Gideon's Daughter | |
---|---|
Directed by | Stephen Poliakoff |
Starring |
Bill Nighy Miranda Richardson Emily Blunt Tom Hardy |
Original language(s) | English |
Production | |
Executive producer(s) |
Peter Fincham Stephen Poliakoff David M. Thompson Kathryn Mitchell |
Producer(s) | Nicholas Brown Helen Flint |
Location(s) |
Edinburgh, Scotland London, England |
Editor(s) | Clare Douglas |
Running time | 105 min. |
Release | |
First shown in | 26 February 2006 |
Chronology | |
Related shows | Friends and Crocodiles |
Gideon's Daughter is the second of two linked BBC television dramas written & directed by Stephen Poliakoff.
Produced independently for the BBC by Talkback Thames and starring Bill Nighy, Miranda Richardson, and Emily Blunt, it aired in the UK on BBC One on 26 February 2006 and in the US on BBC America a month later. It was shown across Australia on ABC1 on 2 November 2008. The first of the dramas, Friends and Crocodiles, had been broadcast the previous month, with the character of Sneath (Robert Lindsay) appearing in both and acting as the narrator of Gideon's Daughter. The Mini series was watched by 10.2 million viewers.
Nighy and Blunt received Golden Globe Awards for their performances. The production won a Peabody Award in April 2007.
William Sneath dictates his latest book to a hired secretary. Exploring themes of love, loss, parenthood, and the cult of celebrity, Gideon's Daughter is set against the backdrop of New Labour's rise to power, the death of Princess Diana, and the ill-advised development of the Millennium Dome.
Sneath's friend Gideon is a hotshot publicist and a widower, driven to the edge of a nervous breakdown by his daughter Natasha's emotional detachment from him. She resents him for repeatedly cheating on her mother, going so far as to call his mistress as her mother lay dying of cancer. To put distance between them, she at first plans to do volunteer work in South America or (her father's preferred choice) to study at the University of Edinburgh.
Stella is mourning the death of her young son, killed while riding his bike on public roads for the first time. Afraid of sleep, and desperate to escape her sense of bereavement, she works the night shift in a supermarket where she raises guinea pigs in the back. She meets Gideon when her ex-husband tries to accost one of Gideon's clients, a New Labour minister, about the government's lack of response to the unsafe traffic conditions that caused their son's death. Soon after the chance meeting, the two find themselves developing an emotional bond, brought together by a shared sense of grief and loss.