Showing posts with label ford madox ford. Show all posts
Showing posts with label ford madox ford. Show all posts

Sunday, September 22, 2013

Emmy Awards British nominees: Benedict Cumberbatch

RADIO TIMES
James Gill
8:00 AM, 21 September 2013



BENEDICT CUMBERBATCH

Nominated for: Outstanding Lead Actor in a Mini Series or Movie

Role: Christopher Tietjens in Parade’s End



This is the second time the Sherlock actor has been nominated for an Emmy Award. The first was last year when he received a nomination for playing Sherlock Holmes, but lost out to Kevin Costner for his leading role as William ‘Devil Anse’ Hatfield in Hatfields & McCoys.

This year he’s up for Outstanding Lead Actor in a Mini Series for playing Christopher Tietjens in Parade’s End. When he heard of his nomination, Cumberbatch paid tribute to writer Tom Stoppard who adapted the novel by Ford Madox Ford.

“I was so honoured to work on Parade’s End, to get the chance to get under the skin of such a complex, beautifully written character as Tietjens with a script written by the unsurpassable Sir Tom Stoppard,” he said.


Friday, March 15, 2013

'Sherlock' Star Benedict Cumberbatch Collects Broadcasting Press Guild Award For 'Parade's End', Rebecca Hall Also Honoured (HUFF POST)


Cumberbatch with 'Parade's End' adaptor Sir Tom Stoppard

Benedict Cumberbatch has picked up another award for his starring role in 'Sherlock' and said he was looking forward to getting his teeth back into the part of the scruffy sleuth.

The actor, who was named best actor at the Broadcasting Press Guild for his performance in 'Sherlock' and the period drama Parade's End, said he was looking forward to starting filming next week.

He said: "Playing Sherlock means a great deal to me. It's lovely to be back and have the hair in place. We're getting our teeth into the first episode of the new series next week so it feels like a treat. It's just wonderful to be back."



Benedict's 'Parade's End' co-star, Rebecca Hall, also walked away with a trophy after she was named best actress for her performance as his on-screen wife in the drama.

'Parade's End', which was shown on BBC Two in five episodes last year, picked up four prizes and was named best drama series, while dramatist Sir Tom Stoppard won the BPG writer's award for his work adapting the original novels by Ford Madox Ford.

READ MORE: http://www.huffingtonpost.co.uk/2013/03/14/sherlock-benedict-cumberbatch-parades-end-rebecca-hall_n_2877196.html#slide=2222544

Tuesday, February 26, 2013

Benedict Cumberbatch: 'Parade's End': A Plum Role for Benedict Cumberbatch


By Ross Langager 26 February 2013
Quavers and Hesitations


A moment in the premiere hour of Parade’s End explains the title in one deft stroke. In the midst of a luncheon with a friend and colleague, the brilliant but conventional government statistician Christopher Tietjens (Benedict Cumberbatch) receives a letter from his free-spirited wife Sylvia (Rebecca Hall). In blunt terms, she asks his leave to come home to Britain after deserting him for a fling with another man on the Continent. As Tietjens details a grimly rational plan for reestablishing a semblance of domestic stability upon her return, his more impulsive Scottish colleague McMaster (Stephen Graham) bluntly wonders why Tietjens does not simply divorce his wife for her serial infidelity. “For a gentleman,” replies Tietjens haltingly, “there is such a thing as… call it, ‘parade’.”

The BBC/HBO miniseries, adapted from Ford Madox Ford’s epochal tetralogy of 1920s novels, goes on to depict a long “parade” of failing conventional propriety. Tom Stoppard’s teleplay amplifies the frosted, caustic wit of the British upper class while maintaining the original’s core themes. The trajectory veers towards the titular expression of finality, as the inherited privilege of the Gilded Age and vestigial Victorian behavioral codes are eclipsed by the slaughter of the First World War and the profound social changes it engendered. Tietjens embodies initially the imperial establishment’s standard of gentlemanly self-possession, gradually becoming a harbinger of its agonizing downfall.

What a plum role for Cumberbatch this Tietjens is. Launched to prominence as a beloved 21st-century Sherlock Holmes, the fantastically named English actor here slips into the skin of another furiously logical genius who struggles to connect emotionally with those closest to him. Though the role is not wholly outside of his comfort zone, Cumberbatch rarely makes the obvious choice with the character, especially when Tietjens sees action at the Front and returns with acute shell shock (very literally expressed, in one haunted monologue about the varieties of explosives used in artillery bombardment). Quavers and hesitations in his Received Pronunciation utterances bespeak a considered intellect before the trenches, afterwards suggest mental trauma, and Cumberbatch gestures to the shift without ever telegraphing it.


READ MORE: http://www.popmatters.com/pm/review/168728-parades-end-a-plum-role-for-benedict-cumberbatch/

BENEDICT CUMBERBATCH: Not the Same Old Cup of British Tea By ALESSANDRA STANLEY (NEW YORK TIMES)


Saying that a television series depicts the English aristocracy on the brink of World War I and beyond is almost a disservice — the description sounds like yet another big Masterpiece Theater bore, or worse, an amusing one like “Downton Abbey.” “Parade’s End,” a co-production of the BBC and HBO that begins on Tuesday on HBO, looks like a lush elegy to the Edwardian age, but it’s not nearly as swoony and nostalgic as most others of the genre. Tom Stoppard adapted Ford Madox Ford’s tetralogy into a five-part series, streamlining and speeding up the story without dumbing it down.


Like Ford’s modernist opus, and its brainy, punctilious hero, Christopher Tietjens (Benedict Cumberbatch), the series is not easy to follow or instantly love, but it is impossible to dismiss. That’s partly thanks to artful storytelling and gifted acting, especially by Rebecca Hall, who is a bewitching hoot in the role of Christopher’s bored, unfaithful wife, Sylvia.

It’s a series that inevitably draws comparisons with “Downton Abbey,” since they share the same upper-class trappings and totems. Tietjens, a brilliant statistician, is an old-fashioned English gentleman, good with horses, furniture and propriety. He is chivalrously loyal to Sylvia, a spoiled beauty who scorns her husband’s stuffy rectitude, even as she is piqued by it. She dismisses him as a “great lump,” yet can’t stop poking him.


“Parade’s End” tells the story of a bad marriage, set in a much broader context of a rotting civilization.

And that’s the real difference between it and “Downton Abbey.” That show is a gauzy anachronism in period costumes; the first novel of “Parade’s End” was published in 1924, and the series is enmeshed in the great cataclysm of the time, underscoring the cruelty of the age as much as its charm.


READ MORE: http://tv.nytimes.com/2013/02/26/arts/television/parades-end-with-benedict-cumberbatch-and-rebecca-hall.html?pagewanted=all

Thursday, February 21, 2013

Move over, Downton Abbey: Parade’s End is moving in Stellar writing and cast make British period piece a winner By Bill Brownstein, Montreal Gazette February 20, 2013 (CALGARY HERALD)




MONTREAL - Great news for those going through the initial stages of Downton Abbey withdrawal: another sterling British period piece is set to make its North American debut.

The five-part miniseries Parade’s End begins Tuesday on HBO Canada. But unlike Downton Abbey, viewers won’t have to wait endless weeks for it to wrap. This Parade comes to an end on Feb. 28; the entire series airs over three nights.

Saving the best for last: Not to detract from Downton Abbey, but Parade’s End packs even more of a punch. Yet it, too, has epic sweep, replete with lavish costumes, tony castles and manicured gardens.

Not that time-honoured servitude doesn’t come into the fray, but Parade’s End is much more upstairs than downstairs-oriented. There is also more passion and more mirth at play here than in Downton Abbey. The tension builds dramatically in this bittersweet tale of love and valour. And the “whiff of sex permeates like a vapour,” as one character so accurately assesses.

Not to detract from the work of Maggie Smith et al at the Abbey, but Parade’s End stars Benedict Cumberbatch (yes, the same guy somewhat slumming in the Sherlock TV series), Rebecca Hall, Adelaide Clemens, Rupert Everett, Stephen Graham, Janet McTeer, Miranda Richardson and many more give the equivalent of a master class in acting. Even the late Sir Larry Olivier would be dazzled.

And not to detract from Downton Abbey creator/writer Julian Fellowes, but it’s hard to top scripts penned by playwright Tom Stoppard, who has adapted this series from the acclaimed four novels of Ford Madox Ford. The dialogue, be it tongue-in-cheek droll or deliciously treacherous, is brilliant. To wit: “He’s not dead. He’s in Glasgow.” Or, “He’s a great lump of wood … (I want) to kill him to see if he has any blood in him.”



Read more: http://www.montrealgazette.com/news/Move+over+Downton+Abbey+Parade+moving/7990821/story.html#ixzz2La6W2suT

Friday, February 15, 2013

Parade's End Promos Showcase Benedict Cumberbatch And Tom Stoppard Author: Jesse Carp (CINEMA BLEND)


In about a week and a half's time, HBO will start airing Parade's End, a five part mini-series starring Benedict Cumberbatch as a British aristocrat caught in a love triangle and World War I. Surely, nothing that Sherlock can't handle. Based on a four part book series of the same name by Ford Madox Ford, the mini-series was adapted for the premium cable network, and the BBC, by renowned British playwright Tom Stoppard.


READ MORE: http://www.cinemablend.com/television/Parade-End-Promos-Showcase-Benedict-Cumberbatch-Tom-Stoppard-52605.html

Wednesday, January 9, 2013

Benedict Cumberbatch: HBO Previews Upcoming ‘Parade’s End’ Miniseries Starring Benedict Cumberbatch


HBO has some good news for Anglophiles who are already fretting over the looming finale of Downton Abbey‘s third season in February. They’ll soon be serving up a British period drama of their own in the form of Parade’s End, a five-part miniseries set against the backdrop of World War I, starring Sherlock‘s Benedict Cumberbatch.

The first two parts of Parade’s End premiere Tuesday, February 26th at 9/8c on HBO.



READ MORE: http://www.tvequals.com/2013/01/09/hbo-previews-upcoming-parades-end-miniseries-starring-benedict-cumberbatch/


Sunday, January 6, 2013

Benedict Cumberbatch in Tom Stoppard miniseries for HBO (WASHINGTON POST)


By Lisa de Moraes


Benedict Cumberbatch, the new dulcet-toned fair-haired boy of British thespianism, came to soak up the love of TV critics and talk about his HBO’s broadcast of “Parade’s End” at Winter TV Press Tour 2013.

“Benedict Cumberbatch…has now played the two cleverest men in England – and, of course, Tom Stoppard,” an HBO exec introduced the panel, having earlier called Stoppard “one of the greatest living writers of the English language.”


Cumberbund plays radical Tory Englishman Christopher Tietjens in Stoppard’s adaptation of Ford Maddox Ford’s quartet of Brit history novels that span the twilight years of Edwardian England through World War I. HBO will launch the five-parter on Feb. 26; it aired in the UK last year.

“Benedict, you have not only played the two cleverest men in England, but you’ve done the words of the two cleverest men in England,” one critic gushed, wondering “What is it like to do the words of these guys and to do these incredibly witty things that they have you say?”

(That second cleverest man reference would be Steven Moffat who penned the “Sherlock” scripts Cummerbund performs in the PBS highly-mini series.)

“Very humbling because they’re far brighter than you could ever possibly be,” said Cumberbatch, appearing via satellite, from London.

He compared it to “extraordinary pieces of classical music,” which, he noted, does have to be interpreted by an actor if anyone’s going to hear it.

“Benedict, this has been such an amazing year for you with all the things that are happening in your career. Could you just reflect a little bit on where you’ve come and what you’re achieving this year and so far?” another critic gushed.

Cumberbatch smiled and laughed. “That’s it, really -- it’s a big smile and a laugh…Embarrassment of riches is the headline, I think.”

Stoppard, who’d not gotten any questions at that point and who, like Cumberbatch, was appearing via satellite, jumped in and noted Cumberbatch had already done “Frankenstein” with Jonny Lee Miller at the National Theatre, alternating the roles of Dr. Frankenstein and his monster.

“Yeah,” responded Cumberbatch. Stoppard had struck a nerve, what with Miller now playing Holmes on CBS, of which neither he nor Moffat approves.

“And you had finished filming ‘War Horse.’,” Stoppard continued. “So we didn’t pluck you from the chorus.

Then he told a story about smoking cigarettes with Cumberbatch in the made-for-movie trenches of Flanders while Cumberbatch was shooting “War Horse,” giving critics a moment to think of a question for Stoppard.

One wondered about the challenge Stoppard faced in adapting the series of novels, guessing “it was considerable.”

“You possibly already know quite a lot about the book,” Stoppard told the room full of critics and blogalists – the best gag of the press tour’s first day.

Then he began to detail that challenge.

READ MORE: http://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/tv-column/post/2013/01/05/eac97982-577d-11e2-bf3e-76c0a789346f_blog.html

Saturday, September 22, 2012

Parade's End, final episode, BBC Two, review Serena Davies reviews the final episode of Tom Stoppard’s BBC Two adaptation of Ford Madox Ford's Edwardian novels Parade's End. (TELEGRAPH)



So what, finally, did Parade’s End amount to? The last episode of Tom Stoppard’s adaptation of Ford Madox Ford’s doorstopper has aired on BBC Two. Half its scenes were of war and gory wounds; the other half of society chat, which came with its own form of lacerations, in the cutting remarks of the witchy Sylvia Tietjens (Rebecca Hall).

The BBC has thrown a lot at this drama: huge amounts of cash (American moneybags HBO helped out), two leads (Hall and Benedict Cumberbatch) with burgeoning Hollywood careers, and a script by Britain’s Greatest Living Playwright (arguably).

Stoppard duly delivered a screenplay that was ever astute, often funny and nearly always lucid – a feat considering the source material is frequently impenetrable. The script was also that remarkable thing in this Downton-saturated age: never sentimental.

In the final episode, noble, unglamorous hero Christopher Tietjens (Cumberbatch) finally got to the Front. There he met a shell-shocked CO who liked to summon pot shots from the Germans by careering across No Man’s Land. In Steven Robertson’s mercurial performance he had a whiff of Brideshead’s Sebastian Flyte about him: destroyed by hateful circumstances, but a bit of an immature fool to begin with.

The CO was spared the snipers (that would have been too obviously sad) but Sylvia’s twerp of a lover, Potty Perowne, was buried up to his neck by a shell, a fixed grin turned heavenwards. This moment elicited the evening’s funniest line. Sylvia, after defending her affair with him to her mother by saying it was an act of charity – “as Jesus would have done” then added: “They say he died with a smile on his face. Potty, that is.”

READ MORE: http://www.telegraph.co.uk/culture/tvandradio/9558694/Parades-End-final-episode-BBC-Two-review.html

Saturday, September 15, 2012

Benedict Cumberbatch: Parade's End, episode four, BBC Two, review Episode four of Parade's End, Tom Stoppard's lush adaptaion of Ford Madox Ford's Edwardian tetralogy, was darkly humorous in tone, writes Patrick Smith. (TELEGRAPH)

By Patrick Smith
10:30PM BST 14 Sep 2012




There were shades of Evelyn Waugh in tonight's penultimate instalment of Parade's End (BBC Two), Tom Stoppard's lush, languorous adaptation of Ford Madox Ford's Edwardian tetralogy. Darkly humorous in tone, it found the putty-mouthed aristocrat Christopher Tietjens (Benedict Cumberbatch) stationed in a base depot near Rouen, fed up with the monotony and harebrained bureaucracy of life on the Western Front.

Though within range of German artillery, this was supposedly a safe posting; his day-to-day duties involved ordering fire extinguishers and dreaming of his would-be lover Valentine Wannop (Adelaide Clemens).

There was a problem, however, in the form of his wife, Sylvia (the wonderful Rebecca Hall). Determined to get written approval from her husband to move into his family estate, Groby, Sylvia decided that she wanted to pay him a visit – despite General Campion (Roger Allam) being vehemently against the idea. “I’ve never known a woman like her," he fumed. "On no account is Mrs Tietjens to be allowed within 50 miles of Rouen, understood? I will not have skirts around my HQ."

Nevertheless, we watched as she charmed her way through France to show up at the General's camp. Indeed, Sylvia remained the most compelling thing about Parade's End: alluring, insouciant and deliciously duplicitous. We also saw her display a rare moment of vulnerability. “I haven’t had a man for five years," she said to her husband, sorrowfully. "I haven't let myself be kissed or touched. Not once. Not since Perowne (Tom Mison). Potty Perowne. Can you see how I must have been feeling to go with a fool like Perowne?" It made for affecting television.


READ MORE: http://www.telegraph.co.uk/culture/tvandradio/9544475/Parades-End-episode-four-BBC-Two-review.html

Sunday, September 9, 2012

Benedict Cumberbatch: Parade’s End – Episode 3 Review September 8, 2012 8:46 am Oscar Harding (WHATCULTURE)



If you haven’t been watching Parade’s End, the five-part adaptation of Ford Madox Ford’s tetralogy of novels starring Benedict Cumberbatch, then I seriously suggest you do. As it stands at the start of the episode, the somewhat conservative and brilliant Christopher Tietjens (Cumberbatch), has resigned from the imperial office of statistics, and away from both his bitterly frustrated wife Sylvia (Rebecca Hall) and his potential saviour-cum-hopelessly smitten suffragette Valentine (Adelaide Clemens). So far, so Downton. But this episode was a reward for patiently enjoying the foundations set in the first two episodes- whilst we see less of the levity of Tietjens’ friend MacMaster (Stephen Graham) and his affair with Edith Duchemin (Anne-Marie Duff), we instead shift focus to three different themes- 1. What Titetjens really means to the women who love him, 2. The Tietjens dynasty and Christopher’s place in it, and 3. The effects of the war on society

First off, we discover that in actual fact Sylvia does love Christopher. Rebecca Hall is given more of an opportunity to show she is completely frustrated with Christopher, desperate for him to be more human, and more flawed. He is on a pedestal she wants to knock down, because she wants to love this man, but knows her wish will never come true. Her character became someone I really empathised with, rather than just an acid-tongued delight and the token villain. Clemens’ Valentine became less simpering and showed a little more depth- her sheer disappointment when her brother (Freddie Fox, playing the one character in the mini-series I have no time for) shows up and she can’t be Christopher’s mistress for the night makes her more than just a token suffragette. I am beginning to warm to her a lot more, and as Rupert Everett says as Christopher’s brother, “You’re good for him”, and she is. As both women develop, so does Christopher- he is not uptight, merely trapped. He does not know what to do as everyone of worth in London discredits him, spreading rumours, which are the catalyst for Sylvia realising how much she cares for him. Christopher is forgetting things, and he looks set to rebuild himself as a more modern man, and realising what is in front of him- a real chance for happiness, and a chance to rebuild his marriage. What happens next will be very interesting.

READ MORE: http://whatculture.com/tv/tv-review-parades-end-episode-3-review.php

Wednesday, August 29, 2012

Benedict Cumberbatch: Parade's End gives BBC2 biggest drama ratings hit in seven years (THE TELEGRAPH)



By Ben Bryant10:02PM BST 28 Aug 2012

Audience figures show the first episode attracted 3.5 million viewers, making it BBC2’s biggest drama in years.

BBC2 trounced BBC1 and ITV’s Friday night prime-time ratings with 15 percent of all viewers, doubling its usual share.

The five-part series marked a return to television for internationally renowned playwright Tom Stoppard after a 35-year hiatus.

Stoppard helped boost the channel to its most impressive ratings since HBO’s historical drama Rome aired in 2005.

Star turns from Benedict Cumberbatch, who enjoys a large global following, and Rebecca Hall, also helped give prominence to the period piece.


Critical praise was just as forthcoming as viewers.

The Telegraph’s reviewer James Walton described it as a programme that ‘demanded and rewarded our full attention’ and awarded it four and a half stars. It was met with an equally rapturous reception across the board in other national newspapers.

Concert pianist James Rhodes wrote on Twitter: “Parade's End the perfect counterpoint to a heavy day. Hall, Stoppard & Cumberbatch - what a combination! TV that makes one feel smart...“

READ MORE: http://www.telegraph.co.uk/culture/tvandradio/9504571/Parades-End-gives-BBC2-biggest-drama-ratings-hit-in-seven-years.html

Monday, August 27, 2012

As Benedict Cumberbatch returns in period drama Parade's End, BBC is hit by complaints the dialogue is inaudible By SARA NATHAN (MAIL ON LINE)



Seen but not heard: Viewers complained that they struggled to hear the dialogue in BBC2's adaptation of Parade's End, starring Benedict Cumberbatch as Christopher Tietjens and Rebecca Hall as Sylvia


For millions of fans, it was a chance to see Benedict Cumberbatch back on screen – but  if they had hoped to be able to hear him too, they may have been disappointed.

Viewers of the BBC2 adaptation of Parade’s End have complained that they could not make out a word the actors said in pivotal scenes.

Sherlock star Cumberbatch, 36, stars in the period drama as brilliant statistician Christopher Tietjens, with his wife Sylvia played by Rebecca Hall, daughter of acclaimed director Sir Peter.


The first episode of the series, adapted by playwright Sir Tom Stoppard from novels by Ford Madox Ford, aired on Friday night and pulled in a peak audience of 3.5million – but afterwards many took to Twitter and internet discussion boards to complain about poor sound.

Fan Tom Newsom wrote on Twitter: ‘I liked Parade’s End. Couldn’t hear all of it, and didn’t realise how “big” it was, but it’s certainly well made.’

Scriptwriter Terry Hodgkinson commented: ‘Bad sound quality. Dialogue and story hard to follow. Too much thespian exuberance and over-acting.’


Read more:http://www.dailymail.co.uk/tvshowbiz/article-2194069/Parades-End-BBC-hit-complaints-dialogue-inaudible.html

Sunday, August 19, 2012

Two sex scenes in the first six minutes... the steamy saga that the BBC hopes will grab Downton's crown By CHRIS HASTINGS and EMILY HILL (DAILY MAIL)



On the night before her wedding, in a sumptuous Parisian hotel suite, a beautiful bride-to-be with tumbling red hair opens the door to her lover. Although he is not the man she is to marry in the morning, they kiss passionately, before he rips off her clothes and ravishes her on the carpet.

This is the arresting opening to the BBC’s latest period drama, Parade’s End.

It boasts two sex scenes in the first six minutes. The second features the show’s stars, Benedict Cumberbatch and Rebecca Hall, breathlessly panting and grappling at one another through illicit sexual congress in a railway carriage. A scene in a later episode shows a naked Hall smoking in the bath.


Downton Abbey’s Lord and Lady Grantham would be appalled – never dreaming of such lewdness. But the BBC hopes that Parade’s End will soon be beating Downton in the battle for ratings and critical plaudits.



Cumberbatch has already launched an attack on ITV’s hit costume drama, denouncing it as  ‘sentimental’, ‘cliched’ and ‘atrocious’.

Outraged Downton devotees are now labelling the actor ‘Cumberbitch’ but its creator, Julian Fellowes, appears to be talking down the furore, claiming: ‘I am quite sure what Ben said has been taken out of context.’

Like Downton, Parade’s End opens in 1912 and unravels the tangled love lives of the English upper-classes in the run-up to the First World War. It soon makes Fellowes’s version of Edwardian life – in which a Turkish gentleman has died in Lady Mary’s bed after making love with her and Lady Sybil has run off with a chauffeur – look positively prim and proper. TV insiders have already dubbed the BBC production ‘Downton for grown-ups’.

‘I like the idea of it being called an adult drama,’ says Susanna White, director of the new five-part series. ‘The two shows are very different animals and although they may appear to have the same spots, they don’t.
‘The only similarity is the period in which they are set and the fact that they are both about a load of toffs.

‘Downton is just a lovely thing to curl up in front of with a glass of wine but ours is the opposite. I like to think of Parade’s End as Downton Abbey meets The Wire,’ she adds, referring to the gritty American crime series.


The £12 million production – one of the most expensive dramas ever commissioned by the BBC – was adapted from acclaimed modernist writer Ford Madox Ford’s series of four novels also called Parade’s End.

In contrast to Downton Abbey, which many viewers feel at times descends into soap opera, the BBC drama could not be more highbrow. ‘Ford Madox Ford tracks the shifting moods of the nation, from chauvinistic pre-war Edwardian complacency to post-war exhaustion,’ says Professor of Literature John Sutherland at University College London. ‘It was a big subject. For those inspired to pick up Penguin’s tie-in edition of Parade’s End be warned: it’s 856 pages. At two minutes a page . . . well, you can do the maths.’

Adapted by playwright Sir Tom Stoppard, Parade’s End was filmed across 150 sets and boasts a cast that also includes Miranda Richardson, Rupert Everett and Anne-Marie Duff.


Read more:http://www.dailymail.co.uk/tvshowbiz/article-2190323/Parades-End-Two-sex-scenes-minutes--steamy-saga-BBC-hopes-grab-Downtons-crown.html


Friday, February 17, 2012

Benedict Cumberbatch: New flagship 5-part saga = Parade's End (Radio Times)



Jack Seale
 12:00 AM, 18 February 2012

First look: Benedict Cumberbatch in Parade’s End Rebecca Hall co-stars in BBC2 drama written by Tom Stoppard

Here’s the first photograph of what should be one of 2012’s classiest drama series: Parade’s End, written by Tom Stoppard and starring Benedict Cumberbatch. It’s a prestige production with high literary pedigree – so anyone looking at this photo and debating how hot or not Cumberbatch looks with his blond side parting and three-piece suit should be thoroughly ashamed.

Certainly this will not happen in the RadioTimes.com office. The flagship five-part saga, a dramatisation of novels written in the 1920s by Ford Madox Ford, follows English aristocrat Christopher Tietjens (Cumberbatch) and his beautiful wife Sylvia (Rebecca Hall, also pictured) from the decline of the Edwardian era to the end of the First World War.

Read further:  http://www.radiotimes.com/news/2012-02-18/first-look-benedict-cumberbatch-in-parades-end