The 1900 House
The 1900 House | |
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PAL VHS cover (UK)
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Genre | Historical reality television |
Country of origin | United States United Kingdom |
No. of seasons | 1 |
No. of episodes | 10 (UK) 5 (U.S.) |
Production | |
Running time | 50 min. (ep. 1, UK) 24 min. (eps. 2–9, UK) 77 min. (ep. 10, UK) 60 min. (U.S.) |
Release | |
Original network | Channel 4 PBS |
Picture format | 576i (SDTV) |
Original release | 28 December 1999 – 3 July 2000 |
External links | |
Website |
The 1900 House is a historical reality television programme made by Wall to Wall/Channel 4 in 1999. In the show, a modern family tries to live in the way of the late Victorians in 1900 for three months in a modified house. It was shown on Channel 4 in the United Kingdom and PBS in America (with American commentary).
The series was accompanied by a book titled 1900 House: Featuring Extracts from the Personal Diaries of Joyce and Paul Bowler and Their Family by Mark McCrum and Matthew Sturgis.[1] It won a Peabody Award in 2000 for being "an often humorous, always perceptive, series about the realities of life in 1900 that reveals themes of perseverance, human adaptation and family dynamics."[2]
Contents
The house
The 1900 House in question is 50 Elliscombe Road, Charlton, South-East London (Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.). An 1890s-built two-storey terraced house with a drawing room, a dining room, a kitchen, a scullery, a bathroom, three bedrooms (there were actually four, but one was used as a safety room with a telephone) and an outside loo. To make it the 1900 house, all modern elements were removed, including electricity, insulation, indoor toilet, and central heating. Period fixtures such as a 'copper' (a large pot used for heating washing clothes over a fire), cast-iron oven and fireplaces were installed.
The Bowler family
- Paul was the father of the family. In contemporary life, he was a Warrant Officer in the Royal Marines. In the house, he worked in the recruiting office in London (for two months; after that, he had to go to his regular job in the Marines). He felt that the role of "Man of the House" was difficult to act.
- Joyce was the mother of the family. In her normal life, she was a civil servant for Somerset Social Services. She looked after the family and later in her free time she looked at the growing suffragette movement. She had problems with her hair (shampoo hadn't yet been invented in 1900) and difficulty with incorporating her vegetarian diet into the project.
- Kathryn was a 16-year-old performing-arts student. In the house, she missed modern cleanliness, her friends and her social life.
- Ruth and Hilary were 11-year-old twins. In the house, they missed their friends and their music.
- Joe was a 9-year-old boy. In the house, he missed sweets and fast-food.
Other people
Daru Rooke was the consultant historian to the series who helped the family adjust to the 1900 lifestyle. He later visited the house for a dinner party with the family. He also equipped the family with a useful reference manual to aid their stay at the house, based on sources of the period such as Mrs. Beeton's Book of Household Management and Cassell's Household Guide.
Because looking after the house became difficult, the Bowlers decided to hire a maid-of-all-work. Elizabeth Lillington was chosen, however after a few weeks the family sacked her as Joyce decided that she could not reconcile her views on women's emancipation with employing a woman as a domestic. However, being 'liberated' was not the view Elizabeth herself took of her dismissal. It was pointed out that a woman in Elizabeth's position in 1900 would have faced desperate poverty had she been denied housekeeping work.
Sequels
UK
- The 1940s House – a family "living" through the Second World War.
- The Edwardian Country House
- Regency House Party
- Coal House – a 1920s Welsh mining community
- Coal House at war – a 1944 Welsh mining community
Australia
- Outback House – a family running a sheep station in 1861 Outback Australia
- The Colony - Four families and several individual "convicts" try to live life in New South Wales of 1800.
New Zealand
- Pioneer House - essentially a New Zealand production of The 1900 House.
- Colonial House - a recreation of the experiences of typical British immigrants to Canterbury, c. 1850; complete with a Sea Voyage from Auckland to Lyttelton, tramping over the Bridle Path to Christchurch with their children and belongings, setting up house in a canvas Tent, and eventually, building their own house.
- One Land - Also a recreation of New Zealand in the 1850s. It featured three families, one Pakeha and two Maori, and aimed to replicate the experiences of British migrants and the indigenous Maori of the period. The Maori families were housed in a traditional Maori Pa, and one of those families was specifically chosen for their knowledge of Maori language and customs. This family was asked to speak only Maori throughout the Series.[3]
Germany
- Schwarzwaldhaus 1902 (Black Forest House 1902) – a family "living" without electricity in a traditional Black Forest house, on rural Kaltwasserhof in Münstertal (August 2001 - January 2002)
- Windstärke 8 – Das Auswandererschiff 1855 – about an emigration ship for the United States
- Die Bräuteschule 1958 – teenage girls attending a domestic science school in the 1950s
- Abenteuer 1900 – Leben im Gutshaus (The 1900 Adventure) – about a noble family and their servants in a manor in Mecklenburg-Vorpommern.
- Abenteuer 1927 – Sommerfrische (The 1927 Adventure) – life in the manor from Abenteuer 1900, this time in the Roaring Twenties
- Steinzeit – Das Experiment (The Stone Age Experiment) – life under conditions of the stone age.
- Die harte Schule der 50er Jahre (Difficult 1950s School) – teachers and students experiencing a boarding school under 1950s conditions.
- Abenteuer Mittelalter – Leben im 15. Jahrhundert (The Medieval Adventure) – people living in a 15th-century castle.
USA
- Frontier House – three families live as 1883 homesteaders in Montana
- Manor House – British family of five and staff of 14 live in a 1900 English manor house (re-presentation of The Edwardian Country House, exactly the same but with bonus footage)
- Colonial House – set in the American frontier of 1628 (shown in the UK as Pioneer House)
- Texas Ranch House – set in the American frontier of 1867
Switzerland
- Leben wie zu Gotthelfs Zeiten (2004 TV series) – about a Swiss family living without modern technology in a traditional Swiss farmhouse as in the era of the Swiss author Jeremias Gotthelf (1797–1854), similar setting as in the German TV series Schwarzwaldhaus 1902, mentioned above
VHS/DVD
The 1900 House was released, alongside The 1940s House by Acorn Media UK. It was released on VHS in 27 June 2000 and on DVD in 5 August 2003.
# | Episode List | Release Date |
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1 | A Year to Remember | 28 December 1999 |
2 | The Time Machine | 12 June 2000 |
3 | A Rude Awakening | 19 June 2000 |
4 | A Woman's Place | 26 June 2000 |
5 | The End of an Era | 3 July 2000 |
References
- ↑ Macmillan, London, 1999. ISBN 978-0-7522-1711-6
- ↑ 60th Annual Peabody Awards, May 2001.
- ↑ http://tvnz.co.nz/one-land/index-group-3134642
External links
- Lua error in Module:WikidataCheck at line 28: attempt to index field 'wikibase' (a nil value). The 1900 House at IMDb
- The 1900 House at TV.comLua error in Module:WikidataCheck at line 28: attempt to index field 'wikibase' (a nil value).
- The 1900 House at PBS
- The 1900 House at Channel 4
- Use dmy dates from January 2012
- Use British English from January 2012
- British reality television series
- PBS network shows
- Channel 4 reality television programmes
- 1999 British television programme debuts
- 1990s British television series
- English-language television programming
- Peabody Award winning television programs
- Historical reality television series
- Television series set in the 1900s