Lost Empires

1986 British film
  • Colin Firth
  • Laurence Olivier
  • Pamela Stephenson
Production
company
Granada Television[1]
Release date
  • 24 October 1986 (1986-10-24) (UK)
CountryUnited KingdomLanguageEnglish

Lost Empires is a 1986 television miniseries adaptation of J. B. Priestley's 1965 novel of the same name and starred Colin Firth, John Castle and Laurence Olivier. Produced by Granada Television, it was shown as a serial, and premiered on the UK's ITV network between 24 October and 5 December 1986.

Plot

After the death of his mother, Richard Herncastle (Colin Firth) is offered a job by his uncle, his mother's brother. Nick Ollanton is a stage conjurer in variety theatre and Richard joins the act where he meets the other members of the team and the rest of the acts on the bill as they travel around Britain appearing at the Empires, the old variety theatres that have since vanished. He becomes our eyes as he experiences the last few months of peace before World War I breaks out and changes the world forever.

During the course of the seven episodes (eight hours), Firth's character, young Richard Herncastle, sees the "whole wide world" from backstage at the music hall variety shows with which the magic act travels, just as his uncle Nick (John Castle) has promised—hilarity, beauty, love, lust, fear, despair. Richard comes of age just as the world enters the fateful year of 1914—the outbreak of World War I, when the greatest of all disappearing acts becomes imminent: the disappearance of millions.

The series has the second to last appearance of Olivier as a fading comedian named Harry Burrard, who has long since lost his audience and his comic abilities. Harry should have retired years before, however he has nowhere else to go and his brain is collapsing into paranoia. The role is a sort of older version of Olivier's Archie Rice, from The Entertainer (1960).

Cast

  • Colin Firth as Richard Herncastle
  • John Castle as Nick Ollanton
  • Gillian Bevan as Cissie Mapes
  • Beatie Edney as Nancy Ellis
  • Laurence Olivier as Harry Burrard
  • Carmen du Sautoy as Julie Blane
  • Pamela Stephenson as Lilly Farris
  • Jim Carter as Inspector Crabbe

Awards

The series was nominated for six Television BAFTA Awards including Best Costume Design, Best Make-up. In the US Olivier received an Emmy Award nomination for Outstanding Supporting Actor in a Miniseries or a Movie.

Video and DVD

The series has been released on both VHS and DVD format.

References

  1. ^ "Company credits for "Lost Empires"". IMDB.

External links

  • Lost Empires at IMDb Edit this at Wikidata

  • Photograph of cast.
  • v
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Novels
Short stories
  • "The Town Major of Miracourt" (1930)
Short story collections
  • The Other Place (1953)
  • The Carfitt Crisis (1974)
Plays
Poetry
  • The Chapman of Rhymes (1918)
Screenplays
Non-fiction
  • Brief Diversions (1922)
  • Papers from Lilliput (1922)
  • Open House (1927)
  • Self-selected Essays (1932)
  • English Journey (1934)
  • Midnight on the Desert (1937 autobiography)
  • We Live In Two Worlds (1937 documentary)
  • Rain Upon Godshill (1939 autobiography)
  • British Women Go To War (1943)
  • Margin Released (1962 autobiography)
  • Man and Time (1964)
  • The Edwardians (1970)
  • Over The Long High Wall (1972)
  • Particular Pleasures (1975)
  • Instead Of The Trees (1977 autobiography)
Film and TV adaptations
  • The Old Dark House (1932 film)
  • The Good Companions (1933 film)
  • An Inspector Calls (1954 film)
  • Angel Pavement (1957 TV series)
  • The Good Companions (1957 film)
  • The Old Dark House (1963 film)
  • Out of the Unknown: "Level Seven" (1966 sci-fi series)
  • Angel Pavement (1967 TV series)
  • An Inspector Calls (1982 film)
  • Lost Empires (1986)
  • An Inspector Calls (2015 film)
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