23 December 2013 (2013-12-23) – 6 April 2016 (2016-04-06)
Raised by Wolves is a British television sitcom written by Caitlin Moran and her sister Caroline Moran, first broadcast between 2013 and 2016. It follows a loose account of the siblings' youth in Wolverhampton, transposed to the modern day. Helen Monks and Alexa Davies star as the oldest sisters in a large family raised by an unconventional single mother.
Broadcast history
A pilot episode was developed by the BBC and broadcast on Channel 4 on 23 December 2013, and the show was subsequently ordered to series. A six-part series began broadcasting on Channel 4 on 16 March 2015.[1] The first series attracted an average of 1.3 million viewers and 6.3% share of audience per episode, making it Channel 4's second highest-rating comedy of 2015.[2] A second six-part series was filmed in late 2015, which began broadcasting on 2 March 2016.[2] The show was cancelled on 9 August 2016 due to Channel 4's "commitments to new programmes" for the following year.[3]
On 18 October 2016, the Moran sisters launched a Kickstarter campaign to raise money to make a third series of the show. The plan was to make a special one-off episode if the campaign received £320,000 by 20 November 2016; or to make a third series (to be premiered in late 2017) if more than £320,000 was donated.[4] The campaign was unsuccessful and plans for a third series were cancelled.[5]
Della Garry lives in Wolverhampton with her five daughters and one son. Eldest daughter Germaine is smitten by local bad boy Lee Rhind, even though he is meant to have shot a snail with an air rifle, and has built a shrine to him.
Della takes the girls foraging for free food on the common. On the way Germaine is thrilled to see Lee Rhind's house is next to the common. The girls find foraging boring and the onset of Yoko's period halts the exercise.
Germaine interrupts her sisters' Britain's Got Talent session to announce that she needs new knickers and, since Yoko also needs a new bra, Della grudgingly takes her daughters to town, shopping.
Cousin Cathy calls by unannounced and everybody is pleased to see her - except Germaine, and to make matters worse Cathy attracts the desirable Lee Rhind.
Della believes that the girls should socialize more and makes them attend the birthday party for depressive Uncle Natie, whose wife has left him. Yoko is very nervous but is declared a champion due to her unexpected skill at computer games whilst Germaine is annoyed to find that Cathy has invited Lee Rhind as her guest.
After Grampy's mother dies and his wife dumps him - literally, in a layby - Della decides he should move in with the family and takes Aretha to collect his mourning clothes, narrowly avoiding a meeting with her hated mother.
Germaine is thrilled to hear that Lee Rhind is on the market again after a split from Cathy and discovers that he is going to the Dorchester night club. Della consents to her going - provided she takes Yoko, whose dancing is a hit, and Aretha. However having been mistaken for a prostitute and realizing that she is irresistible to men Germaine ditches Lee.
To save money Della cancels the Internet, forcing the girls to go to the library where bookish Yoko and Aretha are quite at home though Germaine finds it boring and quiet. However a chance encounter with Callum allows her to use the Monroe Technique and secure a date with him.
With landlady Laura coming to inspect the house Della not only organizes a clean-up but sends the children for a day with their unemployed, former left wing campaigner father Sean. He takes them for a picnic in the country in woodlands, now claimed by a private company where their exercise in civil disobedience ends in arrest.
Having home educated the children Della is shocked when Aretha declares that she wants to go to school and coerces Callum into being her guardian whilst Sean also turns up to promise that he will get even with any bullies. Unfortunately the school is chaotic and badly run and Aretha's rant against it gets her excluded.
As Aretha enjoys college life with radical Economics lecturer Ruby, Della takes Germaine, who claims to be pregnant, to work with her at Pound Lord to show her what real life is like. The pregnancy is a false scare but Della does meet up with old flame Michael and ends the day with a proposition for Callum.
To raise money to pay the gas bill Della drags the family off to a car boot sale where the little ones do well by playing the sympathy card, but Yoko and Aretha's environmentally friendly method of organizing car parking causes chaos.
Della and the family head off for Wales to stay in a caravan that was owned by Grampy's late friend Deano, but with Aretha and Germaine both feeling dumped by objects of their affections.
Reception
Raised by Wolves was generally well received by critics: The Daily Telegraph called it "terrific" and "refreshingly honest", as "every one-liner was a zinger";[6] while The Independent described it as "great fun"[7] and with "joie de vivre to spare";[8] and The Guardian described it as a "loving and funny sitcom".[9]
Amidst this acclaim, the Glasgow Herald complained about the focus on a character's first period in the pilot episode, labelling the comedy "a bloody mess".[10]
With the arrival of the second series in 2016, the Radio Times declared that "the comedy gets even better. And filthier."[11]