06-05)
Series chronology
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The third series of the British medical drama television series Holby City commenced airing in the United Kingdom on BBC One on 5 October 2000, and concluded on 6 June 2001.

Production

Following its second series run of 16 episodes, the third series of Holby City ran for an extended 30 hour-long episodes. The series initially aired on Thursday nights on BBC One, before moving back to its original Tuesday night timeslot.[1] The show's scope was expanded with the addition of a children's ward, allowing for greater diversification in patient storylines.[2] While the series was in production, creator Mal Young deemed Holby City "the first successful new BBC1 one-hour drama format", in contrast to the failed programmes Harbour Lights and Sunburn. Although Young had once favoured soap opera stars in his casting, he reversed his position, explaining: "We're all guilty of grabbing a face, but it's a short-term gimmick. Viewers see right through it. It's the scripts that count. On the other hand, the soaps are so prevalent it's hard to find someone who hasn't been in one."[2]

Reception

Matt Wells and Maggie Brown of The Guardian opined in September 2000, while the series was in production: "Series such as Holby are what the BBC really needs, the fresh but reliable mid-week regular drama that ITV is best at."[2]

Episodes

"Episode #" refers to the episode's number in the overall series, whereas "Series #" refers to the episode's number in this particular series.

Episode
#
Series
#
Title Director Writer Original airdate Viewers
(in millions)[3]
26 1 "The Deep End" Julie Edwards Peter Jukes 5 October 2000 7.79
27 2 "Too Much, Too Young" Jim Goddard Michael Jenner 12 October 2000 5.95
28 3 "The Right Thing" Jim Goddard Jenny Lecoat 19 October 2000 7.40
29 4 "First Impressions" Brett Fallis Steve Lawson 9 November 2000 6.47
30 5 "Against All Odds" Jim Shields Maurice Bessman 16 November 2000 6.47
31 6 "Moving On" Jim Shields Lynne Dallow 23 November 2000 5.65[4]
32 7 "The Trouble with the Truth" Brett Fallis Colin Bytheway 30 November 2000 <5.96[nb 1]
33 8 "A Christmas Carol: Part 1" Adrian Bean Peter Pallister 14 December 2000 7.17
34 9 "A Christmas Carol: Part 2" Adrian Bean Andrew Rattenbury 21 December 2000 7.93
35 10 "Anyone Who Had a Heart" Julie Edwards Al Hunter Ashton 28 December 2000 9.09
36 11 "Extra Time" Indra Bhose Robert Fraser 16 January 2001 8.33
37 12 "Runaway" Colin Bucksey Kate Wood 23 January 2001 8.09
38 13 "Choices" Colin Bucksey Tony Lindsay 30 January 2001 7.94
39 14 "Night Shift" Indra Bhose Leslie Stewart 6 February 2001 8.51
40 15 "Winner Takes All" Brian Kelly Chris Webb 13 February 2001 8.26
41 16 "For Better, For Worse" Brian Kelly Steve Lawson 20 February 2001 7.85
42 17 "Tip of the Iceberg" Susanna White Colin Bytheway 27 February 2001 8.18
43 18 "Borrowed Time" Kim Flitcroft Tony Lindsay 6 March 2001 8.38
44 19 "Private Lives, Public Faces" Kim Flitcroft and Susanna White Al Hunter Ashton 20 March 2001 8.74
45 20 "Family Ties" Susanna White Jeremy Front 27 March 2001 7.75
46 21 "Snakes and Ladders" Mike Cocker Colin Bytheway 3 April 2001 7.90
47 22 "A Change is Gonna Come" Mike Cocker Lillie Ferrari 10 April 2001 7.60
48 23 "Going Gently" Beryl Richards Dan Sefton 17 April 2001 8.25
49 24 "Release" Beryl Richards Dan Sefton 24 April 2001 7.86
50 25 "I'm Not in Love" Jim Shields Leslie Stewart 1 May 2001 8.14
51 26 "Getting Even" Jim Shields Andrew Holden 8 May 2001 7.14
52 27 "The Mourning After" Brett Fallis Colin Wyatt 15 May 2001 8.17
53 28 "New Beginnings" Brett Fallis Ann Marie di Mambo 22 May 2001 6.84
54 29 "Hearts and Flowers" Paul Wroblewski Colin Bytheway 29 May 2001 7.79
55 30 "The Road Less Travelled" Paul Wroblewski Andrew Rattenbury 5 June 2001 8.85

Notes

  1. The Broadcasters' Audience Research Board only archive ratings for the 30 most-viewed programmes on BBC One each week. Holby City episode "The Trouble with the Truth" fell below the top 30, and no alternative sources are available. The least-viewed programme which still made the archived top 30 in the week ending 3 December 2000 was Have I Got News For You, with 5.96 million viewers.[5]

References

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External links