Mother Love (TV series)
Mother Love is a 1989 BBC British television drama. It was adapted by Andrew Davies from Domini Taylor's (Roger Longrigg's) 1983 novel concerning a mother's obsessive love for her son, vengeful hatred of his father, her ex-husband, and the effect on her daughter-in-law and grandchildren. It starred Diana Rigg, David McCallum, James Wilby, and Fiona Gillies, and was directed by Simon Langton.[1]
Mother Love | |
---|---|
Created by | Domini Taylor (novel) |
Written by | Andrew Davies |
Directed by | Simon Langton |
Starring | Diana Rigg David McCallum James Wilby Fiona Gillies |
Composer | Patrick Gowers |
Country of origin | United Kingdom |
Original language | English |
No. of series | 1 |
No. of episodes | 4 |
Production | |
Producer | Ken Riddington |
Production locations | London, England, UK |
Cinematography | Nigel Walters |
Running time | 55 mins |
Production company | BBC |
Release | |
Original network | BBC1 |
Original release | 29 October – 19 November 1989 |
Christopher "Kit" Vesey (James Wilby) and Angela Vesey (Fiona Gillies), a British yuppie couple, enjoy a seemingly idyllic life. Yet there is one troubling factor in their lives - Kit's mother Helena (Diana Rigg), an eccentric and often difficult woman consumed by anger with Kit's father (David McCallum), a famed conductor with whom she believes Kit has no contact. Her oddness is confirmed in a series of incidents involving her ex-husband and his second wife Ruth (Isla Blair), an artist. Flashbacks throughout the series reveal bits of Helena's troubled past. Little by little, the young couple's life begins to fall apart as Helena begins to act out her feelings of intense jealousy and desire for revenge, implicating a dear old friend and leading to murder.
Cast
- Diana Rigg as Helena
- James Wilby as Kit
- David McCallum as Alex
- Fiona Gillies as Angela
- Isla Blair as Ruth
- James Grout as George Batt
- Liliana Komorowska as Danuta
- Ann Firbank as Mrs Turner
- Jeffry Wickham as Brigadier Turner
- Holly Aird as Emily
- Grant Parsons as Leo
- Amelia Shankley as Harriet
- Deborah Grant as Helena's Mother
- Romolo Bruni as Waiter
- Natasha Byrne as Rachel Turner
- Katharyn Ballantine as Tiggy Turner
- Gary Fairhall as Photographer
- Gareth Forwood as Boris
- Michael Dore as Singer
- Louisa Janes as Young Helena
- Anna Price as Maureen
- Colin Stinton as Concert Hall Manager
- Margaret Boyle as Neighbour
- John Grillo, Carl Duering as Art Critics
- Irene Marot as Woman Journalist
- Susan McCulloch as Soprano
- Joan Bakewell as TV Commentator
- Cordelia Roche as Jordan
- Jonathan Burn as Chief Inspector Strachan
- Trevor Cooper as Sergeant Bear
- Rob Edwards as Consultant
- Elizabeth Ash as Vicky
- Franco Trevisi as Rossini
- Timothy Kightley as Vicar
- Angela Goodwin as Betsy Lazerhorn
- Penny Darch as Miss Pope
- Rosemary Frankau as School Secretary
- Dominic St. Clair as Blenkinsop
- Deborah Barrymore as Air Stewardess
- Calvin Simpson as Porter
- Cynthia Powell as Nurse
- Sophie Thursfield as Nurse Sheila
- Francis Atkinson as Sharon
- Magdalena Buznea as Cleaner
- Badi Uzzaman as Mini Cab Driver
- Naomi Kerbel as Olivia
- Rebecca Sabin as Lavinia
- Claire Shepherd as Laura
Plot
Kit Vesey, a London barrister, has proposed to Angela Turner, a receptionist at an art gallery. He is fearful about breaking this news to his fiercely controlling mother, Helena, but they do. Kit also insists that Angela not mention anything to Helena about their going to visit his father Alex, who divorced Helena and remarried many years ago. Helena has blocked all mention of Alex from her life and even threatened to commit suicide when Kit once suggested going to live with him. Accepted by Helena, the Veseys settle into marriage and have two children, all the while maintaining a secret relationship with Alex and his new family. However, when Helena sees an arts programme about Alex's wife Ruth, a renowned photographer, she conspires to kill Ruth by locking her in her darkroom with the ventilators blocked and contrives evidence to convict Helena's friend, George.
While visiting Rome, Alex meets Jordan, an American actress whom he subsequently marries and who later gives birth to twins. As Kit is paralysed following surgery on a brain tumour, Helena comes to tend to him in hospital but starts to uncover other evidence about how Angela has been visiting Alex. After watching Angela leave Alex's home and interpreting the evident affection between the two of them as evidence that Angela was having an affair with Alex, Helena becomes increasingly unhinged. While at the hospital one day, she informs the paralysed Kit that she intends to poison Alex and Jordan's twins using laburnum in return for the pair's 'treachery.' Having tested the effectiveness of laburnum on a neighbour's cat, Helena laces some marzipan shortbreads with the poison and gives them to her grandchildren, knowing that they would likely give them to the twins at Alex's party.
Helena's plan fails, however, as another girl at the party, Olivia, steals one of the shortbreads while the rest of the guests are outside taking a photo together, and she is subsequently discovered in a convulsive state in the garden. After the family receive a strange call purporting to be from the hospital, Angela realises that it must have been Helena who poisoned the shortbreads and who had called the family only to be told that Alex's family did have contact with Kit. Angela rushes to the hospital at the same time as Helena starts removing Kit from his life support machine for his 'treachery.' Angela arrives to find Helena embracing Kit whilst he struggles to breathe and calls nurses over, who discover that Helena had, in fact, forced him out of his paralysis. The final scene shows Helena in a prison cell, staring emptily at a wall.
Awards
Diana Rigg won the British Academy Television Award for Best Actress for her portrayal of Helena.
BAFTA nominations for Mother Love[2] included: Best Drama Series/Serial - Ken Riddington, Simon Langton, Andrew Davies. Best Film Editor - Ray Wingrove. Best Film Sound - Barrie Tharby, Keith Marriner, Graham Lawrence.
Broadcasts
Mother Love first aired in its original four-parts from 29 October to 19 November 1989 on BBC One with a BBC Two repeat the following year. In 1991 it was broadcast on the PBS programme Mystery!, of which Rigg was the host. It was broadcast on Sky Arts in the early 2010s.
Following the death of Diana Rigg, it was repeated on 22–23 December 2020 on BBC Four in two parts.[3]
It has not been officially released on VHS or DVD.
References
- "Mother Love (TV Mini-Series 1989)". IMDb.
- "BAFTA Awards Search | BAFTA Awards".
- "BBC Mother Love". BBC. 22 December 2020.
External links
- Mother Love at the British Film Institute
- Mother Love at IMDb