Genre: | Fantasy drama |
Creator: | Tom Gabbay Roy Clarke |
Director: | Bob Mahoney (episode 1) Terry Marcel (episodes 2, 3 and 5) Christopher King (episodes 4 and 9) Alan Grint (episodes 6–8 and 12–13) Rick Stroud (episodes 10 and 11) |
Starring: | Bryan Brown Tony Haygarth Kim Thomson Deborah Moore Otto Tausig |
Composer: | Paul Hart Joe Campbell Bob Mahoney (vocals) |
Country: | United Kingdom Germany Spain |
Language: | English |
Num Episodes: | 13 |
Executive Producer: | Keith Richardson Tom Gabbay |
Producer: | Steve Lanning |
Location: | Leeds (England) Salzburg (Austria) Munich (Germany) Soria (Spain) London (England) Scarborough (England) |
Runtime: | 55 minutes (including adverts) |
Network: | Sky One (United Kingdom) ZDF (Germany) Antena 3 (Spain) |
Company: | FingerTip Films for Yorkshire Television and British Sky Broadcasting |
The Wanderer is a fantasy drama television miniseries of a British origin, first transmitted on Sky One from 14 September to 7 December 1994, and comprising 13 hour-long episodes.[1] [2] [3]
Every episode brings a new adventure, and the story of long-ago brothers Adam and Zachary, Princess Beatrice, and Lady Clare slowly unfolds as the present-day Adam searches for the original Zachary's grave, a magic stone, and a lost book of power.
The central characters of the programme were created, and its core format was developed, by Tom Gabbay, who also served as executive producer of the series, which was filmed on locations in Austria, Germany, Spain, and England, including Chinatown in London, Helmsley Castle and the Yorkshire Moors, made by FingerTip Films (a partnership between Roy Clarke, who wrote the scripts, and producer Steve Lanning) for Yorkshire Television with British Sky Broadcasting (United Kingdom), ZDF (Germany), and Antena 3 (Spain). Bob Mahoney directed Rebirth, the first episode of the series.
In the United States, The Wanderer was transmitted primarily in first-run syndication.
Beginning for the first episode:
Beginning from episodes 2 to 13:
The shy multi-millionaire businessman Adam ("the Wanderer" of the programme's title) and his wicked twin brother Zachary (both played by Brown) are two former knights from the late 10th century during the Middle Ages at the end of the 1st millennium, both of whom have been born again (or reincarnated) in the late 20th century. Zachary is after a complicated revenge on Adam, who killed him in the year A.D. 1000, but much more is at stake than mere vengeance. As the turn of the 3rd millennium is approaching, people are growing more superstitious, and Zachary plans to use this for his own purpose. He needs his brother Adam dead, and Adam's death to be seen by witnesses, so he can pose as Adam resurrected.
The other players in both time-zones are Zachary's beautiful but deadly companion Beatrice (played by Thomson), Adam's friend Godbold (in the present day a philosophically-minded plumber and professional wrestler with a large beard, but once a hermit and monk, played by Haygarth), and Adam's 10th century lover Lady Clare (played by Moore). She has come back in the present day as Clare, a high-spirited photographer, and she does not plan to lose her man a second time.
Wolfgang Mathias (played by Tausig) is Adam's personal assistant. Unfortunately for him, as he himself has no roots in the 10th century, he finds virtually everything about the Wanderer's world extremely confusing.
Actor | Character | |
---|---|---|
Bryan Brown | Adam/Zachary | |
Tony Haygarth | Godbold | |
Kim Thomson | Beatrice | |
Deborah Moore | Clare | |
Otto Tausig | Wolfgang Mathias |
Actor | Character | Appearance | |
---|---|---|---|
Tatjana Blacher | Inspector Mentzel | "Rebirth" | |
Alexander Stebele | Forster | "Mind Games" | |
Ann-Kathrin Kramer | Kiara | ||
August Schmölzer | Kurt | ||
Jan Biczycki | Oskar | "Bridges" | |
Uwe Ochsenknecht | Brandt | "False Witness" | |
Felipe Jiménez | Fatso | "Clare" | |
Pedro Bea | Skinny | ||
Fernando Hilbeck | Clare's father | "Clare" "Everybody Must Get Stoned" | |
Isabel Prinz | Clare's mother | ||
Debora Izaguirre | Loura | "Everybody Must Get Stoned" | |
Pablo Scola | Pascual | ||
Burt Kwouk | Ling Fat | "A Dragon by Any Other Name" | |
Choy Ling Man | Sun Li | ||
K.C. Leong | Wen | ||
Mark Burns | Sir Niles | "Home" |
No. | Episode | Director | Air date |
---|---|---|---|
1 | "Rebirth" | Bob Mahoney | 14 September 1994 |
2 | "Mind Games" | Terry Marcel | 21 September 1994 |
3 | "Bridges" | 28 September 1994 | |
4 | "False Witness" | Christopher King | 5 October 1994 |
5 | "Castle Takes Knight" | Terry Marcel | 12 October 1994 |
6 | "Clare" | Alan Grint | 19 October 1994 |
7 | "No Bull" | 26 October 1994 | |
8 | "Everybody Must Get Stoned" | 2 November 1994 | |
9 | "A Dragon by Any Other Name" | Christopher King | 9 November 1994 |
10 | "See No Evil" | Rick Stroud | 16 November 1994 |
11 | "Waste Not, Want Not" | 23 November 1994 | |
12 | "Home" | Alan Grint | 30 November 1994 |
13 | "Knight Time" | 7 December 1994 |
ITV Studios Home Entertainment, owners of the copyright to The Wanderer, were not known to have released it on home media in any format as of the beginning of August 2014.
TV Zone magazine, surveying the ratings for TV shows aired on Sky One, noted that The Wanderer's debut episode was watched by 0.46 million UK viewers.[4] Subsequently, the show's episodes had lower ratings, gaining fewer viewers than Sky One's showings of and . The magazine concluded "Unless it [The Wanderer] performs well in other territories, a long life is not expected". According to TV historian Milly Buonanno, The Wanderer was "an absolute failure according to audience ratings".[5] Unhappy with the show's performance, ZDF ceased showing The Wanderer after the third episode.