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The Change (TV series)
2023 British television series From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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The Change is a British comedy drama series starring, written and created by Bridget Christie for Channel 4 and co-directed Mackenzie Crook. Regular cast members include Susan Lynch, Jim Howick, Jerome Flynn, Paul Whitehouse, Liza Tarbuck and Omid Djalili. A second series was broadcast in March 2025.
The show's end credits music is Hares on the Mountain performed by Shirley Collins and Ian Kearey.
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Synopsis
Linda (Christie) has an existential crisis at the age of 50 after being informed she has started the menopause. She finds her old Triumph motorcycle and goes on a pilgrimage around her old haunts in the Forest of Dean.[1]
Cast
- Bridget Christie as Linda
- Monica Dolan as Carmel (Season 1)
- Susan Lynch as Agnes
- Jim Howick as The Verderer
- Jerome Flynn as William (Pig Man)
- Paul Whitehouse as Tony
- Liza Tarbuck as Siobhain
- Tanya Moodie as Joy
- Omid Djalili as Steve
- Sonny Charlton as Ryan
- Laura Checkley as Theresa (Season 2)
Episodes
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Series 1 (2023)
Series 2 (2025)
The second series was made available prior to linear broadcast on Channel 4 on-demand for subscribers to its paid Channel 4+ tier on 11 March 2025.[3]
Production
In July 2022 the series started filming, and Howick, Djalili, Whitehouse, Tarbuck and Dolan joined the cast.[4] Later, Susan Lynch was revealed to have joined the cast as an Eel sister.[5] Filming took place on location in the Forest of Dean.[6] Christie was brought up in near the Forest of Dean, and had in 2021 experienced some of the symptoms explored in the series.[7][8][9]
A second series was confirmed in May 2024 with filming locations including Chepstow in July 2024.[10][11]
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Broadcast
The series began airing on Channel 4 on 21 June 2023.[12] The second series premiered on Channel 4 on 25 March 2025.[13]
Reception
Critical reception
The Evening Standard awarded the show four stars out of five, calling it "joyful" and observing that "[while] it is cutting both in its humour and its astute social commentary, it is also immensely warm, grounded in familial community and nostalgic in a way that is hard to define."[14] The Guardian also gave four stars out of five, declaring it "like nothing else on TV" and identifying Christie's protagonist as "the role model we've all been waiting for.".[12] Comedy website Chortle also gave it four stars, calling it 'sardonic yet surreal'[15]
Hollie Richardson in The Guardian subsequently reviewed the final episode of the first series as "gorgeous", "life-affirming", and "the most profound finale of the year."[16] Chitra Ramaswamy in The Guardian gave the second series five stars describing it as "ambitious, surreal, moving, and above all hysterically funny".[17]
On review aggregator website Rotten Tomatoes, the first series has a 92% approval rating based on 12 critics' reviews, with an average rating of 8.0/10.[18] The second series has 100% approval from 6 critics, with average rating 8.8/10.[19]
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Accolades
In February 2024, the series was nominated at the Broadcast Awards in the Best Comedy Programme category.[20] That month, it was also nominated in the Best TV Show category at the Chortle Awards.[21] Christie was nominated for Best Writer - Comedy at the Royal Television Society Programme Awards.[22] In March 2024, Christie was nominated in the Female performance in a comedy programme category at the 2024 British Academy Television Awards.[23]
In August 2024, Christie won Best Actress - Comedy at the Edinburgh TV Awards at the Edinburgh International Television Festival.[24]
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References
External links
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