The Glittering Prizes
| The Glittering Prizes | |
|---|---|
![]()  | |
| Genre | Drama | 
| Written by | Frederic Raphael | 
| Directed by | Waris Hussein Robert Knights  | 
| Starring | Tom Conti | 
| Country of origin | United Kingdom | 
| Original language | English | 
| No. of seasons | 1 | 
| No. of episodes | 6 | 
| Production | |
| Producer | Mark Shivas | 
| Running time | 80 minutes | 
| Production company | BBC | 
| Original release | |
| Network | BBC2 | 
| Release | 21 January – 25 February 1976  | 
The Glittering Prizes is a British television drama by Frederic Raphael about the changing lives of a group of Cambridge students, starting in 1952 and following them through to middle age in the 1970s.[1] It was first broadcast on BBC2 in January 1976[1] and later adapted into a novel of the same name.[2][3]
Episodes
Episode 1 ‘An Early Life’ aired 21 January 1976
Plot outline: It is the mid-1950s, Adam Morris (Tom Conti) begins his career as a Cambridge undergraduate on a scholarship. Some of Adam's views about class and religious faith are tested by an aristocratic fellow undergraduate who shares his rooms. The series's characters are introduced by  their involvement in a play by the Cambridge Footlights.
Episode 2 ‘A Love Life’ aired 28 January 1976
Plot outline: Still the mid fifties., Adam marries Barbara (Barbara Kellerman), despite parental opposition, whilst Joyce (Angela Down) finds herself pregnant by Alan (John Gregg) but marries Dan (Malcolm Stoddard).
Episode 3 ‘A Past Life’ aired 4 February 1976
Plot outline: The early 1960s,  Adam (Tom Conti) has a bruising encounter with a famous writer Stephen Taylor (Eric Porter) who was once a fascist sympathiser but then goes on to write an Oscar-winning screenplay.
Episode 4 ‘A Country Life’ aired 11 February 1976
Plot outline: The mid sixties. Set at a boys' approved school Joyce (Angela Down) must finally face up to some unpleasant truths about her seemingly idyllic marriage to Dan (Malcolm Stoddard), now a teacher, when their old Cambridge friend  Alan (John Gregg (actor)), now a media personality,  drops in.
Episode 5 ‘An Academic Life’ aired 18 February 1976
Plot Outline: the late sixties. Accusations of racism are made by student militants at a  plate glass university featuring, Dinsdale Landen as Gavin Pope, Ray Smith (actor) as Austin Denny, Clive Merrison as Bill Bourne, Suzanne Stone as Joann Bourne, Tim Pigott-Smith as Tim Dent, Carolle Rousseau as Jeanne Dent.
Episode 6 ‘A Double Life’ aired 25 February 1976
Plot outline: It’s 1976, Adam (Tom Conti), by now a famous writer, copes with the death of his father and tragedies in the personal lives of some old Cambridge friends.
Cast (selected)
| Character | Actor | 
|---|---|
| Adam Morris | Tom Conti | 
| Barbara Morris | Barbara Kellerman | 
| Lionel Morris | Leonard Sachs | 
| Joyce Hadleigh/Bradley | Angela Down | 
| Dan Bradley | Malcolm Stoddard | 
| Barbara Ransome/Parks | Anna Carteret | 
| Donald Davidson | David Robb | 
| Mike Clode | Mark Wing-Davey | 
| Anna Cunningham | Emily Richard | 
| Alan Parks | John Gregg | 
| Denis Porson | Nigel Havers | 
| Bill Bourne | Clive Merrison | 
| Stephen Taylor | Eric Porter | 
| Gavin Pope | Dinsdale Landen | 
Related works
- Fame and Fortune (2007) novel (sequel to The Glittering Prizes). Broadcast by BBC Radio 4 in six episodes October–November 2007
 - Final Demands (2010) novel (sequel to Fame and Fortune). Broadcast by BBC Radio 4 in six episodes March 2010
 
References
- ^ a b Evans, Jeff (2001). The Penguin TV Companion. Harmondsworth, England: Penguin Books. ISBN 0-14-051467-8.
 - ^ "BFI Screenonline: Glittering Prizes, The (1976)". www.screenonline.org.uk. Retrieved 14 February 2022.
 - ^ The Glittering Prizes | TVmaze, retrieved 14 February 2022
 
