Monday, January 16, 2012

Tune in and swoon over telly’s unlikely hunks (Mail On-Line)

By Kathryn Knight
Last updated at 12:22 PM on 16th January 2012


Quite unexpectedly, our TV screens have been over-run by dishy thesps.

We’ve had the delightful spectacle of Benedict Cumberbatch swooshing around the small screen with mesmerising intensity as a modern-day Sherlock Holmes.

An offbeat hunk he may be, but I defy any woman not to feel a frisson at the way he swirls his black coat.


Swoon! Benedict Cumberbatch as Sherlock (left) and Iain de Caestecker as the youthful James Herriot
Swoon! Benedict Cumberbatch as Sherlock (left) and Iain de Caestecker as the youthful James Herriot
Swoon! Benedict Cumberbatch as Sherlock (left) and Iain de Caestecker as the youthful James Herriot

Prefer a historical romance? There’s been an embarrassment of breeches. No sooner had we wiped away the tears after chisel-cheekboned Dan Stevens’s snowy proposal in the Downton Abbey Christmas special than we were able to whisk ourselves back to Victorian times and the spectacle of Douglas Booth as the doe-eyed Pip in the BBC’s Great Expectations.

Hot on his heels we had more Victorian smoulder in The Mystery Of Edwin Drood, with Freddie Fox in the title role and Matthew Rhys as the brooding John Jasper.
Shaun Evans kicked off 2012 in heart-fluttering fashion as a young Inspector Morse in a Mod-style jacket, while Iain de Caestecker charmed us as the youthful James Herriot.

While there have always been telly hunks (I grew up fixated with Dempsey & Makepeace, moving on to Robin of Sherwood as played by Michael Praed), it was slim pickings compared to what the menfolk were offered.

For every Robin of Sherwood there was Miss World and dozens of game shows with middle-aged males fawned over by skimpily clad blondes.


Double whammy: Matthew Rhys as John Jasper (left) and Freddie Fox as Edwin Drood in the BBC's adaptation of Dickens' final novel

Double whammy: Matthew Rhys as John Jasper (left) and Freddie Fox as Edwin Drood in the BBC's adaptation of Dickens' final novel


Model performances: Dan Stevens' Matthew Crawley in Downton Abbey (left) and Douglas Booth as Pip in Great Expectations
Model performances: Douglas Booth as Pip in Great Expectations
Model performances: Dan Stevens' Matthew Crawley in Downton Abbey (left) and Douglas Booth as Pip in Great Expectations
So it was time for TV parity. Why it’s come now is hard to say, though it can’t be entirely coincidence that there are more women in TV’s top jobs.

Who’s to say they don’t have a tick list of top ten telly hunks on their desk when they commission the latest three-parter?

The process wouldn’t be a million miles away from how female roles seem to have been cast in television since the first black and white picture flickered into life (‘Long hair? Decent pair of a legs and a cleavage? You’re in.’).

Now it’s our turn. Who’s for an updated Play Your Cards Right with a parade of shapely men in trunks?


Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/femail/article-2087049/Benedict-Cumberbatch-Sherlock-Downton-Abbeys-Dan-Stevens-TVs-unlikely-hunks.html#ixzz1jcuqBWlS

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