4-part mini-series directed by David Attwood,
written by Andrew Davies, Dominic Minghella,
based on the novel Moll Flanders by
Daniel Defoe, released in the United States on October 13, 1996.
Music by Jim Parker, Mark Springer.
Cast:
Alex Kingston, Daniel Craig, James
Bowers, Trevyn McDowell, Patti Love, Colin Buchanan, Nicola Walker, Roger
Morlidge, Nicola Kingston, Geoffrey Beevers, Sam Halpenny, Tom Ward, Anthony
O'Donnell, Lucy Evans, Jenna Hodges, Diana Rigg, Anthony Bessick, Matthew
O'Neill, Lucy Fitzmaurice, James Fleet, Struan Rodger, Dan D. Fough, Claire
Keepie, John Savident, Bill Thomas, Chrissie Cotterill, Jonathan Weir, Brian
Rawlinson, Peter Jonfield, Anna Welsh, Neville Phillips, Will Tacey, Alison
Lomas, Maureen O'Brien, Guy Scantlebury, Irving Czechowicz, Ronald Fraser,
Catherine Keis, Anthony Milner, Ian Driver, Ruth Mitchell, Caroline Harker,
Anya Phillips, Dallas Campbell, Milton Johns, Dawn McDaniel, David Burston,
David Norman, Ken McDonald, Mary Healey, Elizabeth Skelton, Jeff Nuttall,
Philip Fox, Caroline Trowbridge, Victoria Scarborough, Jeffrey Robert, James
Larkin, Christopher Fulford, Michael Johnson, Andrew Mayor, Roger
Ashton-Griffiths, Evie Garratt, James Helm, Colin Alltree, Sarah Dorsett,
Alistair Donkin, Alex Brown, Tim Jefferis, David Mitchell, Maia Lucas.
Recommended reading:
Moll Flanders
by Daniel Defoe.First published 1772.
Published by Random House Publishing Group.
Published by Random House Publishing Group.
ISBN 13: 9780375760105
ISBN 10: 0375760105
ASIN:0375760105
Description:
ISBN 10: 0375760105
ASIN:0375760105
Written in a time when criminal biographies
enjoyed great success, Daniel Defoe’s Moll Flanders details the life of the
irresistible Moll and her struggles through poverty and sin in search of
property and power. Born in Newgate Prison to a picaresque mother, Moll propels
herself through marriages, periods of success and destitution, and a trip to
the New World and back, only to return to the place of her birth as a popular
prostitute and brilliant thief. The story of Moll Flanders vividly illustrates
Defoe’s themes of social mobility and predestination, sin, redemption and
reward.
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