Elizabeth I (TV miniseries)
| Elizabeth I | |
|---|---|
Logo with Helen Mirren and Jeremy Irons |
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| Directed by | Tom Hooper |
| Produced by | Barney Reisz |
| Written by | Nigel Williams |
| Starring | Helen Mirren Jeremy Irons Hugh Dancy Toby Jones Ian McDiarmid Simon Woods |
| Music by | Robert Lane |
| Cinematography | Larry Smith |
| Editing by | Beverley Mills Melanie Oliver |
| Country | United Kingdom |
| Language | English |
| Release date | 29 September 2005 |
| Running time | 223 minutes |
Elizabeth I is a 2005 British television miniseries directed by Tom Hooper. The teleplay by Nigel Williams concentrates on the last 25 years of the nearly 45-year-long reign of Elizabeth I of England.
The series originally was broadcast in the UK in two two-hour segments on Channel 4. It later aired on HBO in the United States, CBC and TMN in Canada, ATV in Hong Kong, ABC in Australia, and TVNZ Television One in New Zealand.
The series went on to win Emmy, Peabody, and Golden Globe Awards. The same year, Helen Mirren starred as the second Queen Elizabeth in The Queen, with which she dominated the award season.
Contents |
[edit] Plot
Part One focuses on Elizabeth's close and volatile relationship with her oldest friend and confidant, Robert Dudley, 1st Earl of Leicester, as it survives her contemplated marriage to the considerably younger Duke of Anjou, war with Spain, and his exile from and eventual return to the court, finally ending with his death in 1588.
Part Two follows Elizabeth through her later years, during which she has a passionate affair with the stepson of the Earl of Leicester, the much younger Earl of Essex, whose political ambitions frequently clash with his devotion and loyalty to the monarch. As Elizabeth finds her young lover's behavior becoming increasingly worrisome, she draws closer to Robert Cecil, who is named Secretary of State following the death of Sir Francis Walsingham.
Chief among the problems facing the throne is the question of a successor, given Elizabeth has no heirs. Both the queen's first cousin, the imprisoned Mary, Queen of Scots, and Mary's son, James VI of Scotland, would like to usurp Elizabeth from her position, but she is determined neither one will take her place.
[edit] Cast
- Helen Mirren ..... Elizabeth I
- Jeremy Irons ..... Earl of Leicester
- Hugh Dancy ..... Earl of Essex
- Toby Jones ..... Sir Robert Cecil
- Patrick Malahide ..... Sir Francis Walsingham
- Ian McDiarmid ..... Lord Burghley
- Jérémie Covillault ..... Duke of Anjou
- Barbara Flynn ..... Mary, Queen of Scots
- Ewen Bremner ..... James VI, King of Scots
- Toby Salaman ..... Dr Lopez
- Charlotte Asprey ..... Frances Walsingham
- Geoffrey Streatfield ..... Sir Anthony Babington
- David Delve ..... Sir Francis Drake
- Martin Marquez ..... Don Bernardino de Mendoza
- Rimantas Bagdzevicius ..... Lord Howard of Effingham
- Will Keen ..... Francis Bacon
- Eddie Redmayne ..... Earl of Southampton
- Ben Pullen ..... Sir Walter Raleigh
- Diana Kent ..... Lady Essex
- Simon Woods ..... Gifford
[edit] Production
The series was filmed in Vilnius, Lithuania, where the massive sets were constructed inside a sports arena. The church where Elizabeth and James VI meet is St. Anne's Church, built in 1500.
This series' broadcast forced the BBC to postpone the premiere of The Virgin Queen, also about Elizabeth I, until January/February 2006. Ewen Bremner appeared in both productions.
[edit] Critical reception
David Wiegand of the San Francisco Chronicle said, "It almost goes without saying that when Helen Mirren plays Elizabeth Tudor in HBO's new miniseries, the scenery becomes a veritable banquet table that gets picked clean in two nights ... [Her] performance is powerful enough to shatter your television screen, not to mention any notion you might have had that if you've seen one Elizabeth - Bette Davis, Glenda Jackson or Cate Blanchett, for example - you've seen them all ... Right up there with Mirren, the rest of the cast is stellar. Irons, now a lion in winter, has sometimes settled into craggy self-parody in lesser films. But here, he invests Leicester with as much depth and complexity as he can, and he is every bit Mirren's equal onscreen."[1]
Brian Lowry of Variety observed, "Somewhat plodding through its opening hour, Elizabeth I gains steam and then soars through its concluding installment ... watching Mirren sink her teeth into this role is a treat worth savoring ... Tom Hooper, who previously directed Mirren in Prime Suspect 6, indulges Williams' penchant for long, theatrical monologues, which require a little getting used to in the slow early going. Gradually, however, as with the best British costume drama, the narrative becomes absorbing."[2]
[edit] Awards
- Outstanding Miniseries
- Outstanding Directing for a Miniseries
- Outstanding Lead Actress in a Miniseries (Helen Mirren)
- Outstanding Supporting Actor in a Miniseries (Jeremy Irons)
- Outstanding Art Direction
- Outstanding Casting for a Miniseries
- Outstanding Single-Camera Picture Editing for a Miniseries
- Outstanding Costumes for a Miniseries
- Outstanding Hairstyling for a Miniseries
- Best Television Mini-Series
- Best Actress in a Mini-Series (Mirren)
- Best Supporting Actor in a Mini-Series (Irons)
- Outstanding Female Actor in a Mini-Series (Mirren)
- Outstanding Male Actor in a Mini-Series (Irons)
- Best Original Television Music
[edit] References
[edit] External links
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- English-language films
- 2005 television films
- British television miniseries
- Channel 4 television programmes
- HBO network shows
- Films set in Tudor England
- Films based on actual events
- Peabody Award winning television programs
- Emmy Award winning programs
- Best Miniseries or Television Movie Golden Globe winners
- 2005 in British television
- Cultural depictions of Elizabeth I of England