1 4 mins 10 yrs

First novel of the Grantchester series set for ITV.

image

ITV has commissioned a six-part series Grantchester, an adaption of the James Runcie novel, ‘Sidney Chambers and the Shadow of Death.’

Produced by Lovely Day, a sister company of Kudos, the 1953 Cambridgeshire-set drama is written for ITV by Daisy Coulam (EastEnders, Casualty)

Set against the backdrop of the real hamlet of Grantchester, the drama focuses upon the life of Sidney Chambers, a charismatic, charming clergyman who turns investigative vicar when one of his parishioners dies in suspicious circumstances.     
 
A tall and handsome man with a love of warm beer and hot jazz, Sidney is self-effacing, great company and a true romantic.  He conscientiously undertakes his parish duties at the church of St Andrew and St Mary’s, and has the ear of his congregation who respect his unique moral insights and dry humour.  Sidney thinks the best of people, but intuitively asks all the right questions which often results in an epiphany!  
 
His partner in crime is over-worked Police Inspector, Geordie Keating, a man two inches shorter than he’d like to be, with scuffed shoes and hair not as familiar with a comb as it should be.  Geordie speaks plainly and his down to earth approach to policing complements Sidney’s more gentle technique of coaxing information from witnesses and suspects.  Their unlikely partnership becomes a true friendship as each offers a different insight into the crimes they begin to unravel.
 
Troubled by nightmares and recurring flashbacks to the time he served in the Scot’s Guards, Sidney is the moral compass of the drama with a desire to put right the wrongs of the past  – “we cannot erase our pasts however hard we try.  Instead we must carry them with us into the future.”

Sidney’s private life is complicated, as his love for beautiful heiress Amanda Kendall, although reciprocated, doesn’t have a future, as her father wants her to marry an aristocratic beau.  For the foreseeable, Sidney lives with his housekeeper the redoubtable Mrs Maguire who keeps him in check and cleans his water closets. He also has gorgeous Labrador puppy, Dickens, for company.

ITV’s Director of drama Steve November said: “Daisy Coulam’s scripts are vivid and beautifully written with some wonderful characters at the heart of the stories. There’s an emotional truth and gravity to this series which makes it a very compelling drama.”  

Lovely Day’s Managing Director and founder Diederick Santer said: “Grantchester is a real labour of love for me and Lovely Day.  Sidney is a charming, but complex character, a man of faith burdened by his past despite a distinguished wartime record, he’s funny, dashing and inquisitive.  He loves being a parish priest in the exquisite village of Grantchester, but somehow it’s not enough and he still finds time to fall in and out of love and solve crimes. James Runcie has created this brilliant character and this glorious world, which Daisy Coulam is now bringing to the screen in her wonderful and lavish scripts, and I can’t wait for ITV’s audience to get to know him too.”

Emma Kingsman-Lloyd (DCI Banks) will produce the series with Diederick Santer executive producing.

Grantchester casting will be announced in 2014, with filming due to begin in March 2014 in London, Cambridge and Grantchester and shooting will continue until June.

One thought on “ITV commissions six-part drama adaption, ‘Grantchester’

Comments are closed.