We reach the end of Wolf Hall: The Mirror and the Light, and history tells us how Thomas Cromwell’s story ends. What happens after he is arrested for treason? Caution: This post contains SPOILERS for ...
Peter Kosminsky talks through the technical and emotional challenges of visualizing Thomas Cromwell and Jane Seymour’s uncertain meeting with King Henry VIII. By Hilton Dresden Associate Awards Editor ...
Wolf Hall: The Mirror and the Light gives us a look at Thomas Cromwell’s downfall, and we’re seeing that it starts with the loss of Jane Seymour. The series itself indicates that Cromwell loved Jane ...
Part of the appeal and popularity of Hilary Mantel’s Wolf Hall novels is the fact that it puts Thomas Cromwell center stage in a new light. The titan of the Tudor era was one of the instrumental ...
Add Yahoo as a preferred source to see more of our stories on Google. A second season of “Wolf Hall” was inevitable. The first, based on Hilary Mantel's award-winning novels “Wolf Hall” and “Bring Up ...
Hilary Mantel’s Wolf Hall book trilogy puts historical figure Thomas Cromwell into a more favorable spotlight. The Tudor-era figure is known for masterminding the separation of the Church of England ...
Add Yahoo as a preferred source to see more of our stories on Google. Ten years ago, Joanna Eatwell received an Emmy nomination for period-costume design for “Wolf Hall,” the BBC/PBS adaptation of ...
Thomas Cromwell, a prominent figure in King Henry VIII’s reign, doesn’t often get the spotlight in history books. That’s the appeal of both Wolf Hall series, including the Hilary Mantel book trilogy ...
It is a measure of the original work’s quality and its excellent adaptation to television that historical revisionism remains central to any discussion of its merits; if they were less good, no one ...
Wolf Hall: Parts 1 & 2 are adapted by Mike Poulton from Hilary Mantel's double Man Booker Prize winning novels, Wolf Hall and Bring Up the Bodies (published Henry Holt in the U.S.). The plays are ...
With deep pockets, globally-focused streaming giants have driven up production costs in our industry, pricing out our own, home-grown broadcasters. A levy would let them back into the game. By Peter ...