Thursday, September 19, 2013

Originally based around the lives of a group of high school students living in the wealthy Beverly Hills neighborhood then later moving on to their college days as they got older. The kids become friends and enemies fall in and out of love and go through an endless series of crises as this small group somehow becomes personally involved in every newsworthy social issue from alcoholism to South African apartheid to pregnancy to AIDS.

Review

Its easy to forget (or not even know) that at one point Beverly Hills 90210 (created by Darren Star whod go on to Melrose Place before the phenomenon that is Sex & The City) was the biggest teenorientated show in the world. Yes the world! One minute it was struggling to survive and the next the stars of the series inspired scenes reminiscent of Beatlemania. And justly so because in those halcyon days of yesteryear 90210s blend of drama cheese humour pure unadulterated escapism great scenery in terms of cast and location and strong characterisation was compelling viewing.

The early years concentrated on the Walsh family who promptly became the emotional core of the show and their efforts to adjust to life in Beverly Hills after relocation from Minnesota.

Twins Brandon and Brenda (Jason Priestley and Shannen Doherty) befriend a diverse group of mostlyrich rich kids at West Beverly High spoilt son of a movie actress jock and joker Steve Sanders (Ian Ziering) persistently in trouble and always relying on Brandon to bail him out. Brainy (but not as affluent) crusader Andrea Zuckerman (Gabrielle Carteris) doomed to an unrequited love for Brandon. Ditzy naive Donna Martin (Tori Spelling) probably the most (in)famous virgin on American TV. Insecure school DJ David Silver (Brian Austin Green) desperate to be accepted by the gang. Blonde bombshell Kelly Taylor (Jennie Garth) whod go on to sleep with her best friends boyfriend and also her exboyfriends best friend. And last (but by no means least) moody alcoholic Dylan McKay (Luke Perry) the quintessential troubled teen.

From High School (Seasons 13) through to College (Seasons 47) and life after College (Seasons 810) they face a series of crises together ranging from the death of a friend to depression drugs physical and sexual assault and tumultuous love triangles.

The earlier High School years are undoubtedly the best the original cast is intact the strongest scripts are to be found within this time frame and its the period that to this day defines the show.

However postShannen Doherty and with TiffaniAmber Thiessen as vivacious vampy schemer Valerie Malone and Kathleen Robertson as the acerbic sarcastic Clare Arnold on board 90210 remained very entertaining viewing right up to College graduation at the end of Season 7 notable as the episode in which High School sweethearts (and future spouses) David and Donna finally consummated their long onagainoffagain relationship.

Admittedly the last three seasons are weaker than previous ones. A deadly combination of changes to cast and crew (it survived the loss of Darren Star Shannen Doherty and Luke Perry in Season 6 but to all intents and purposes the show ended with Jason Priestleys departure in Season 9. Not even Luke Perrys return could compensate for that) a more overt soap opera format and weaker new characters (embodied by the fauxDylan imitator Noah Hunter ineptly played by Vincent Young) sounded the death knell for a series that had become a shadow of its former powerhouse self.

Still in the cutthroat world of TV youve got to have something very special to last ten years on an American network and thats exactly what Beverly Hills 90210 did. It outlasted all its contemporaries such as the infinitely superior teen drama My SoCalled Life starring Clare Danes and Jared Leto which only made it to air for a year and it gave the likes of Buffy Party of Five and Dawsons Creek a recipe for success to follow.

Love it or hate it (and I LOVE it) Beverly Hills 90210 is a TV institution.