Sunday, February 26, 2012

Elizabeth R (BBC Series)

  Spoiler Alert 
This is about the 3rd time that I have watched the "Elizabeth R" Series broadcasted on BBC.  In this post, I will illustrate what the series, Elizabeth R, is about.  Within a few days from this post, I will write my own personal review of this Series (Similar to my postings about "The Six Wives of Henry VIII" & "The Shadow of the Tower", both BBC Specials).  

Elizabeth R (*See below) is a BBC television drama serial of six 85-minute episodes starring Glenda Jackson in the title role. It was first broadcasted from February to March 1971. 

Six Episodes
First Episode, The Lion's Cub


The Lion's Cub (First Episode) - The fragile succession heralds dangerous times for the young Princess Elizabeth. Having narrowly avoided implication in Sir Thomas Seymour's attempted abduction of her sickly half-brother, the boy King Edward VI; she becomes an unintentional figurehead for a Protestant rebellion led by Thomas Wyatt the Younger when her half-sister Queen Mary I of England, a devout Roman Catholic, succeeds to the throne. Will the Princess Elizabeth survive her emotionally unstable half-sister's reign?   The obvious answer is yes.
Second Episode, The Marriage Game

The Marriage Game (Second Episode) - The new Queen Elizabeth I is 25 years old - and unmarried. Her council, particularly the man she trusts most Sir William Cecil, urges her to marry quickly [to ensure the succession, among other valid reasons]. Only Lord Robert Dudley, at first her Master of the Horse, and eventually the Earl of Leicester, seems to interest the Queen. When Dudley's wife dies under mysterious circumstances, Elizabeth must decide if she really wants to marry; and if so, is Dudley the right choice?  Answer is unfortunately no.  
Third Episode, Shadow in the Sun
Shadow in the Sun (Third Episode) - Elizabeth meets her most eligible suitor yet: François, Duke of Anjou. A marriage will cement France's sought-for alliance with England. Both Sir William Cecil and Thomas Radclyffe, 3rd Earl of Sussex (especially the latter), eagerly support this marriage offer. Despite the Puritans' rousing opposition in the country (which her zealously anti-catholic councillor Sir Francis Walsingham secretly approves of), Elizabeth seems taken with the witty and flower-tongued François. As her duties as Queen clash with her feelings as a woman (and she discovers to her fury that Dudley has secretly married her cousin Lettice Knollys), Elizabeth faces her toughest decision. In the end, her good friend and councillor Sussex helps Elizabeth make her painfully honest, final decision. Elizabeth does not want to marry - ever!  Inheriting the name, "The Virgin Queen".

Fourth Episode, Horrible Conspiracies
Horrible Conspiracies (Fourth Episode)- As long as the imprisoned Mary, Queen of Scots lives, she is the focus of plotters and revolutionaries. Despite a harsh clampdown against conspiring Roman Catholics, Mary (in domestic exile and Elizabeth's prisoner for nearly twenty years), inspires an earnest attempt to overthrow Elizabeth. Is the execution of Mary the only way Elizabeth will remain on the throne? Sir Francis Walsingham definitely thinks so, and will use any means to convince Elizabeth to eliminate Mary. But Elizabeth fears Mary's death will condemn her in the eyes of God. In the end, Elizabeth makes a final choice.  Mary, Queen of Scots is beheaded.

Fifth Episode, The Enterprise of England
The Enterprise of England (Fifth Episode) - Whispers of war fill the air in Elizabeth's court and in Spain. The infirm King Philip II of Spain is eager to avenge the death of Mary, Queen of Scots, (and incidentally, make good on his inheritance from Mary as the Catholic claimant to the English throne - which Mary bequeathed to him). Philip urges an unprepared fleet, commanded by the incompetent Duke of Medina Sidonia, to sail on England. Even as Elizabeth rebukes the hawks (privateers) in her council (both Walsingham and Sir Francis Drake), with hopes of peace (encouraged by Cecil, who is now Lord Burghley), the Spanish Armada appear on the horizons of England. Her fate and the future of the country now lie in the hands of Drake, and the Navy. England triumphs, but Elizabeth pays a heavy emotional price with the death of her beloved Robert Dudley, Earl of Leicester.  After the defeat of the Spanish Armada, Elizabeth's reign after this is known as the Golden Age.  

Sixth Episode, Sweet England's Pride
Sweet England's Pride - "He is the sun in splendour; he is all our pride." Robert Devereux, Earl of Essex (the stepson of Robert Dudley, Earl of Leicester and the son-in-law of Francis Walsingham), is the people's champion. He and Charles Howard were successful in capturing and sacking the Spanish seaport of Cadiz. The Queen tells her secretary Robert Cecil, son of William Cecil, "I am not Gloriana without the magic of his mirror." Essex is given a great opportunity to rise in power by being made Lord Deputy of Ireland and quelling the uprising led by O'Neill, Earl of Tyrone, but he squanders his army, makes an inglorious truce with O'Neill, and returns to England without permission. After his unsuccessful uprising against the Queen in London, he is executed. The old Queen shines in her final address to Parliament, but dies (at age 69) soon afterward. Her last action is a nod to Robert Cecil to his query about her successor being King James of Scotland.
* Information above from site: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Elizabeth_R  
** An interesting site to review is: http://www.bbc.co.uk/blogs/aboutthebbc/2011/02/elizabeth-r-40-years-on.shtml

My personal review of the Series will be posted within the next few days.

1 comment:

rosalina said...

This series was one of the best re enactment of events of the period ever made, in my opinion; and I have seen a few series over the years!!!
It successfully depicts the events reflected by primary sources and if anyone is familiar with the speech and events taken from primary evidence then this series is as accurate as it gets - the only weak area is when it is depicting the events surrounding Mary Q of scots and bias is evident in her portrayal. Interestingly, this is perhaps due to the producers not taking the time to thoroughly research the history of M Q of Scots and have just followed the English bias against her.

Well worth watching - the end of the series demonstrates Elizabeth's slow descent into death is so moving that even if you hated her for some of the cruelty she showed her female relations, you can not help but empathise with her dealing with her fear of her impending immortality and the struggle she had to let go of life - so moving.