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24 September 2014
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³ÉÈË¿ìÊÖ ONE Winter/Spring 2006 Highlights
Friends and Crocodiles

³ÉÈË¿ìÊÖ ONE Winter/Spring 2006 Highlights



Drama


Friends and Crocodiles

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Following the triumphant success of his two-part drama The Lost Prince, Stephen Poliakoff returns to ³ÉÈË¿ìÊÖ ONE with an intoxicating film charting the shifting power between a boss and his secretary as their careers rise and fall in the rapidly changing workplace of Eighties and Nineties Britain.

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In his inimitable style, Poliakoff combines cinematic panorama with moments of great intimacy, as he takes an epic sweep through our recent past and creates an unforgettable story.

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Friends And Crocodiles stars Damian Lewis, Jodhi May and Robert Lindsay and boasts an ensemble cast that includes Eddie Marsan and Patrick Malahide.

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Damian Lewis plays Paul, a Gatsby-like figure and inspirational entrepreneur. He is a host of fabulous parties, a collector of interesting people, a visionary with dreams of new urban landscapes and keeper of a pet crocodile.

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Jodhi May plays Lizzie, who is persuaded by Paul to become his secretary and bring some order to his creative chaos. Once at Paul's magnificent house, Lizzie's world expands as she meets artists, historians and politicians.

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It is also here that she first encounters Sneath, played by Robert Lindsay. A social chameleon and born survivor, Sneath is there as events unfold and is around to tell the story later.

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But Paul's Eden does not last for ever. Abruptly, Lizzie and Paul fall out but their paths are destined to cross again and again, and eventually they come to understand that they were born to work together.

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Drama Publicity

³ÉÈË¿ìÊÖ ONE highlights Winter/Spring 2006 Mayo

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Mayo

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Alistair McGowan stars as wise-cracking, brilliant detective Gil Mayo, a master of crime-solving.

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Mayo's team includes sexy DS Alex Jones (Jessica Oyelowo), with whom he conducts a tantalising flirtation; cocky, laddish DC Martin Kite (Huw Rhys); and nerdy Scene of Crime Officer Harriet "Anorak" Tate (Loo Brealey).

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With a clever and intriguing whodunit at the core of every episode, the murky world of crime-solving has never been so entertaining.

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Mayo is based on the books by Margery Eccles.

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³ÉÈË¿ìÊÖ ONE highlights Winter/Spring 2006 Gideon's Daughter

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Gideon's Daughter

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Miranda Richardson, Bill Nighy, Emily Blunt, Ronni Ancona and Robert Lindsay star in Gideon's Daughter, a new film for ³ÉÈË¿ìÊÖ ONE, written and directed by acclaimed auteur, Stephen Poliakoff.

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As the drama opens, Sneath (Lindsay) is dictating his memoirs to a young copy typist, but breaks off to tell the extraordinary story of a PR guru, Gideon, who vanished without trace one day at the end of Nineties.

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It is 1997, explains Sneath, and Gideon (Nighy), an elegant, leading PR consultant, a man constantly fêted by the rich and famous, is being earnestly courted by the New Labour Government to manage the festivities around the Millennium.

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Then the news breaks about the deaths of Diana, Princess of Wales and Dodi Al Fayed. But as the British public unite to express unprecedented levels of grief over this shocking event, Gideon turns inward and very quietly unravels as he struggles with his personal feelings of loss and emptiness.

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Gideon's daughter, Natasha (Blunt), is about to leave home, perhaps as revenge for his serial infidelities, committed while her late mother was alive.

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It seems no one can comfort him; certainly, it becomes clear that Barbara (Ancona), his glamorous girlfriend, cannot reach him.

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Increasingly, he finds the hollowness of high-profile public life exposed by his relationships with Natasha and Stella (Richardson), a woman grieving for her young son killed in a cycling accident.

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Has the time come for all of them to stop and learn to live again?

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Drama Publicity

³ÉÈË¿ìÊÖ ONE highlights Winter/Spring 2006 Doctor Who

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Doctor Who

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The wait is over! David Tennant, the tenth Time Lord to grace the TARDIS, and his feisty young companion, Rose Tyler (Billie Piper), return in the eagerly anticipated new series of Doctor Who.

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Together, the Doctor and Rose travel through time and space, battling a host of new and returning aliens and monsters, including the dreaded Cybermen, an evil race of Cat Women, the sinister Krillitanes and maybe even a Dalek!

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The new series, which promises to be even scarier than the last, sees the welcome return of two of the Doctor's favourite and most iconic companions, Sarah Jane Smith (Elisabeth Sladen) and his faithful robot dog, K9.

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Rose's mum Jackie (Camille Coduri) and Rose's hapless boyfriend Mickey (Noel Clarke) also return.

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Viewers join the Doctor and Rose as they embark upon an adventure that takes them further into the future than ever before, to a glittering paradise where the grass smells of apples – but where old and new terrors lurk.

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Then it's off to the Highlands for a Royal appointment with Queen Victoria (Pauline Collins).

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Doctor Who is the creative vision of lead writer Russell T Davies. The series' other writers include Steven Moffat, Mark Gatiss, Toby Whithouse, Tom Macrae, Matt Jones and Matthew Graham.

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Doctor Who is the winner of three National Television Awards.

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³ÉÈË¿ìÊÖ ONE highlights Winter/Spring 2006 Hotel Babylon

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Hotel Babylon

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Max Beesley, Tamzin Outhwaite, Dexter Fletcher, Emma Pierson and Natalie Mendoza star in Hotel Babylon, a tantalising and seductive insight into the sexy world of the luxury five-star hotel industry, where money not only talks but can buy just about anything you desire.

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Inspired by Imogen Edwards-Jones's searing exposé of life behind the scenes of the luxury hotel industry in London, Hotel Babylon takes viewers on a journey beyond the glamour and façade of the smiling faces and glittering chandeliers and into the frenetic, non-stop world of the staff.

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Drama Publicity

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New Street Law

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John Hannah and John Thomson head the cast in New Street Law, a gripping, contemporary legal drama series which follows the exploits and cases of two rival barristers' chambers in the heart of Manchester.

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John Hannah stars as the passionate and charming Jack Roper, who turned down a lucrative job offer from his mentor, Laurence Scammel QC (Paul Freeman), head of Manchester's leading prosecution chambers, in favour of more noble defence work.

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Instead, Jack set up his own firm with old friend and head clerk Al Ware (Chris Gascoyne), lovable chancer Charlie Darling (John Thomson), no-nonsense lawyer Annie Quick and cocky pupil Joe Stevens (Lee Williams).

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After 18 months, Jack's chambers have earned a good reputation but they're still struggling. With every case he wins, Jack's confidence grows and he rapidly threatens Laurence's status in the legal community – something that his ruthlessly ambitious wife, Honor (Penny Downie), is determined to prevent.

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Laurence and Honor's daughter, Laura, who works for the family chambers, shares Jack's instinctive passion for justice, but she also poses a threat.

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New Street Law strikes at the very heart of the modern-day legal system, providing a unique insight into the world of opposing legal teams and the people whose lives they hold in their hands.

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As this series progresses, the characters' pasts are unearthed through the crises they face. It is through their professional dilemmas that viewers gradually get to know and care about them as people.

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³ÉÈË¿ìÊÖ ONE highlights Winter/Spring 2006 Life on Mars

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Life on Mars

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John Simm plays Sam Tyler, a driven and ambitious young detective, in this new drama series.

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Sam is determined to keep the streets of 21st-century Manchester safe. However, the hunt for a serial killer becomes a personal vendetta when Sam suspects his girlfriend has been kidnapped by the very man he's tracking down.

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But after a near-fatal car accident, Sam wakes up, dazed and confused, in 1973 – struggling to understand what's real. Has he gone back in time? Is he in a coma? Or has he simply gone insane?

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What follows is his account of Seventies life, where he feels like a fish out of water.

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Sam's new boss, DCI Gene Hunt (Philip Glenister), is Seventies cop personified: arrogant, sexist, insensitive, brutal, lazy, boozy, impatient and corrupt.

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But by trusting his gut instincts and, all too often, sheer brute force, Gene gets results.

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Sam must come to terms with an unfamiliar environment and an archaic CID unit, where, using his modern know-how, he becomes integral to the investigation process and learns how to adapt to old-fashioned technologies and etiquettes – and his new way of life.

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Drama Publicity

³ÉÈË¿ìÊÖ ONE highlights Winter/Spring 2006 The Street

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The Street

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Jimmy McGovern, one of British television's most prolific and influential writing talents, returns to ³ÉÈË¿ìÊÖ ONE with a major new drama series, The Street, starring Jim Broadbent, Jane Horrocks, Sue Johnston and Timothy Spall.

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The critically-acclaimed writer of Cracker, Hillsborough, Sunday and award-winning films Priest and Liam, is back on ³ÉÈË¿ìÊÖ ONE for the first time since The Lakes.

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Set in the North of England, each episode concentrates on a different house in the street; each story is unique and individual but all are linked by themes of community and shared experience and an indomitable sense of humour.

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In the opening episode, Jane Horrocks plays Angela Quinn, a mother of three, whose 15-year-old marriage to builder Arthur (Daniel Ryan) is growing stale. An affair with her neighbour provides much-needed excitement – until Angela's world is turned upside down by events which leave her locked in warfare with her lover.

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In episode two, Stan (Jim Broadbent) finds himself forced out of his beloved job three weeks short of his 65th birthday. To the despair of his forthright wife Brenda (Sue Johnston), he turns to contemplate the meaning of life and decides he is surplus to requirements – until, in a bittersweet twist, tragedy next door offers him a glimmer of hope for the future.

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The cast includes Timothy Spall as taxi driver Eddie; Neil Dudgeon as teacher Brian; and Christine Bottomley as sparky Yvonne, who is married to the dangerous, mercurial Sean, played by Lee Ingleby. Shaun Dooley is Peter Harper, Angela's neighbour and lover, and Liz White plays his unknowing wife, Eileen.

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AF

³ÉÈË¿ìÊÖ ONE highlights Winter/Spring 2006 The Family Man

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The Family Man

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Trevor Eve stars as charismatic fertility expert Patrick Stowe in a moving new drama that takes an engaging and thought-provoking look at the business of making babies in the 21st century.

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Written by Bafta-winning Tony Marchant and also starring Michelle Collins, Daniela Denby-Ashe, Claire Skinner and Lennie James, the drama centres on the emotionally charged stories of four couples who have all turned to Patrick for help in realising their dreams.

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In an industry in which science and ethics are always changing, Patrick believes that every case should be judged individually.

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But this puts him at odds with many of his colleagues. Where should the pursuit of dreams end?

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SA/JDR

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³ÉÈË¿ìÊÖ ONE WINTER/SPRING 2006:


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