Stonehouse (TV series) explained

Screenplay:John Preston
Director:Jon S. Baird
Theme Music Composer:Rolfe Kent
Country:United Kingdom
Language:English
Num Series:1
Num Episodes:3
Editor:Steven Worsley
Cinematography:Mark Wolf
Runtime:55 minutes
Network:ITV

Stonehouse is a British comedy-drama[1] television series dramatising the life and times of disgraced British government minister John Stonehouse, first broadcast from 2 to 4 January 2023. The series starred Matthew Macfadyen and Keeley Hawes and was directed by Jon S. Baird from a script by John Preston.

Synopsis

The series is a part fictional/fact[2] based account of how in November 1974 a prominent Labour British politician, John Stonehouse, the former Postmaster General within the Harold Wilson government and MP for Walsall North, disappeared from the beach of a luxury hotel in Miami, Florida. Stonehouse left only a neatly folded pile of clothes behind, after he swam into the sea to fake his own death.

Stonehouse faked his own death in a vain attempt to avoid disgracing his reputation. After engaging in espionage, forgery, theft and fraudulent activities, he was extradited to the UK from Australia.[3]

Cast

Production

Filming took place around Birmingham, Stratford-upon-Avon and Leamington Spa.[4] The series marked the first time real life husband and wife Macfadyen and Hawes have worked together since the BBC series Ashes to Ashes. Kevin McNally has previously appeared as Harold Wilson in the Kray twins 2015 bio-pic Legend, starring Tom Hardy.[5]

Stonehouse's daughter Julia protested against her father's alleged spycraft for the East Bloc, both in this production and in the Channel 4 documentary The Spy Who Died Twice also about John Stonehouse.[6]

Broadcast

Stonehouse was broadcast in the UK on ITV and ITVX in three one-hour episodes on 2, 3 and 4 January 2023 from 9pm.[7]

Reception

Rebecca Nicholson of The Guardian awarded the drama four stars out of five, and called it "enormously entertaining".[8] Carol Midgley of The Times described it as "a joy, chiefly thanks to Macfadyen’s witty, light-on-its-feet performance,"[9] whilst Hugo Rifkind, writing for the same newspaper, declared it "very funny" but was disappointed in the lack of nuance in its depiction of the title character.

The series was nominated for Best Single Drama or Mini-Series 1-3 EPS at the 2024 Broadcasting Press Guild Awards.[10]

Notes and References

  1. News: Nicholson . Rebecca . 2023-01-02 . Stonehouse review – Matthew Macfadyen is a brilliantly bad baddie in this fun, death-faking romp . en-GB . The Guardian . 2023-05-29 . 0261-3077.
  2. Web site: 2023-01-03 . Stonehouse story 'far more fascinating' than TV drama suggests, relative says . 2023-01-03 . The Guardian.
  3. Web site: Stonehouse: The true story that inspired the ITV drama starring Matthew MacFayden. The Independent. 2 January 2023 .
  4. Web site: The Boar . 2023-07-12 . theboar.org . en-GB.
  5. Web site: Matthew Macfadyen in first trailer for Stonehouse, inspired by true story. Radio Times.
  6. News: 2022-07-24 . Family of fraud scandal MP John Stonehouse in plea over new TV drama . en-GB . The Observer . 2023-06-05 . 0029-7712.
  7. News: ITV dramatises life of John Stonehouse MP who faked his death in 1974. The Guardian. 16 December 2022. Campbell. Duncan.
  8. Web site: Stonehouse review – Matthew Macfadyen is a brilliantly bad baddie in this fun, death-faking romp . The Guardian . 14 February 2023 . 2 January 2023.
  9. Web site: Stonehouse review: a fun drama about the MP who faked his own death . . 14 February 2023 . 12 January 2023.
  10. Web site: BPG Television and Streaming nominations for the 50th annual BPG Awards . Broadcasting-pressguild.org. 21 March 2024. February 29, 2024. James. Naylor.