A Woman of Substance (TV series)

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A Woman of Substance
British DVD cover from 2003
GenreDrama
Written byBarbara Taylor Bradford (novel)
Lee Langley (screenplay)
Directed byDon Sharp
StarringJenny Seagrove
Deborah Kerr
Barry Bostwick
Liam Neeson
ComposerNigel Hess
Country of originUnited Kingdom
United States
Original languageEnglish
No. of seasons1
No. of episodes3
Production
ProducerDiane Baker
Production locationsYorkshire and London
CinematographyErnest Vincze
EditorTeddy Darvas
Running time290 mins
Production companyPortman-Artemis
Original release
NetworkChannel 4 (UK)
Operation Prime Time (USA)
Release2 January (1985-01-02) –
4 January 1985 (1985-01-04) (UK)

A Woman of Substance is a British-American three-part television drama serial, produced in 1984. It is based on the 1979 novel of the same name by Barbara Taylor Bradford.

Plot[edit]

In 1970, 80-year-old Emma Harte is a wealthy, formidable businesswoman. She spent her life building a business empire, including the world-famous Harte's Department Store in London, as well as extensive holdings in property and oil. While on a business trip, Emma informs her granddaughter, Paula, that she will be her business successor.

Back in London, Emma learns that her two sons, Kit and Robin, are plotting to force her retirement and break up and sell off her businesses. Emma then changes her will, leaving her business to her grandchildren.

The story flashes back to the early 20th century when teenaged Emma worked as a servant at Fairley Hall in rural Yorkshire, along with her father, Jack, and two brothers, Winston and Frank. The Fairly family owns several local businesses including a mill and a brickyard. After their mother's death, Winston joins the Royal Navy. Emma becomes romantically involved with the Fairley's younger son, Edwin and becomes pregnant. When Edwin refuses to marry her, Emma's friend, Shane "Blackie" O'Neill, an Irish navvy who works at Fairley Hall, suggests she move to start a new life. Emma relocates and tells her landlady and new friends that she is married to a sailor currently away at sea.

While looking for work, Emma meets Abraham Kallinski, a Jew whom she rescues from an anti-Semitic attack by local youths. Abraham introduces Emma to his wife, Janessa, and grown sons, David and Victor. Abraham then offers Emma a job in his textile factory.

Blackie introduces Emma to Laura Spencer. They become good friends and Emma moves into Laura's house, and also starts a new job at Thompson's Mill. Emma gives birth to a daughter that she names Edwina. Emma's cousin Freda takes baby Edwina so Emma can work. After working two jobs for a year, Emma makes enough money to rent a shop in Armley in which she sells fabrics, clothing, and luxury food goods. The shop is a success and Emma eventually has three stores. Emma is horrified when Edwin Fairley's vile brother, Gerald, unexpectedly arrives. He discovered Emma working at Thompson's Mill, now owned by his father. He says Edwin is about to be engaged and demands to know where their child is. Emma refuses and after a violent confrontation, she marries her landlord, Joe Lowther for protection. Soon after, they have a son named Kit.

Emma goes into partnership with the Kallinskis. Unfortunately, her private life runs less smoothly. Joe is killed in the Battle of the Somme and Laura, now married to Blackie, dies giving birth to a son, Bryan. Emma takes in Bryan to lives with her and her children until Blackie returns from the war.

In early 1918, Emma falls in love with Australian Army officer Paul McGill. He returns to the war in France after recovering from a leg injury. After the war, Emma is hurt and disappointed to learn that Paul has gone back to his estranged wife. She turns to an acquaintance Arthur Ainsley for consolation, agreeing to marry him. She and her new husband have twins, Robin and Elizabeth, but the marriage is short-lived when Paul returns. Emma is angry until Paul explains that he tried writing but his secretary hid the letters. They start seeing each other and she divorces her husband after giving birth to Paul's child, a daughter they name Daisy.

Emma has never forgiven the Fairleys for how they treated her and her family. Now rich and powerful, she buys the Fairley's holdings, including Fairley Hall, which she intends to demolish and use as a public park.

In February 1939, with new war on the horizon, Paul goes to Australia to ask his wife for a divorce. While there, he is seriously injured in a car crash and almost dies. He survives but will die within a year. He redraws his will, leaving nearly everything to Emma and Daisy (including his vast shares in the Sitex oil company). He then he commits suicide. Emma is devastated but eventually recovers enough to tend to her business empires.

Emma's children marry and have children of their own – Edwina, Kit and Robin have one child each. Elizabeth marries repeatedly and has four and Daisy marries and has two, including Paula.

Back in 1970, Emma invites her family to Yorkshire estate for her 80th birthday. After dinner, Emma informs them she changed her will, effectively cutting her own children out for their deceit and leaving everything to her grandchildren instead. She announces that Paula will inherit the Harte's Department Store chain. Emma's children are furious but reluctantly accept £1 million each as "pay-offs" after signing an agreement that they will not contest her will. Emma also gives her blessing to Paula's engagement to Jim Fairley, Edwin's grandson, thus ending her lifelong hatred of the Fairley family.

Main cast[edit]

Production[edit]

The drama was produced by the British company Portman-Artemis, and was co-financed by the UK's Channel 4 and the US-based OPT Organisation (a subsidiary of MCA Television). Producer Diane Baker (who also co-stars as Laura Spencer) first met Taylor-Bradford prior to the novel being published, whilst Taylor-Bradford was working for a newspaper in New York and was interviewing Baker (who worked predominantly as an actress at that time) for an article about interior design. After the novel was published, Baker contacted Taylor-Bradford to obtain the television rights, remortgaging her house in order to do so.

Don Sharp was not the original director. He says the producers were unhappy with the progress of the film during pre-production; the original director and several heads of production were fired, and Sharp was brought in four weeks before filming. Sharp says it was he who cast Jenny Seagrove and that Diane Baker recommended Liam Neeson.[1]

The series was largely filmed in Yorkshire in the north of England, and locations include Brimham Rocks (where Emma first meets Blackie on the moors), Richmond (for most of Armley), and the main shop-front of the Emma Harte Emporium in London. The original Armley store was a then disused row of shops in Crown Street Darlington (opposite the towns main post office).[2] Filming took twelve weeks.

The budget was $6 million.[3] Sharp said the original cut ran long because they did not have enough time during pre production to cut the script as thoroughly as he would have liked.[1]

Transmission[edit]

The drama was aired by Channel 4 in the UK over three nights from 2 to 4 January 1985. The broadcast of the final part on 4 January drew 13.8 million viewers, which remains the channel's highest ever audience.[4] It was shown in limited syndication in the United States several weeks before the British transmission, in order to qualify for the 1985 Primetime Emmy Award.

Award nominations[edit]

For the 1985 Primetime Emmy Award, A Woman of Substance was nominated for Outstanding Limited Series, and Deborah Kerr was nominated for Outstanding Supporting Actress in a Limited Series or Special.[5]

Sequels[edit]

Barbara Taylor-Bradford's sequel, Hold the Dream, was produced as an eponymous serial in 1986, again starring Deborah Kerr and Jenny Seagrove, though Seagrove now played the role of Paula. It was again directed by Don Sharp, who spent most of the decade directing in this genre.[6]

A second sequel, To Be the Best, was adapted in 1992 and starred Lindsay Wagner as Paula.

References[edit]

  1. ^ a b Sharp, Don (2 November 1993). "Don Sharp Side 7" (Interview). Interviewed by Teddy Darvas and Alan Lawson. London: History Project. Retrieved 17 July 2021.
  2. ^ Credited in end credits of original serial
  3. ^ Preston, Marilynn (25 November 1984). "Special feature: Bradford novel on TV: Soapy 60-year saga". Chicago Tribune. p. i4.
  4. ^ Ruddick, Graham (8 November 2017). "Channel 4 wins second biggest audience ever with Bake Off". The Guardian – via www.theguardian.com.
  5. ^ IMDb: A Woman of Substance – Awards Linked 2014-12-04
  6. ^ Vagg, Stephen (27 July 2019). "Unsung Aussie Filmmakers: Don Sharp – A Top 25". Filmink.

External links[edit]