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Season 8

  • S08E01 The Millionairess

    • September 25, 1972
    • BBC One

    Fast-paced despite a 100-minute running time, The Millionairess is perfectly suited to the unique talents of Maggie Smith, even if the political moralizing of the final act, combined with the somewhat sentimental take on marriage make for a sticky union. The first act of The Millionairess is Maggie Smith in her prime, raging and preening at the same time as she deliciously spits out the Shavian insults to the amused Barkworth. Throughout the play, the ping-ponging Shavian word play is deftly knocked about by Smith, who clearly relishes the chance to exercise her quick wits and flash-powder, pyrotechnical flourishes. Barkworth, a marvelous supporting player always seen in the background of British films (who also had a solid theatrical career), is every bit as engaging as the sanguine Sagamore, so much so that I missed their repartee throughout the rest of the film. Charles Gray, playing the type of role he often was stuck with, is amusing as always (looking like the Cheshire Cat when he sticks that square jaw out of his and slits up his sardonic eyes), while Tom Baker (famous for playing Doctor Who) does at times bring Dr. el Kabir off more like his Rasputin turn in Nicholas and Alexandria rather than as a typically Shavian male jouster. Directed by William Slater, The Millionairess does takes some missteps when it tries to "open up" the play, particularly an ill-advised photo montage sequence (set to supposedly "madcap" jazz) that's intended to bridge the time between Epifania's acceptance of Dr. Ahmed's challenge, and her completion of the task (I've seen these photo montages in other BBC productions from this period, and I suspect they were considered convenient cost-cutter solutions for dramatic problems). But overall, it's an agreeably feisty romp with Smith at the top of her game, even though admittedly it's not top-flight Shaw (nobody who's ever been married buys Shaw's defense of the institution at the end of the play). Based on the George Bernard Shaw

  • S08E02 Hedda Gabler

    • October 20, 1972
    • BBC One

  • S08E03 King Oedipus

    • November 24, 1972
    • BBC One

  • S08E04 The Magistrate

    • December 20, 1972
    • BBC One

  • S08E05 The Adventures of Don Quixote

    • January 7, 1973
    • BBC One

  • S08E06 Candide

    • February 16, 1973
    • BBC One

  • S08E07 A Room with a View

    • April 15, 1973
    • BBC One

  • S08E08 Caucasian Chalk Circle

    • May 16, 1973
    • BBC One

Season 9

Season 10

  • S10E01 The Linden Tree

    • September 8, 1974
    • BBC One

  • S10E02 Electra

    • October 24, 1974
    • BBC One

  • S10E03 The Wood Demon

    • November 17, 1974
    • BBC One

  • S10E04 Robinson Crusoe

    • December 29, 1974
    • BBC One

  • S10E05 The Apple Cart

    • January 19, 1975
    • BBC One

    In Bernard Shaw's play, set 40 years into the future, the king must match wits with an unruly mistress and a cabinet seeking to transform the nation into a constitutional monarchy. Over the course of two acts and interlude he navigates a series of political challenges and verbally spars with his mistress Orinthia played by Helen Mirren. Mirren's Orinthia is pampered, devastatingly beautiful, and every bit the intellectual match of her royal lover. Even though she doesn't appear until after the first act, Mirren more than makes up for her early absence with a drawing room scene that can be considered the highlight of the play

  • S10E06 The School for Scandal

    • February 16, 1975
    • BBC One

  • S10E07 King Lear

    • March 23, 1975
    • BBC One

  • S10E08 Strife

    • May 18, 1975
    • BBC One

Season 11

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Season 14

Season 15

Season 16