The Forsyte Saga
- Serie de TV
- 1967
- 50min
A lo largo de décadas, la saga contrasta al obsesivo Soames, aferrado a su esposa Irene, y a Jolyon, que se va con la institutriz de sus hijos. Sus caminos divergentes se entrelazan, trayend... Leer todoA lo largo de décadas, la saga contrasta al obsesivo Soames, aferrado a su esposa Irene, y a Jolyon, que se va con la institutriz de sus hijos. Sus caminos divergentes se entrelazan, trayendo altibajos al clan Forsyte de clase alta.A lo largo de décadas, la saga contrasta al obsesivo Soames, aferrado a su esposa Irene, y a Jolyon, que se va con la institutriz de sus hijos. Sus caminos divergentes se entrelazan, trayendo altibajos al clan Forsyte de clase alta.
- Ganó 1 premio Primetime Emmy
- 4 premios ganados y 3 nominaciones en total
Opiniones destacadas
Forget the recent remake and after about ten minutes you'll certainly forget that this is thirty-odd years old and made in black and white. Maybe its high-class soap opera but even so its all class.
Truly a saga spanning four or five generations, the story is dominated by Eric Porter's Soames, the cold venal rapist who eventually commands our grudging respect and the truly beautiful Irene played by Nyree Dawn Porter, Soames' victim who later finds love. And then there's Susan Hampshire's pretty but totally selfish Fleur, drawing you eye whenever she's on-screen. Incidentally, Nicholas Pennell plays Fleur's husband as if he was Wilfred Hyde-White in My Fair Lady! There are many other major characters, all well portrayed and you'll really care what happens to them.
Even the make-up of the two Porters is worth a word of praise as they age convincingly.
A minor criticism I could make is the rather eccentric recording of the sound. The dialogue level soars and drops as if the microphones were concealed in flowerpots like the early talkies. Doors slam loudly and there are unidentified knocks and bangs in the background.
See this masterpiece of television if you can, I don't think it has been bettered.
The series is adapted from six novels and three short stories by John Galsworthy about the Forsyte family of upwardly mobile Britishers in the late 19th-early 20th century, focussing in particular on the "Man of Property," Soames Forsyte (Eric Porter), who mistakes possession for love until he finally has a child, the spoiled yet totally captivating Fleur (Susan Hampshire). The adaptation is mostly faithful, though it opens with three episodes not in the original novels but dramatizing their backstory. In addition, Soames's first wife, Irene (the utterly amazing Nyree Dawn Porter), is more of a presence in the final chapters than she was in the later books.
If you ever get a chance to see this series (I don't think it's availabe on video at present), jump at it. The story is epic in scope yet quite moving on the personal level as Galsworthy traces the tortuous relationships of this large Victorian family in a manner that would make most soap opera writers green with envy.
¿Sabías que…?
- TriviaEach episode was rehearsed for two weeks.
- Citas
Jolyon 'Jo' Forsyte: I'm not a true Forsyte. I'm a bit of a mongrel. I put the ha'pennies on my cheques, not take them off.
- ConexionesFeatured in Night of a Thousand Shows (2000)
- Bandas sonorasHalcyon Days
(uncredited)
(from the suite 'The Three Elizabeths')
Composed by Eric Coates
Conducted by Marcus Dods
[series theme tune]
(theme music)
Selecciones populares
- How many seasons does The Forsyte Saga have?Con tecnología de Alexa
Detalles
- Tiempo de ejecución50 minutos
- Color
- Relación de aspecto
- 1.33 : 1