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Title: Masterpiece Theatre
Description: 2006-2007 season


Lisa Larkin - December 15, 2006 07:34 AM (GMT)
MT's current season is pretty lackluster with lots of repeats, but there are four new productions coming up.

http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/masterpiece/schedule/index.html

I'm looking forward to JANE EYRE since I've heard some good things from our friends in the UK. I've also heard that it is not very faithful to the novel, but what version is? [I hear the Sorcha Cusack/Michael Jayston version comes closest but I haven't seen it].

Also upcoming is an equally unfaithful new DRACULA. It includes a syphilis angle [something Bram Stoker would have never dared to include overtly, though vampirism can be seen as a metaphor for syphilis].

The other two new productions are THE SALLY LOCKHART MYSTERIES: THE RUBY IN THE SMOKE [with Billie Piper] and a new WIND IN THE WILLOWS [with Bob Hoskins and Imelda Staunton]. THE RUBY IN THE SMOKE is based on a novel by Philip Pullman [His Dark Materials].

John W McKelvey - December 15, 2006 11:29 PM (GMT)
Well, I'll definitely check out Jane Eyre, though there's already so many versions out there already that it's hard to get excited about this. This will really have to be a "clearly the best" adaptation, at this point, if it's going to make any kind of impression on me.
Dracula sounds interesting. If it lives up to MT standards, this could be the stand-out of the season. Wind In the Willows? Well, I'll give 'er a rent, too.
As for Ruby, well, I've never really gotten too into the MT mysteries... though I also haven't actually watched many. Some day I'm going to throw them all in my Netflix que and have a marathon. :)

Lisa Larkin - December 16, 2006 07:17 AM (GMT)
I looked up the book RUBY IN THE SMOKE and it sounds pretty interesting. From amazon:

QUOTE
"Her name was Sally Lockhart; and within fifteen minutes, she was going to kill a man." Philip Pullman begins his Sally Lockhart trilogy with a bang in The Ruby in the Smoke--a fast-paced, finely crafted thriller set in a rogue- and scalawag-ridden Victorian London. His 16-year-old heroine has no time for the usual trials of adolescence: her father has been murdered, and she needs to find out how and why. But everywhere she turns, she encounters new scoundrels and secrets. Why do the mere words "seven blessings" cause one man to keel over and die at their utterance? Who has possession of the rare, stolen ruby? And what does the opium trade have to do with it?

As our determined and intelligent sleuth sets her mind to unraveling these dark mysteries, she learns how embroiled she is in the whole affair. As riveting and witty as the sensational "penny dreadfuls" of Victorian England (but thousands of times better written), Pullman's trilogy (including The Shadow in the North and The Tiger in the Well) will have readers on the edges of their seats. Ruby is an ALA Best Book for Young Adults. (Ages 12 and older) --Karin Snelson


Rod Barnett - December 16, 2006 06:44 PM (GMT)
Well, I certainly look forward to the new DRACULA adaptation although I'm not sure this slant will work.

>>Lord Holmwood is marrying his sweetheart Lucy, but he hides a terrible secret. He has syphilis, so cannot consummate the marriage without infecting his bride. Desperate to find a cure, he seeks out an occult priest who tells him of a legendary being with extraordinary powers who lives in Transylvania -- Count Dracula. If Dracula could be persuaded to come to England, he could cleanse him of his corrupted blood...<<

Still, it sounds like something I'll not dare miss.

ROD

Lisa Larkin - December 17, 2006 01:28 AM (GMT)
That plot description sounds a bit like a Dan Simmons novel I read years ago, "Children of the Night":

http://www.amazon.com/Children-Night-Dan-S...s/dp/0446364754

It worked well for Dan Simmons, but that was a modern day reworking of the Dracula legend.

Steve Phillips - December 28, 2006 12:54 AM (GMT)
Did any of our UK based members check out the BBC DRACULA on Boxing Day? Any good?

I'm glad we only have a 6 week wait to see it on this side of the Atlantic.




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