BBC
24 September 1995
Historical Comedy, Romance
DVD
B
Other than the leads (mentioned in the synopsis below), the regulars:
- Roger Barclay would be in three more episodes as Capt. Carter;
- So would David Bark-Jones as Lt. Denny;
- Christopher Benjamin would be Sir William Lucas thrice more;
- Anna Chancellor would be Miss Bingley in every episode;
- Judy Chetner appears in two more episodes as an uncredited Lady at Dance;
- David Coastworth appears in all six episodes as the uncredited Gun Keeper;
- Lucy Davis is in almost all the other episodes as Maria Lucas;
- Victoria Hamilton and Paul Moriarty would be in two more episodes as Mrs. and Col. Forster;
- Roy Holder would be Hodge the gardener twice more;
- Kate O'Malley appears in two more episodes as Sarah the maid, but Annabel Taylor would be Maggie the maid only once more.
- Neville Phillips, who was a Member on Jeeves and Wooster, would return once more as Fossett the footman;
- Lucy Robinson would be in all the other episodes as Mrs. Hurst;
- Lucy Scott (yes, there are a lot of Lucys here) would be in nearly every episode as Charlotte Lucas;
- Marlene Sidaway, who was a Pub Landlady on J & W, would make three more appearances as Hill the Housekeeper;
- Christopher Staines would be Lt. Sanderson once more;
- Norma Streader as Lady Lucas would be in two more episodes;
- Annabel Taylor would return as Maggie the maid;
- and Rupert Vansittart would be Mr. Hurst thrice more.
This is a reasonably faithful, if sometimes slow-moving, adaptation of the first dozen chapters of the classic novel, which I reviewed here: http://rereadingeverybookiown.blogspot.com/2011/12/pride-and-prejudice.html. A mismatched couple (Whitrow and Steadman) have five marriageable daughters (Susannah Harker as Jane, Jennifer Ehle as Lizzy, Lucy Briers as Mary, Molly Maberly as Kitty, and Julia Sawalha as Lydia), so when young, handsome, rich, and eligible bachelors Mr. Bingley (Crispin Bonham-Carter) and Mr. Darcy (Colin Firth in the role that defined him) arrive in the neighbourhood, they must be "in want of wives." The basic set-up and characters are established in this episode, although the setting and circumstances will change as the story progresses, and a couple very memorable characters (Mr. Collins and Lady Catherine) have yet to be introduced. Overall, the casting, costumes, music, acting, etc. are solid and I can't think of anything terribly wrong, just that the magic of the novel is hard to capture in full.
Simon Langton, who directed the '91 J & W episodes, directed every episode of this series.
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