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Channel 5 drama lands a second series before the first even airs – and filming is already underway
Channel 5 drama lands a second series before the first even airs – and filming is already underway

The Sun

time13-06-2025

  • Entertainment
  • The Sun

Channel 5 drama lands a second series before the first even airs – and filming is already underway

A CHANNEL 5 drama has secured a second series - before series one has even hit screens. The period show is a reimagining of a Nobel Prize-winning book series. 2 2 Penned by Poldark screenwriter Debbie Horsfield, The Forsytes follows an upper-class family of stockbrokers across multiple generations. And it is set against the backdrop of a rapidly evolving late-Victorian world. Despite the first series having not yet aired, a second instalment has already been confirmed. Among the leading cast members are Doctor Who star Millie Gibson and The Morning Show actor Jack Davenport. Further cast includes Joshua Orpin, Francesca Annis, Stephen Moyer, Eleanor Tomlinson and Susan Hampshire OBE. Millie, 20, portrays Irene Heron, the dancer, who is known for her scandalous manner when it comes to men. BAFTA winner Francesca, 80, plays formidable Forsyte matriarch Ann while Jack, 52, stars as Ann's competitive son James. OBE, who starred in the 1967 BBC Forsyte Saga and won the first of her three lead actress Emmys for the role, plays Lady Carteret. The show is based on a trilogy of books called The Forsyte Saga, written by John Galsworthy. These novels were released between 1906 to 1921 - with several adaptations over the years. Paul Testar, Commissioning Editor, Drama, 5, said: 'We are excited to announce that production has begun on the second series of The Forsytes. "With the first series set to air soon, this early commitment to a second chapter is a testament to the strength of the stories and characters that we know our audience will embrace. "We look forward to sharing even more of this rich and compelling series.' Damien Timmer, CCO & Founder of Mammoth Screen said: 'We can't wait for the world to see series 1 of The Forsytes, and we're so pleased to be getting ahead of ourselves and starting on this thrilling second series with Debbie Horsfield's irresistible scripts and our glorious – and ever expanding - cast.' Viewers don't have too long to wait, as series one is set to launch on 5 later this year. Top Channel 5 dramas Channel 5 has become a hub for gripping drama, these are some of the best My5 has to offer. All Creatures Great and Small - Based on the best-selling novels by real-life vet Alf Wright, the show revolves around a trio of vets working in the Yorkshire Dales in the late 1930s. Eccentric Siegfried Farnon (Samuel West) hires James Herriot (Nicholas Ralph) for his veterinary practice at Skeldale House alongside himself and his younger brother Tristan (Callum Woodhouse). There James settles into his new life and even finds love with local farmer's daughter Helen (Rachel Shenton). The Ex-Wife - New parents Tasha (Céline Buckens) and Jack (Tom Misson) seem to have the perfect life, but the constant presence of Jack's overly friendly but suspicious ex-wife Jen (Janet Montgomery) puts pressure on the couple. But as the series progresses it becomes less clear who the bad guy really is and how far everyone will go to get the life they think they deserve. Heat - EastEnders alum Danny Dyer leads this four-part action thriller, set in Australia, which sees two families holidaying together during bushfire season. But instead of rest and relaxation, secrets and lies start to unravel — and not everyone will make it out alive… Lie With Me - Another soap legend jets off to Australia, this time its EastEnders alum Charlie Brooks who takes as a married woman trying to saving her marriage by moving halfway around the world after her husband had an affair. However it's far from plain sailing, as a young and attractive live-in nanny comes to work with the Fallmont family, and tensions soon build and eventually, someone ends up dead. The Drowning - Jill Halfpenny plays Jodie, a woman whose life is shattered following the disappearance of her beloved four-year-old son, Daniel. However, ten years later, the grieving mother thinks she's finally found her missing child, and embarks on a journey to discover the truth about him. But has she really just found the son she has been missing for so long? It was originally commissioned by Masterpiece on PBS and produced by Mammoth Screen, part of ITV Studios, But earlier this year, it was revealed Channel 5 had secured the broadcast rights for the rebooted series. Susanne Simpson, Head of Scripted Content and Executive Producer at Masterpiece said at the time: 'We can't wait to bring The Forsytes to our Masterpiece viewers in the US, and we're thrilled that the series has a UK home at 5. "With brilliant actors and an amazing crew, Mammoth Screen has created a sumptuous reimagining of a classic that will delight audiences around the world.'

Jean Marsh obituary
Jean Marsh obituary

The Guardian

time15-04-2025

  • Entertainment
  • The Guardian

Jean Marsh obituary

Jean Marsh, who has died aged 90, created the classic 1970s television series Upstairs, Downstairs with her friend and fellow actor Dame Eileen Atkins. As well as co-writing the series, Marsh played the part of Rose Buck, a parlour maid, who became something of a sex symbol in the early 70s and returned as the housekeeper when the series was revived nearly four decades later. The period drama, 'the everyday story of Edwardian folk', as the Guardian described it at the time, followed the intertwined lives of the upper-class Bellamy family and their servants, at 165 Eaton Place in Belgravia, London. Set between 1903 and 1930, the series documented a period of immense social change. Marsh and Atkins had originally conceived of a story centred around two maids. Both from working-class families, the actors wanted to create a drama that depicted characters with backgrounds more like their own. They came up with the idea 'over a Sunday lunch'. The Forsyte Saga was then a popular television drama series. 'It was beautiful, of course,' Marsh recalled. 'The clothes, the houses ... But we thought ... who is cooking the food and ironing the clothes? At the time, apart from Dickens there was nothing written about the working classes. And I was determined to be the maid and not the lady.' Their idea was developed by the television producers John Hawkesworth and John Whitney and taken up by London Weekend Television. Upstairs, Downstairs ran for five series on ITV between 1971 and 1975, winning two Baftas. For her role as the hard-working parlour maid, Marsh won an Emmy for outstanding actress in a drama series (1975) as well as two Golden Globe nominations. Audiences in the UK peaked at 18 million and the show was sold to 80 countries. The two repeated the success with The House of Eliott, about two sisters who set up a fashion house in the 20s, which ran for three BBC series (1991-94). However, when they proposed a re-make of Upstairs Downstairs for the 21st century ­– this time on the BBC – the series (2010-12) was overshadowed by ITV's Downton Abbey. Marsh, the only member of the original cast, reprised her role as Buck, and Atkins played an 'upstairs' character, Maud, Lady Holland. Despite critical acclaim, with Keeley Hawes and Ed Stoppard in the starring roles, the series could not capture the same audiences as Downton and was axed after nine episodes. Marsh's big screen credits included Alfred Hitchcock's Frenzy (1972), The Eagle Has Landed (1976) and the fantasy films Return to Oz (1985) and Willow (1988), but Rose Buck is the role for which she will be best remembered. Born in London, Jean grew up in Stoke Newington. Her father, Henry, was a printer's assistant, and her mother, Emmeline (nee Bexley), a parlour maid 'in a big pub hotel' who lived to the age of 102; Jean later described her as the prototype for her Upstairs, Downstairs character. (Atkins's father, meanwhile, had been a chauffeur and an under-butler in 'a grand household'.) The Marsh family of four lived in two rooms with no kitchen and no bathroom. Jean and her elder sister, Yvonne, shared a bed. She left school at 15 to train as a dancer. 'If you were very working class in those days you weren't going to think of a career in science,' she told the Guardian in 1972. 'You either did a tap dance or you worked in Woolworth's.' She quickly built a career in acting, working first in repertory theatre, in Huddersfield and Nottingham. In 1959 she went to the US to appear on Broadway with John Gielgud in his production of Much Ado About Nothing. One of her first television roles was alongside Laurence Olivier in the US television film The Moon and Sixpence (1959), playing his Tahitian mistress. 'People would say: 'If it turned out you were an earl's daughter we wouldn't be surprised ... I was, like: 'Excuse me, but I am actually a scrubber.'' She went on to appear in The Saint (1964-68), The Tomorrow People (1994) and, much later, the 2007 BBC adaptation of Jane Austen's Sense and Sensibility, playing Mrs Ferrars. She also had a long association with Doctor Who, appearing as Lady Joanna in the 1965 serial The Crusade, Morgaine in Battlefield in 1989, and the companion Sara Kingdom in the 12-part The Daleks' Master Plan in 1965-66, with William Hartnell as the first Doctor. She reprised the role in a series of Doctor Who audio plays between 2008 and 2016. Her friendship with Atkins was a long collaboration. They met in their 30s, Atkins just divorced from the actor Julian Glover and Marsh separated from the actor Kenneth Haigh after a 10-year relationship. 'We were exactly the same age, both sort-of working class and we were always laughing,' Marsh said. She was married for five years from 1955 (when she was 19) to the actor Jon Pertwee, who later played Doctor Who; as well as the relationship with Haigh, she had an affair with Albert Finney and a long-term partnership with the film director Michael Lindsay-Hogg. He said that they had spoken by phone 'almost every day for the last 40 years'. Marsh enjoyed her image as a sex symbol and was fond of speaking mischievously in interviews. At 78, she said: 'Men look at me. They might be very happily married but they just think: 'Nice'.' Marsh was appointed OBE in 2012. Her sister Yvonne died in 2017. Jean Lyndsey Torren Marsh, actor and writer, born 1 July 1934; died 13 April 2025

British actor Susan Hampshire, 87, has phone and purse stolen in tube mugging incident
British actor Susan Hampshire, 87, has phone and purse stolen in tube mugging incident

The Independent

time25-02-2025

  • Entertainment
  • The Independent

British actor Susan Hampshire, 87, has phone and purse stolen in tube mugging incident

Actor Susan Hampshire has revealed that she had her mobile phone and purse stolen on the London Underground in a shocking mugging incident. The 87-year-old Forsyte Saga and Monarch Of The Glen actor recalled the incident at a Talking Pictures event earlier this week. She said, via The Mail: 'I was mugged on the underground the other day. I wish I'd put my money in my bra because I lost my phone and my purse.' The actor, who has won three Emmy Awards for her roles in Forsyte Saga (1970), The First Churchills (1971) and Vanity Fair (1973), did not give further details of the incident – but it comes as the capital's transport system faces a rise in crime. According to the recent TFL report, crimes committed on the Tube went up 13 per cent last year, with 17 per cent of crimes committed on the Central Line and Northern Line. King's Cross was the most crime-ridden stop, followed by Oxford Circus, Tottenham Court Road, Stratford and Finsbury Park. Theft is the most common crime across the city's transport network, making up for 60 per cent of recorded offences on trains and 40 per cent at stations. The Independent revealed this month that mobile phone thefts reported to UK police have almost doubled over the past five years, with more than three quarters of offences happening in London. Home secretary Yvette Cooper said the increase in thefts was being driven by organised crime as she pledged more powers for police to tackle the wave, while also calling on tech companies to improve device security. She said: 'Over the last few years, mobile phone thefts have shot up – often driven by organised crime – leaving our streets feeling less safe. That has to change.' The Met Police said earlier this month it had seized 1,000 stolen mobiles and arrested 230 people in one week, cracking down on the '£50m-a-year trade in stolen phones'. The City of London police force has also been deploying teams of plain-clothed officers to catch offenders. Hampshire made her acting debut as a child in the 1947 drama The Woman of the Hall, directed by Jack Lee. She rose to prominence in the Sixties and Seventies for her work across film and TV, including the BBC miniseries The Pallisers.

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