The
Fledgling
n1.1 (1)
UK: 26 December 2010
US: 10 April 2011

Cert:
|
January 1936. King George V is dying. Sir Hallam and
Lady Agnes Holland return from a diplomatic posting to Washington. They
have immense plans for their future at 165, Eaton Place, which they have
recently inherited from Sir Hallam's father. The house has been empty
since the Bellamy family sold it in 1931, and is in need of complete
renovation. Keen to organise her servants, Lady Agnes turns to 'Buck's
of Belgravia', an agency run by Miss Rose Buck, who was formerly in
service at 165. Rose has some reservations about the commission, but the
lure of Eaton Place proves irresistible. She agrees to spearhead Lady
Agnes's quest for the perfect staff.
The builders set to work, and the house begins its journey back to
opulence. But Lady Agnes and Sir Hallam are stunned when his mother, the
widowed Maud, Lady Holland, arrives from India and reveals she's moving
in. She has her Sikh secretary, Mr Amanjit, in tow, and intends to write
her memoirs in the morning-room. This was not in any part of their plan.
Rose – hindered more than helped by Lady Agnes – strives to find
servants worthy of the house she loved so much. After some persuasion, a
cook, snobbish Mrs Thackeray, agrees to come aboard. Housemaid Ivy –
just 15 years old – is recruited from Dr Barnardo's, and a teenaged
footman, Johnny, arrives from a mining village in the north. But Rose
deems the chauffeur, Harry Spargo, rather common, and searches in vain
for the perfect butler. The ghost of Mr Hudson casts a long and
cherished shadow.
The family upstairs is completed by the arrival of Lady Persie, Lady
Agnes's wayward younger sister. Lady Agnes plans a smart party to mark
the launch of the Hollands in London. Guests will include Foreign
Secretary Anthony Eden, and Sir Hallam's closest friend, the Duke of
Kent.
But as the party approaches, tensions rise. Maud constantly
interferes with Lady Agnes's plans – resulting in the addition of the
King and his mistress, Mrs Simpson, to the guest list. With the clock
ticking, a panicking Rose is forced to engage a rather unusual butler,
Mr Pritchard. But the party, and its aftermath, send shockwaves through
165 Eaton Place. Before the night is out, Rose is forced to take
control. It becomes clear to both families – upstairs and downstairs –
that 165 needs her to stay.
Writer: Heidi Thomas
Director: Euros Lyn
Regular cast: Lady Agnes Holland, Sir Hallam Holland, Rose Buck,
Maud – Lady Holland, Lady Persie, Mrs Thackeray, Mr Amanjit, Mr
Pritchard, Harry Spargo, Ivy Morris, Johnny Proude, The Duke of Kent,
Anthony Eden, Ribbentrop
Guest cast: Emma Clifford (Mrs Simpson), Caroline O'Neill (Mrs
Proude), Sadie Shimmin (Matron), Jack Bannell (Franklin) [Uncredited: Sy
Turner (Party Guest)]
|
The
Ladybird
n1.2 (2)
UK: 27 December 2010
US: 17 April 2011

Cert: 
|
June 1936. Rose is now officially installed as
housekeeper, wrangling her team of eccentrics and juveniles. Lady Agnes,
meanwhile, has manoeuvred her household to the heart of London society,
and adores the fact that Lady Persie is a debutante. Lady Persie is
bored to tears – and Maud is restless too. The London Season is at its
height, and life at 165 is filled with diamonds, dancing, mink capes and
champagne. But world events rumble like thunder in the distance – Sir
Hallam's work is affected by Mussolini's annexation of Abyssinia, and a
new parlourmaid, Rachel Perlmutter, arrives as a refugee from Germany.
Rachel does not take easily to domestic work, while the other servants
are disconcerted by her elegance, poise, and dietary habits. However,
there are celebrations upstairs and down when Lady Agnes discovers –
after seven long and fruitless years of marriage – that she's expecting
a child. Though she and Sir Hallam are overjoyed by the news, Lady Agnes
is haunted by thoughts that things may not go well. She becomes
preoccupied by her pregnancy, and her husband and sister are left to
their own devices.
Maud seizes the chance to draw closer to her son. Sir Hallam welcomes
this when he is shaken out of his political complacency by an encounter
with deposed Emperor Haile Selassie. Despite Lady Agnes' indifference,
he begins to view the rise of the European right wing in a different
light.
Maud also takes Lady Persie under her wing, encouraging her to think
more deeply and read more widely. But she lights a fire in a dangerous
place, and Lady Persie soon falls under the spell of Oswald Mosley and
his British Union of Fascists. Unbeknown to the rest of the household,
she forms an alliance that will drag her into moral and physical peril.
Meanwhile, as the summer progresses, Rachel bonds with fellow
outsider Mr Amanjit, and a tender friendship forms. She comes to trust
him with her deepest secret – the existence of her little daughter,
Lotte – and they move towards full-blown romance.
But events are hurtling towards the powder keg of the Cable Street
riots – an explosive confrontation that ends in tragedy, and has
far-reaching results for all at Eaton Place.
Writer: Heidi Thomas
Director: Euros Lyn
Regular cast: Lady Agnes Holland, Sir Hallam Holland, Rose Buck,
Maud – Lady Holland, Mrs Thackeray, Mr Amanjit, Mr
Pritchard, Lady Persie, Harry Spargo, Ivy Morris, Anthony Eden, Lotte Perlmutter
Guest cast: Helen Bradbury (Rachel Perlmutter), Sarah Crowden
(Instructress), Ian Barritt (Dr Gascoine) |
The
Cuckoo
n1.3 (3)
UK: 28 December 2010
US: 24 April 2011

Cert: 
|
November 1936. Several weeks have passed since the
Cable Street riots and the ensuing tragedy. Sir Hallam feels responsible
for Lotte's plight, and the staff are consumed by worry for her future.
Maud believes the child has psychiatric problems. Meanwhile, Lady
Persie's life becomes increasingly covert and complex. In the thrall of
an illicit sexual affair, she is also obsessed with right-wing politics
– and pursues her interests regardless of the danger to the people that
she loves.
Lady Agnes, due to give birth in December, has no knowledge of her
sister's activities. She is both elated and anxious at the prospect of
motherhood, and throws herself into the preparations – decorating the
nursery, seeking out a nanny, and arranging to be photographed by Cecil
Beaton.
Mrs Thackeray is enthralled by the thought that London's top
photographer is actually in the house. Breaking bounds, she steals
upstairs and sneaks a secret meeting with him. He even takes her
photograph – but when Rose finds out, battle lines are drawn, and Mr
Pritchard is caught between the warring women.
Tensions also deepen upstairs, as Sir Hallam is drawn into the
burgeoning abdication crisis. His closest friend, the Duke of Kent, is
desperate to stop his brother from abandoning the throne, and begs Sir
Hallam for help. Anthony Eden also exerts pressure – and so it comes to
pass that a very special dinner is arranged at Eaton Place. The house
finds itself at the eye of the storm that engulfs the monarchy.
But it is the fate of one small child that has 165 divided. Lotte's
mental condition deteriorates, and Maud takes charge. To the servants'
dismay, Lady Agnes permits Maud to whisk the child away to a psychiatric
clinic. No cure is guaranteed, and they fear they will never see Lotte
again.
Sir Hallam returns from the Foreign Office late at night, and is
angry to find that Lotte has gone. Furious with Lady Agnes, he enlists
the help of Harry Spargo and Mr Amanjit, setting out to locate the child
and establish her fate. But in doing so, he discovers more than he ever
expected, and his life is thrown into utter disarray.
Writer: Heidi Thomas
Director: Saul Metzstein
Regular cast: Lady Agnes Holland, Sir Hallam Holland, Rose Buck,
Maud – Lady Holland, Mrs Thackeray, Mr Amanjit, Mr
Pritchard, Lady Persie, Harry Spargo, Ivy Morris, The Duke of Kent, Anthony Eden, Lotte Perlmutter,
Ribbentrop [Uncredited on end credits: Johnny Proude]
Guest cast: Christopher Harper (Cecil Beaton), Richard Teverson (Esmond
Harmsworth), Jemma Churchill (Nanny Lyons), Emily Bowker (Nurse), Sarah
Gordy (Pamela) |