The Charles Dickens Collection
Eight BBC television adaptations of the classic novels of Charles Dickens.
In ‘Martin Chuzzlewit’ (1994), old Mr Chuzzlewit (Paul Scofield) is on his death
bed, and surrounded by his money-hungry family jostling for a position in his
will.
In ‘Oliver Twist’ (1985), Ben Rodska plays the orphan who falls in with the
pickpocket Fagin (Eric Porter) and his band of thieving boys, as well as
crossing paths with the villainous Bill Sykes (Michael Attwell).
In ‘A Christmas Carol’ (1977), miserly Ebenezer Scrooge (Michael Hordern) says
humbug to Christmas, before three ghosts show him his past, present and possible
future, if he doesn’t mend his evil ways.
In ‘A Tale of Two Cities’ (1980), Paul Shelley plays Sydney Carton, in love with
the beautiful but unheeding Lucie (Sally Osborne), who loves Charles Darnay
(also Shelley). When Charles is caught up in the terrors of the French
Revolution, Carton risks everything to rescue the husband of the woman he loves.
In ‘Great Expectations’ (1999), Ioan Gruffudd plays orphan Pip, helped to become
a gentleman in society by a mysterious benefactor. Thinking that he is being
groomed by the reclusive and bitter Miss Havisham (Charlotte Rampling), Pip is
shocked to find that his benefactor is the vicious convict Magwitch (Bernard
Hill), who Pip helped escape from the Essex marshes when he was a boy.
In ‘David Copperfield’ (1999), the titular hero (played as a young boy by Daniel
Radcliffe) progresses through an uncertain life, helped along the way by debtor
Mr Micawber (Bob Hoskins) and his aunt Betsy (Maggie Smith). By the time David
grows up (played by Ciaran McMenamin), he decides to make a better life for
himself.
In ‘The Pickwick Papers’ (1985), Nigel Stock stars as the founder of the
Pickwick Club, undergoing many eccentric and chaotic adventures.
Finally, in ‘Our Mutual Friend’ (1998), an adaptation of Dickens’ darkest book,
a mysterious death by the banks of the Thames links the lives of two young
women, Lizzie Hexam (Keeley Hawes) and Bella Wilfer (Anna Friel).