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Reilly, Ace of Spies

1983 British TV drama series


Summary

1983 British TV drama series

FieldValue
imageSidney reilly 8.jpg
image_size250
captionSam Neill portraying Sidney Reilly in the television serial Reilly, Ace of Spies (1983).
based_onAce of Spies by Robin Bruce Lockhart
screenplayTroy Kennedy Martin
directorMartin Campbell
Jim Goddard
starringSam Neill
Jeananne Crowley
Leo McKern
Tom Bell
Kenneth Cranham
Norman Rodway
theme_music_composerHarry Rabinowitz
Dmitri Shostakovich (main theme)
countryUnited Kingdom
languageEnglish
num_series1
num_episodes12
producerChris Burt
Johnny Goodman
Verity Lambert
runtime50 minutes
companyEuston Films for Thames
networkITV
first_aired
last_aired

Jim Goddard Jeananne Crowley Leo McKern Tom Bell Kenneth Cranham Norman Rodway Dmitri Shostakovich (main theme) Johnny Goodman Verity Lambert Reilly, Ace of Spies is a 1983 British television programme dramatizing the life of Sidney Reilly, a Russian-born adventurer who became one of the greatest spies ever to work for the United Kingdom and the British Empire. Among his exploits, in the early 20th century, were the infiltration of the German General Staff in 1917 and a near-overthrow of the Bolsheviks in 1918. His reputation with women was as legendary as his genius for espionage.

The series was written by Troy Kennedy Martin, and based on the 1967 book Ace of Spies by Robin Bruce Lockhart, whose father R. H. Bruce Lockhart was one of Reilly's fellow spies. Sam Neill stars as the eponymous character. The theme music is the romance movement from Dmitri Shostakovich's The Gadfly Suite, though Shostakovich is not actually credited (Harry Rabinowitz is credited with the music).

Episodes

There are 12 episodes, each approximately 50 minutes in length, except Episode 1, which is approximately 80 minutes). The DVD set Thames/Freemantle) includes a 22-minute "documentary examination into what really happened".

Cast

  • Sam Neill as Sidney Reilly
  • Peter Egan as Major Charles Fothergill
  • Ian Charleson as R. H. Bruce Lockhart
  • Norman Rodway as Captain Mansfield Smith-Cumming
  • Tom Bell as Felix Dzerzhinsky
  • David Burke as Joseph Stalin
  • Kenneth Cranham as Vladimir Lenin
  • Leo McKern as Basil Zaharoff
  • Jeananne Crowley as Margaret Callaghan Reilly (wife #1)
  • Derek Newark as General Stoessel
  • Donald Morley as Stanley Baldwin
  • John Castle as Count Massino
  • Celia Gregory as Nadina "Nadia" Massino (wife #2)
  • Brian Protheroe as Shasha Grammaticoff
  • Joanne Whalley as Ulla Glass
  • Clive Merrison as Boris Savinkov
  • Laura Davenport as Nelly "Pepita" Burton (wife #3)
  • Joanne Pearce as Caryll Houselander
  • Michael Aldridge as Orlov
  • Victoria Harwood as Natalia
  • Anthony Higgins as Mikhail Trilisser
  • John Rhys-Davies as Tanyatos
  • Sebastian Shaw as Reverend Thomas
  • Bill Nighy as Goschen
  • David Ryall as Herr Glass
  • Denis Lill as William Knox D'Arcy
  • David Suchet as Inspector Tsientsin
  • Alex McCrindle as Captain MacDougal
  • Colin Jeavons as Widdemeyer
  • Alfred Molina as Yakov Blumkin
  • Peter Howell as Baron Rothschild
  • Lindsay Duncan as The Plugger
  • Hugh Fraser as George Hill
  • Malcolm Terris as Sykes
  • Diana Hardcastle as Anna
  • Prentis Hancock as Boris Souvarine
  • Geoffrey Whitehead as Count Lubinsky
  • Aubrey Morris as Mendrovovich
  • Phil Smeeton as Chekist
  • Michael Angelis as Artur Artuzov
  • Alan Downer as Eduard Berzin
  • Alan Bowerman as Lieberman
  • Sara Clee as Fanya "Fanny" Kaplan

Critical reception

In a 1984 review for The New York Times, John Corry wrote, "much of 'Reilly' is eminently watchable simply because it is eminently watchable." He praised the production and Sam Neill's performance and summarized "a mixed bag of pleasures, but it's worth dropping in on, if not in whole, then at least in part."

Awards

Costume designer Elizabeth Waller was nominated for a 1984 British Academy Television Craft Award for best costume design for the series, and editors Edward Marnier and Ralph Sheldon won the BAFTA TV Craft award for Best Film Editor.

Home media

The series was issued on Region 1 DVD by A&E Home Entertainment, under licence from THAMES International, talkbackTHAMES and FremantleMedia Ltd on 22 February 2005.

References

References

  1. Billington, Michael. (15 January 1984). "A Spy Story Even James Bond Might Envy". The New York Times.
  2. Corry, John. (19 January 1984). "By TV 'REILLY: ACE OF SPIES,' A SERIES". The New York Times.
  3. "BFI Screenonline: Reilly, Ace of Spies (1983)".
  4. "Harry Rabinowitz | Biography & History".
  5. "1984 Television Craft Film Editor {{!}} BAFTA Awards".
  6. (7 December 2005). "Reilly, ace of spies".
Wikipedia Source

This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

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