
Last Tango in Halifax Bows Out on a High With Strong Ratings and Familiar Emotional Warmth
The final episode of Last Tango in Halifax drew an impressive overnight audience on BBC One on Wednesday, December 19, confirming the enduring popularity of Sally Wainwright’s warm, bittersweet family drama. According to viewing data, the sixth and final episode attracted 6.29 million viewers, delivering a robust 26.6 per cent audience share, the highest figure of the season. The strong performance followed Tuesday night’s penultimate episode and cemented the show’s place as one of the broadcaster’s most reliable drama successes.
For many viewers, the finale represented not just the end of another series, but the closing of a long-running emotional chapter. Since its debut, Last Tango in Halifax has drawn loyalty through its gentle exploration of love rediscovered later in life, anchored by the enduring on-screen chemistry of Anne Reid and Derek Jacobi as childhood sweethearts Alan and Celia. Their romance, rekindled after decades apart, has remained the show’s emotional backbone, even as the narrative expanded to encompass children, grandchildren, and the wider complexities of modern family life.
Despite the series’ broad popularity, Last Tango in Halifax has not always been embraced uncritically. For some viewers and critics, its gentle rhythms and familiar emotional beats have long signalled comfort television rather than challenging drama. For them, the show sits firmly in the tradition of nostalgic, rural-set storytelling, marked by sweeping views of the Yorkshire countryside and a tone often described as reassuringly old-fashioned.
One critic described the experience of starting a new series as a feeling of inevitability: a “light, bittersweet rom-com” atmosphere with very few surprises. From the opening moments, the foundations of each character’s journey are typically laid bare — the widowed grandparents reconnecting after youthful romance, the emotionally burdened adult children, and the younger generation navigating early adulthood against a backdrop of family history and quiet regret.

In that sense, Last Tango in Halifax has always worn its narrative intentions openly. The question of whether Celia and Alan will finally find lasting happiness is rarely framed as a genuine mystery; instead, the pleasure lies in watching how the obstacles rise and fall along the way. The same applies to the extended family, whose romantic entanglements, professional collapses, and reconciliations unfold with careful emotional pacing rather than dramatic shocks.
The one storyline that genuinely startled some viewers in the first series was the revelation that Caroline, played by Sarah Lancashire, was involved in a lesbian relationship with one of her former teachers. For a series initially perceived as traditional in tone, the plot twist challenged expectations and added unexpected depth to a show many assumed would remain safely conventional. In retrospect, the storyline signalled Wainwright’s intention to explore identity and personal freedom beneath the program’s gentle surface.
Wainwright, now regarded as one of Britain’s most consistent television writers, has always defended the emotional realism at the heart of the series. While her later work would take darker turns in shows such as Happy Valley, Last Tango in Halifax remains firmly rooted in the belief that everyday emotional struggles — pride, loneliness, forgiveness, and compromise — are dramatic enough without heightened sensationalism.
The final episode stayed true to that philosophy. Rather than ending with a grand dramatic flourish, the series closed with measured resolutions, emotional reckonings, and the suggestion that relationships remain works in progress even after apparent closure. For its most devoted audience, this restraint is precisely what makes the show so resonant.
Critics who have long viewed the series as predictable concede that its real success lies in character consistency. Over the years, viewers have watched characters age, change, fracture, and reform in ways that feel gently earned rather than theatrically imposed. The comfort of that familiarity is not accidental; it is the engine of the show’s longevity.

The ratings success of the finale underscores how powerfully that familiarity continues to resonate. In an era of high-concept thrillers and relentless plot-driven drama, Last Tango in Halifax has proved that audiences still have a deep appetite for reflective storytelling rooted in emotional connection and human imperfection.
For the BBC, the series’ performance represents a reminder of the enduring value of character-led drama aimed at older and family audiences — viewers often underserved by mainstream entertainment trends but fiercely loyal once engaged.
Whether this truly marks the final farewell for Alan, Celia, and their extended family remains uncertain. Television history suggests that popular, warmly remembered dramas have a habit of returning when conditions align. For now, however, Last Tango in Halifax exits on a rare note of ratings triumph, leaving behind a legacy defined not by spectacle, but by steadfast emotional companionship.
And for millions of viewers who tuned in for one last visit to the familiar hills of Yorkshire, the farewell felt less like an ending and more like parting from a group of old friends.