
BBC spy thriller hailed as 'the best series about a true story in a long time' finally lands on Netflix - and viewers 'binge it all in two days'
A BBC spy thriller hailed as 'the best series about a true story in a long time' has finally landed on Netflix.
The six-part programme, The Trial of Christine Keeler, reenacts the story of the 1960s Profumo affair.
Sophie Cookson, 35, stars as Keeler, whose sexual liaisons with Tory Minister John Profumo and a Russian military attache, based in London, led to one of the biggest political scandals of modern times.
The series originally aired on BBC One back in 2019 and has recently been added to Netflix.
Fans have raved about the drama over the years, which has an impressive 77% score on Rotten Tomatoes.
From A-list scandals and red carpet mishaps to exclusive pictures and viral moments, subscribe to the DailyMail's new Showbiz newsletter to stay in the loop.
Some viewers left their thoughts on The Trial Of Christine Keeler on Google and one penned: 'Excellent depiction of a true life drama and event that had everything from high suspense and gripped the viewer from beginning to the end.
'Christine really had a sad life and paid the ultimate price by being exploited by men from a very young age, being let down by her own parents.
'It also showed that men in high office could get away with almost anything. Just kept you on the edge of your seat throughout. And superbly acted by the entire cast.
'One of the best series of a true story I have seen in a long time that I literally binge watched over two days! Brilliant.'
Another added: 'I enjoyed this drama of a true event. It was to me more realistic of the event and the people involved and less of a showcase drama.
'The entire cast was superb. I have never heard of Sophie Cookson and she came across as credible and sympathetic to the memory of the real Christine.'
While someone else gushed: 'Loved it . Graham Norton was excellent , in fact Casting was brilliant. Probably one of the best TV series I've viewed.'
'A gripping story, great actors and actresses. Think the story was portrayed in a good way,' one viewer said.
Fans have raved about the drama over the years, which has an impressive 77% score on Rotten Tomatoes
It comes after TV fans were left gripped by another show, a 'masterpiece' period drama titled The English.
Written and directed by Hugo Blick, the show first hit our screens back in 2022.
The revisionist Western six-part series landed on Amazon Prime Video in the US, but was also released on BBC Two for those in the UK.
Although it was released three years ago, some only recently noticed the drama is available to watch on iPlayer.
What was the Profumo affair?
The Profumo affair had it all - sex, lies and espionage. It broke at the height of the Cold War, when spying was rife and the threat of war was imminent with the outbreak of the Cuban Missile Crisis.
Here we look back at how the scandal unfolded:
April 1960: At the height of the Cold War, Christine Keeler, having left her home in Wraysbury, Berks, heads for London and begins working at Murray's Cabaret Club in Soho. It is there that she meets Dr Stephen Ward, a London osteopath. Within weeks she had moved into his Bayswater flat. She soon meets Mandy Rice-Davies at Murray's and the pair become party companions.
July 1961: Ward introduces 19-year-old Keeler to Secretary of State for War, John Profumo, while at a party thrown by Lord and Lady Astor at their stately home in Cliveden at Taplow, Bucks. Keeler and Profumo embark on an affair lasting only a few weeks. At the same time, she becomes involved in an affair with Commander Eugene Ivanov, a Soviet naval attaché at the Russian Embassy in London.
March 1963: After months of speculation among MPs, Profumo is forced to face the Commons, where he says: 'There was no impropriety whatever in my acquaintance with Miss Keeler and I have made the statement because of what was said yesterday in the House by three honourable members whose remarks were protected by privilege.'
June 1963: Ward is arrested in Watford and taken to Marylebone Police Station where he is charged with living off immoral earnings. His trial soon begins at the Old Bailey.
June 5, 1963: Profumo resigns his Cabinet post after admitting lying to the House of Commons about the nature of his relationship with Keeler.
August 1963: On the last day of his trial, Ward is found dead at his London home having taken an overdose of sleeping pills.
December 1963: Keeler is found guilty of perjury in a related trial and imprisoned for nine months.
1989: The Profumo affair is made into a film called Scandal, starring John Hurt, Ian McKellen and Joanne Whalley.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Daily Mail
13 minutes ago
- Daily Mail
'Public are sick to death of the migrant free-for-all', says Top Tory as he hails Mail's cash-for-visas investigation
The public are 'sick to death' of the immigration 'free-for-all', Robert Jenrick warned yesterday after the Mail revealed how crooked legal advisers run cash-for-visas scams. The Tory justice spokesman hailed our 'crucial' undercover investigation which exposed how companies are charging up to £22,000 per person to provide 'skilled' jobs in the UK for underqualified foreign workers. The Mail probe discovered a range of brazen tricks being used to dupe the Home Office into providing sponsorship licences which enable convenience stores, barbers, warehouses and bars across the country to bring in overseas labour on false pretences. It is so lucrative that many firms have been started up just to profit from hiring foreign staff and then exploit them for cheap labour. Immigration advisers working as fixers for the firms coach immigrants on how to lie to officials, overstating their levels of education and experience to secure the visa. Mr Jenrick said: 'This crucial Daily Mail investigation shows our immigration system is a free-for-all. 'Scammers are lining their pockets while the public have yet more low-skilled migration forced upon them. 'It's gone on for decades and the public are sick to death of it.' Border security minister Dame Angela Eagle launched an urgent investigation into our probe. She also immediately suspended the sponsorship licence of Leicester-based immigration advice firm Flyover International after the Mail revealed its managing partner tricks the Home Office into believing employers need a certificate of sponsorship to take on overseas workers. Joe Estibeiro told our undercover reporter that he worked with businesses in Bradford, Leicester, Northampton and Peterborough, but takes payment for his services only via third-party bank accounts to avoid a paper trail linking the firm to his scam. He makes it appear that employers can't find any British residents to fill 'skilled' jobs by first advertising the positions in the UK and only recording interviews with the worst candidates to use as evidence if the Home Office investigates. The overseas workers he recruits officially earn around £3,000 a month to meet the Government's minimum salary requirements for skilled worker visas. But Estibeiro described how after the money is paid into their account they have to withdraw all but £900 and secretly hand it back to their boss. More than 131,000 businesses are on the Home Office's list for licensed sponsors for the permits. including market traders, dog groomers – listed as 'canine beauticians' – curtain fitters and even scores of kebab shops. Critics warned the open duplicity could sink Sir Keir Starmer's immigration crackdown which made new restrictions on skilled worker visas a major part of his aim to end the economy's addiction to cheap overseas labour. Flyover International is owned by another man who is understood to be taking the matter seriously and investigating, and says Estibeiro was not officially hired to work for the UK end of the business. Estibeiro denied involvement in any 'illegal or unethical' activity and said he was 'solely involved in student recruitment'. A Home Office source claimed that when Mr Jenrick was immigration minister, he failed to clamp down on the criminal gangs fuelling illegal immigration. The source added: 'If he needs reminding what the Labour Government has done to tackle this, we've introduced a new law to prevent suspected crooks like the one found by the brilliant journalism in the Daily Mail – so the Immigration Advice Authority will get new powers to immediately suspend registered advisers and organisations.'


Telegraph
28 minutes ago
- Telegraph
Harry Potter star faces pile-on for backing Rowling
Tom Felton, the Harry Potter actor, said he was 'grateful' to JK Rowling despite other stars from the film series shunning the author for her gender-critical views. Felton, who played Draco Malfoy in the films, addressed the ongoing controversy around Rowling's stance on transgender issues. Speaking to Variety at the Tony Awards about his part in the franchise, the actor, 37, said: 'The only thing I always remind myself is that I've been lucky enough to travel the world… and I have not seen anything bring the world together more than 'Potter'. 'And she's responsible for that, so I'm incredibly grateful.' His comments are markedly different from the other leading Harry Potter stars, who have all publicly criticised the author, and are likely to provoke criticism online. Rowling, who once said she would rather go to jail than refer to a trans person by their preferred pronouns, first publicly voiced her opinion on the issue five years ago, when she mocked a brand that used the term 'people who menstruate' instead of 'woman' in an article. The author, 59, was branded 'transphobic' by activists and criticised by the film franchise's stars, including Daniel Radcliffe, Emma Watson and Rupert Grint. Felton, who will make his Broadway debut in Harry Potter and the Cursed Child, said that he was not particularly 'attuned' to the trans row, but that it does not impact his work in the popular franchise. Speaking about the reprisal of his role as Malfoy in the stage show, he said: 'I think we all thought that the fandom flame might be doused over the years, but clearly it's not. 'The most exciting part is to do it live. It took nine months, more or less, to shoot a film, and this is all compact. This is all reimagined into a very loving, new type of story. And I get to be a dad, which is really fun.' His run on the Broadway show begins in November and marks the first time an original Harry Potter cast member has joined the stage production of Cursed Child. Elsewhere, the former cast members have distanced themselves from the author with whom they once had a close relationship. Rowling has previously said she would not forgive the Harry Potter actors for criticising her trans rights views, telling them last year to 'save their apologies' for 'traumatised detransitioners'. 'Eroding women's hard-won rights' She wrote on X: 'Celebs who cosied up to a movement intent on eroding women's hard-won rights and who used their platforms to cheer on the transitioning of minors can save their apologies for traumatised detransitioners and vulnerable women reliant on single-sex spaces.' Earlier this year, she appeared to renew the public disagreement with the trio of stars on social media by suggesting that Radcliffe, Watson and Grint had 'ruined' the movie franchise. Responding to a post on X in March that said 'What actor/actress instantly ruins a movie for you?', the author wrote: 'Three guesses. Sorry, but that was irresistible.' Rowling has found herself increasingly at odds with other actors who made their names in the franchise since the Supreme Court's landmark ruling that trans women are legally not women. After the ruling, stars of HBO's Harry Potter reboot series – including Paapa Essiedu, Eddie Redmayne and Katie Leung – signed a pro-trans open letter 'in solidarity' with members of the LGBT community. The author accused them of being 'motivated by fear', adding: 'Gender ideology could give medieval Catholicism a run for its money when it comes to punishing heretics, so isn't it common sense to keep your head down and recite your Hail Mulvaneys?' Last year, Warner Bros, which owns HBO, defended Rowling's 'right to express her personal views' amid the ongoing row, saying that the new series 'will only benefit from her involvement'.


Telegraph
42 minutes ago
- Telegraph
Beth, review: a baffling and muddled sci-fi drama about race and IVF
Beth is Channel 4's first 'digital original drama'. What does this mean? Your guess is as good as mine. But it's being shown as a 45-minute programme on regular television and in 15-minute mini-episodes on YouTube. 'Truly groundbreaking,' says the man from Channel 4. Hmm. The thinking seems to be that young people with chronically short attention spans watch YouTube, and Channel 4 needs young people. In which case, they've made a baffling choice of subject, because does anyone under the age of 30 want to watch a stifling drama about a couple going through IVF? It's billed as a sci-fi thriller, which piques the interest a bit. Think of it as an undercooked episode of Black Mirror. Joe and Molly (Nicholas Pinnock and Abbey Lee) have been trying for a baby. They've had multiple rounds of fertility treatment and multiple miscarriages. Now at the end of the road, they're told by their doctor that there is a chance they could conceive naturally. 'Once you remove the stress and strain, miracles can happen. That's the irony with IVF,' he explains. He also puts his hand on Molly's knee in the consulting room, which we are invited to find a bit suspicious. Is there something going on between those two? When Molly does get pregnant, and the baby arrives – white and bearing no resemblance to Joe – the question hanging in the air is: who's the father? We skip from the labour room to a few years later. You may be wondering where the sci-fi element kicks in, and the answer is about five minutes from the end. The big reveal is bizarre. Until then, though, it is just a little bit odd. Molly's mother becomes unnaturally freaked out by a child's drawing. There is some business with a wall clock. As for the title, I still have no idea who Beth is. Film-maker Uzo Oleh has a background in high-end fashion photography and he has crafted something that looks beautiful, not least because Lee is a model who has appeared on the cover of Vogue. As an entry into television writing and directing, it's a promising start, but too hung up on the visuals. The tone is arty. The casting is a problem, because while the talented Pinnock acts like a regular guy invested with a full range of human emotions, Lee is at an icy remove even in scenes where she's supposed to be full of warmth. At times, as Molly and Joe wear their expensive clothes in a tasteful apartment, a couple supposedly in love but displaying about as much emotional connection as Nick Robinson and Emma Barnett on the Today programme, it reminded me of Eyes Wide Shut. It helps to watch it twice, once you've seen the twist. But when the emphasis is on the convenience of 15-minute instalments, will anybody have the time to do that?