3 4 mins 11 yrs

New BBC dramatisation of events that inspired Moby Dick.

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Jonas Armstrong and Director Alrick Riley

Jonas Armstrong (Robin Hood, The Street) is to lead the cast of new one-off 90-minute BBC One and Discovery drama, ‘The Whale’ (w/t).

The drama written by Terry Cafolla, whose credits include BAFTA-nominated Holy Cross and Messiah, will follow the ill-fated voyage of The Essex through the eyes of the cabin boy Thomas Nickerson who, at 14, was the youngest member of the crew and one of only eight survivors of the shipwreck.

Before he died in 1883, aged 78, Nickerson wrote a detailed account of his experiences which will form the basis of The Whale’s chronology, geography, characters, and main events; these are the same events that inspired Herman Melville to write Moby Dick.

Martin Davidson, Commissioner for BBC History, says: “Throughout the narrative of this fascinating story, some universal themes that everyone can relate to will be explored, such as – What is Man’s place on Earth? How does humanity relate to the planet and its creatures? And what lengths will Man go to in order to survive? It is a thrilling tale.”

Jonas Armstrong will star as First Mate Owen Chase with Adam Rayner (Hunted) as Captain Pollard, Paul Kaye (Game Of Thrones, Stella) as Joy; David Gyasi (Cloud Atlas, War Horse) as Peterson and Jolyon Coy (The Village) as Lawrence. Also starring Jassa Ahluwalisa, John Boyega and Ferdinand Kingsley and introducing Charles Furness as the young Tom Nickerson.

Made by BBC Factual productions, the action-packed narrative follows Nickerson as, against all odds, he comes through the worst that nature throws at him, growing up fast in the process. He faces the destructive force of sea-storms, the power of whales, the brutal desolation of the sun and sea after the shipwreck, and finally the grim realities of dark deeds as his only means of survival.

Terry Cafolla, writer says: “At the emotional heart of the drama is orphan Nickerson’s coming-of-age story, where he meets three powerful male role models in the captain, the first mate, and a steward. As the narrative develops, his views on what makes a man switch dramatically as he sees how these role models respond under some of life’s most extreme pressures.”

Woven within the story is a vivid depiction of the 19th-century whaling industry, its importance to the world in an age before petroleum, the reality of its economics and operation, and the life and society of the sperm whale itself, one of the ocean’s greatest creatures.

The drama is executive produced by Eamon Hardy, (Who Bombed Omagh, Monkeys Rats And Me) and Ruth Caleb (A Short Stay In Switzerland, Bullet Boy). The producers are Mike Dormer (Clocking Off, Pompeii – The Last Day) and John Chapman (The Lost Prince, The Street).

Filming on ‘Whale’ begins in Malta this week.

3 thoughts on “Jonas Armstrong to star in BBC1 Moby Dick story ‘Whale’

  1. Do you have any information on why Joe Armstrong’s name has been
    replaced with Jolyon Coy as Lawrence in the BBC press release? Has there
    been a cast change? Thanks.

    1. It’s a recent change, I shall enquire with the BBC tomorrow and find out.

      Update! After enquiring with the publicist – it’s was a mistake on the BBC’s part. Joe Armstrong not linked to the drama.

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