Border Cafe

Get in control of your TV
Choose from over 500 channels from Sky, Virgin and Freeview and customise just the way you like it.
Click here to download and customise now

Sick of squinting at your ragged paper TV guide?
Over 570 channels with FULL information in one powerful package.
Click here to download and try now

Running Time: 45 minutes (approx)

Former rock star of rock heroes 'True North', Charlotte Smith (Elizabeth Carling), buys the Border Cafe (a converted 1930's petrol station) for her boyfriend David Doyle (Sean Gallagher) when she leaves the band at the height of their success.

Charlotte brought David the cafe as a place for him to play live to an audience, which as a struggling singer/songwriter, had been his dream for years. The cafe is situated on the outskirts of Hayle Point (a fictional town lying on the border of Lancashire, Cheshire and North Wales).

The two turn the place into an American style diner where David gives his elder brother, Kidder (Antony Strachan), a job as the chef to release him from his dead-end canteen job. Soon Ronnie (Georgia MacKenzie) comes on to the scene, after leaving her career as a band member in a True North tribute band, to track down Charlotte. She soon remains in the area and starts work at the cafe.

The cafe starts to attract diners from all walks of life and becomes known as the place for banter, intrigue and a shoulder to cry on.

Main Cast

Anna Keaveney
Image for Elizabeth CarlingElizabeth Carling
Richard Mylan
Sean Gallagher
Georgia Mackenzie
Michael Atwell
Michael Elwyn
Anthony Strachan

Still looking for more?

 Click here to search the web for Border Cafe

Add a comment

(required)
(required but not displayed)
Your e-mail is also used for adding an Avatar image to your comment using the free and very cool Gravatar.com
 
(your personal web site)

Please note we can not guarantee that programme makers will read your comment as we have no direct relationship with them, so requests for application forms will almost certainly be ignored (try searching Google instead). This is merely an opportunity to register opinions, questions or comments about a programme's content.