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tammyy2j
06-04-2014, 20:06
Sarah Phelps's gripping new drama presents one of the Great War’s untold stories. In a tented field hospital on the coast of France, a team of doctors, nurses and women volunteers work together to heal the bodies and souls of men wounded in the trenches.

The hospital is a frontier: between the battlefield and home front, but also between the old rules, hierarchies, class distinctions and a new way of thinking.

In the first episode, Kitty Trevelyan tries to put the troubles of her past behind her as she joins two other girls, Flora Marshall and Rosalie Berwick, to volunteer at one of the busiest war hospitals in Northern France.

For the hospital workers, it’s a daily battle to patch the men up and keep the war machine churning. Staff numbers are low and the volunteers are desperately needed, yet there are some who see these women as more of a threat than a lifeline.

It’s not just the girls who are causing a stir. One particular patient is facing certain death but resisting it with all the strength he can muster. Alongside him lies the shell-shocked form of Lance Corporal Prentiss. He may be physically unmarked but this war has damaged him badly, and the staff are at a loss as to how to treat him.

As the three volunteer nurses settle into their first day, it soon becomes clear that no training could ever have prepared them for the reality of working near the Front Line. Before the day draws to an end, the hospital sees the arrival of Sister Joan Livesey, but it remains to be seen whether her modern approach will be welcomed...

The Crimson Field stars: Joan Livesey played by Suranne Jones, Kitty Trevelyan played by Oona Chaplin, Matron Grace Carter played by Hermione Norris, Flora Marshall played by Alice St. Clair, Rosalie Berwick played by Marianne Oldham, Sister Margaret Quayle played by Kerry Fox, Lieutenant-Colonel Roland Brett played by Kevin Doyle, Orderly Corporal Peter Foley played by Jack Gordon, Captain Miles Hesketh-Thorne played by Alex Wyndham, Captain Thomas Gillan played by Richard Rankin, and Quartermaster Sergeant Reggie Soper played by Jeremy Swift.

The 6x60 series is a BBC Drama Production for BBC One, distributed by Endemol Worldwide Distribution.

Anne Pivcevic (The Lady Vanishes, Great Expectations) is the BBC executive producer, Sarah Phelps (Great Expectations, EastEnders) is an executive producer, creator and writer, and Annie Tricklebank (The Lady Vanishes, Lark Rise To Candleford) is producer. David Evans (Downton Abbey, One Night), Richard Clark (Doctor Who, Life On Mars) and Thaddeus O'Sullivan (Silent Witness, Single-Handed) are the directors.

The series was shot on location in Wiltshire and was commissioned for BBC One by Ben Stephenson, Controller, BBC Drama and Danny Cohen, former Controller, BBC One, now Director of Television.

alan45
07-04-2014, 00:32
Slow start but has the makings of a good series

Perdita
11-06-2014, 07:53
The Crimson Field has been axed after one series by BBC One.

Writer Sarah Phelps confirmed the news on Twitter, saying that she is "gutted" that the WWI drama won't return for a second run.

Found out today that #TheCrimsonField won't be recommissioned by @BBCOne Gutted doesn't even touch the sides of how I feel.

— Sarah Phelps (@PhelpsieSarah) June 6, 2014

Phelps is said to have planned for the drama to run for at least four more series, after the first run began in 1914, reports Radio Times.

Oona Chaplin, Hermione Norris and Suranne Jones starred in the drama, which focused on the lives of medics and patients at a fictional field hospital in France.

The BBC said in a statement: "The Crimson Field was our landmark drama series that launched the start of the BBC's World War I coverage. We are very proud of The Crimson Field and are hugely grateful to all those who worked so hard on it.

"However in order to create space for new shows and to keep increasing the variety of BBC One drama it will not be returning for a second series. Coming up this autumn on BBC One further WWI drama content includes The Passing Bells and War Poems."

Chaplin recently admitted that she had grown frustrated about the show's future, saying: "The way these things are financed are so bloody complicated and ridiculous if you ask me. I am sure it must make sense for someone."

Meanwhile, Sarah Phelps has adapted JK Rowling's novel The Casual Vacancy for BBC One.