Cranford | |
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Title card
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Genre | Comedy-drama |
Created by |
Sue Birtwistle Susie Conklin |
Directed by |
Simon Curtis Steve Hudson |
Composer(s) | Carl Davis |
Country of origin | United Kingdom |
Original language(s) | English |
No. of series | 2 |
No. of episodes | 7 |
Production | |
Executive producer(s) |
Kate Harwood Rebecca Eaton |
Producer(s) | Sue Birtwistle |
Cinematography | Ben Smithard |
Editor(s) | Frances Parker |
Camera setup | Panavision Genesis HD Camera |
Running time | 60 minutes |
Production company(s) |
BBC WGBH Boston Chestermead |
Distributor | BBC Worldwide |
Release | |
Original network | BBC One |
Picture format | HDTV |
Original release | 18 November 2007 – 16 December 2007 |
Chronology | |
Followed by | Return to Cranford |
Related shows | Cranford (1972 TV series) |
External links | |
Website |
Cranford is a British television series directed by Simon Curtis and Steve Hudson. The teleplay by Heidi Thomas was adapted from three novellas by Elizabeth Gaskell published between 1849 and 1858: Cranford, My Lady Ludlow, and Mr Harrison's Confessions. (The Last Generation in England was also used as a source.)
The series was transmitted in five parts in the UK by BBC One in November and December 2007. In the United States, it was broadcast in three episodes by PBS as part of its Masterpiece Theatre series in May 2008.
Cranford returned with a two-part Christmas special Return to Cranford in 2009.
Set in the early 1840s in the fictional village of Cranford in the county of Cheshire in North West England, the story focuses primarily on the town's single and widowed middle class female inhabitants who are comfortable with their traditional way of life and place great store in propriety and maintaining an appearance of gentility. Among them are the spinster Jenkyns sisters, Matty and Deborah; their houseguest from Manchester, Mary Smith; Octavia Pole, the town's leading gossip; the Tomkinson sisters, Augusta and Caroline; Mrs Forrester, who treats her beloved cow Bessie as she would a daughter; Mrs Rose, the housekeeper for Dr Harrison; Jessie Brown, who rejects Major Gordon's marriage proposal twice despite her feelings for him; Laurentia Galindo, a milliner who strongly believes men and women are on equal footing; the Honourable Mrs Jamieson, a snob who dresses her dog in ensembles to match her own; Sophy Hutton, the vicar's eldest daughter and surrogate mother to her three younger siblings, who is courted by Dr Harrison; and the aristocratic Lady Ludlow, who lives in splendour at Hanbury Court and perceives change as a peril to the natural order of things.