Genre: | Drama |
Creator: | E. Nesbit |
Music: | Paul Hart |
Starring: | David Suchet |
Country: | United Kingdom |
Language: | English |
Network: | BBC One |
Runtime: | 28 minutes |
Num Episodes: | 6 |
Director: | Michael Kerrigan |
Producer: | Giles Ridge |
The Phoenix and the Carpet is a BBC Television adaption of the 1904 book of the same name by E. Nesbit about four children in Edwardian England who acquire a phoenix and the adventures they have as a result.
The six-part serial was first broadcast in 1997 and starred David Suchet as the Phoenix.
An earlier 8-part serialisation of the same story was made by the BBC in 1976 starring Jane Forster, Max Harris, Tamzin Neville and Gary Russell as the four children.
In the first episode, a second-hand carpet is delivered to the Bastable household in London. Impatient for the arrival of Guy Fawkes Night, the four Bastable children had set off fireworks in the nursery, leading to a fire. Rolled up in the carpet, the children find a large egg. When they accidentally knock it into the fire, it hatches, and a talking Phoenix emerges. The new carpet is a magic carpet and can take the children anywhere, and with it they have some exotic adventures.
The Phoenix is a friend of the Psammead, whom the children already know, and his help is sometimes called upon.
In the sixth episode, the Phoenix decides it is time for him to begin his cycle again, going up in flames to arise from the ashes in two thousand years' time. He lays an egg, and immolates himself.
The series was a co-production between the BBC and HIT Entertainment and took the format of six 28-minute episodes, first broadcast on BBC One between November and December 1997.[1]
The Phoenix and the Carpet is part of a family of BBC productions about the adventures of the Bastable children, based on novels by E. Nesbit, launched in 1991 with Five Children and It in six episodes, followed in 1993 by The Return of the Psammead. All three were adapted by Helen Cresswell, and apart from the children the Psammead, created and voiced by Francis Wright, appears in all three.
The serial was released on DVD in a truncated version, only half as long as the original.
A VHS and DVD release from Reader's Digest (under license from BBC Worldwide) were released, containing a 90-minute edited version of the serial.[2] [3]