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"Now, no one is sayin that Chatsworth Estate is the
Garden of Eden," says Frank Gallagher at the beginning of the British comedy/drama
series Shameless. What follows is a succinct, funny montage of characters and
setting, culminating in a neighborhood bonfire around a burning car and narrated with
boozy affection by an alcoholic single father living on a Manchester council estate. In
addition to introducing the characters, this opening sequence serves as fair warning to
American viewers struggling to make out Franks thick working class brogue. Shameless
is well written, and well acted but in its American market it could use a few subtitles.
Fortunately the show lives up to its title with a headlong anarchic
humor so raw that even those who can only understand seven words in ten will have little
trouble following the plot. Within the first fifteen minutes its made clear that
this is a world where sexual acts are as casual as a trip to the refrigerator.
Unemployment, violence, and theft are the norm, and functional parents practically
nonexistent.
The Gallagher family consists of six children and Frank, who is so
hopelessly and permanently drunk that he typically sleeps on the floor downstairs. Mom
went out for a loaf of bread some years ago and never came back ("And good luck to
her!" Frank says stoutly in the opening) so the true head of the family is
twenty-year-old Fiona, the eldest, who does everything from dispensing "dinner
money" to her siblings to picking through the youngest Gallaghers head for
lice, to giving instructions about where to set down her passed out father when the police
carry him home.
Next oldest is the academically gifted Lip, then the hangdog Ian, the
deceptively sweet-faced Debbie, Carl, whose head is shaven to prevent nits and little
Liam, a cheerful preschooler prone to "fits." The closest thing to truly capable
authority figures are the Gallaghers neighbors, Veronica a lively blonde in her
thirties whose brief experience as a cleaner in a hospital (she was sacked for stealing)
has left her with a surprising amount of medical knowledge, and her thuggish but easygoing
boyfriend Kev.
What makes this dysfunctional world functional is the dogged sense of
loyalty that binds together not just the family but also the neighborhood. When a domestic
fight smashes a front window at his girlfriends house, Lip gallantly steals some
plywood and helps her patch it. When Frank plays his music too loudly late at night, the
awakened neighbors come over -- to demand that he play something they like. Its this
good will that makes life in Chatsworth Estate bearable, even if occasionally the
poignancy of Fionas situation hits her as when she bursts into tears after a
tryst is interrupted by the arrival of her incontinent, unconscious father, and loses her
temper when she learns that her middle-class boyfriend, Steve, walked away from medical
school.
The performances are all good. Frank is played with skuzzy likability
by David Threlfall, who Americans with long memories may recall most clearly as the
tightlipped, conservative Leslie Titmuss in Titmuss Regained and as the pathetic
Smike in the Broadway production of Nicholas Nickleby. Fiona is played by
Anne-Marie Duff, James McAvoy is Steve, and Jody Latham is Lip, but its Gerard
Kearns who stands out as the closeted Ian. He conveys a shy dignity in a family and
neighborhood where dignity is in very short supply.
Shameless is written and created by Paul Abbot, who also wrote
State of Play. Like that political
thriller, this family saga is surprising, smart, and addictive. It may take American
viewers a few minutes to get used to the accents, but its worth it.
- Pamela Troy