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IMDbPro

Love for Lydia

  • Série de TV
  • 1977
  • Not Rated
  • 13 h
AVALIAÇÃO DA IMDb
7,6/10
286
SUA AVALIAÇÃO
Mel Martin in Love for Lydia (1977)
Love For Lydia: Episode 7
Reproduzir trailer1:38
18 vídeos
14 fotos
DramaDrama históricoRomance

Adicionar um enredo no seu idiomaA coming-of-age story from the perspective of Edward Richardson, a junior journalist who falls deeply in love with the enchanting and reckless Lydia Aspen, heiress of the wealthy but moribun... Ler tudoA coming-of-age story from the perspective of Edward Richardson, a junior journalist who falls deeply in love with the enchanting and reckless Lydia Aspen, heiress of the wealthy but moribund Aspen family.A coming-of-age story from the perspective of Edward Richardson, a junior journalist who falls deeply in love with the enchanting and reckless Lydia Aspen, heiress of the wealthy but moribund Aspen family.

  • Artistas
    • Mel Martin
    • Christopher Blake
    • Sherrie Hewson
  • Veja as informações de produção no IMDbPro
  • AVALIAÇÃO DA IMDb
    7,6/10
    286
    SUA AVALIAÇÃO
    • Artistas
      • Mel Martin
      • Christopher Blake
      • Sherrie Hewson
    • 9Avaliações de usuários
  • Veja as informações de produção no IMDbPro
    • Indicado para 6 prêmios BAFTA
      • 6 indicações no total

    Episódios13

    Explorar episódios
    PrincipaisMais avaliados1 temporada1977

    Vídeos18

    Love For Lydia: Vol. 3
    Clip 0:51
    Love For Lydia: Vol. 3
    Love For Lydia: Episode 7
    Trailer 1:38
    Love For Lydia: Episode 7
    Love For Lydia: Episode 7
    Trailer 1:38
    Love For Lydia: Episode 7
    Love For Lydia: Episode 1
    Trailer 1:33
    Love For Lydia: Episode 1
    Love For Lydia: Episode 12
    Trailer 1:57
    Love For Lydia: Episode 12
    Love For Lydia: Vol. 4
    Trailer 0:52
    Love For Lydia: Vol. 4
    Love For Lydia: Episode 3
    Trailer 1:58
    Love For Lydia: Episode 3

    Fotos14

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    Elenco principal64

    Editar
    Mel Martin
    Mel Martin
    • Lydia Aspen…
    • 1977
    Christopher Blake
    Christopher Blake
    • Richardson
    • 1977
    Sherrie Hewson
    Sherrie Hewson
    • Nancy Holland
    • 1977
    Peter Davison
    Peter Davison
    • Tom Holland
    • 1977
    Ralph Arliss
    Ralph Arliss
    • Blackie Johnson
    • 1977
    Beatrix Lehmann
    Beatrix Lehmann
    • Aunt Bertie
    • 1977
    Michael Aldridge
    Michael Aldridge
    • Captain Rollo Aspen…
    • 1977
    Jeremy Irons
    Jeremy Irons
    • Alex Sanderson
    • 1977
    Christopher Hancock
    Christopher Hancock
    • Mr. Richardson
    • 1977
    Ruby Head
    Ruby Head
    • Lily the Maid
    • 1977
    Rachel Kempson
    Rachel Kempson
    • Aunt Juliana
    • 1977
    Wendy Gifford
    • Mrs. Sanderson
    • 1977
    Patricia Leach
    • Mrs. Richardson
    • 1977
    David Ryall
    David Ryall
    • Bretherton
    • 1977
    Irene Richard
    Irene Richard
    • Nora Jepson
    • 1977
    Richard Grant
    • Vicar
    • 1977
    Jonathan Darvill
    • PC Arthur Peck
    • 1977
    Donald Bisset
    • Mr. Holland
    • 1977
    • Elenco e equipe completos
    • Produção, bilheteria e muito mais no IMDbPro

    Avaliações de usuários9

    7,6286
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    10

    Avaliações em destaque

    6JamesHitchcock

    Seriously Overlong

    This is an adaptation of the novel by H. E. Bates, first published in 1952. The story is set in the small industrial town of Evensford, possibly based upon Bates's home town of Rushden, a town where the main industry is the manufacture of shoes and leather goods. The story takes place during the late 1920s and early 1930s and the main character is Edward Richardson, a young apprentice journalist on the local newspaper with ambitions to become a writer. (In the novel we never learn his Christian name; the name Edward was given to him for the purposes of the dramatisation).

    The title character is Lydia Aspen, a girl from a once-wealthy but now impoverished aristocratic family who, after the death of her father, moves to Evensford to live with her elderly aunts and her eccentric uncle. Edward first meets her when he is sent to their house (a crumbling mansion isolated from the rest of the town behind a high stone wall) to get a story about her father's death. Lydia, a seemingly shy girl, has led a sheltered existence, and her meeting with Edward allows him to introduce her to the pleasures of ordinary life; for instance, he takes her skating on the frozen rivers, a popular local pastime during cold winters.

    Lydia and Edward fall in love, but he realises that he is not her only admirer. She has at least three others- the wealthy Alex Sanderson, Tom Holland, a young farmer, and Bert "Blackie" Johnson, a car mechanic. Richardson realises that Lydia is not the shy, innocent girl for which he initially took her but can be wilful and fun-loving, and that she greatly enjoys the attentions of so many young men. His position is made more difficult by the fact that Alex and Tom are both close friends of his, and of each other. Blackie has more difficulty fitting in with the group because of his working-class background; Edward is also from a working-class family, but Tom and Alex seem more willing to accept him, possibly because of his literary aspirations and his more genteel accent.

    I did not see this serial when it was first shown in 1977; I was a teenager at the time, had hardly heard of Bates, and the theme did not seem very interesting to me. I was introduced to Bates's work a few years later as a college student who I walked into a bookshop, saw a copy of the Penguin "Love for Lydia" and bought it on a whim, largely because the young woman on the cover looked very like my then girlfriend. I was immediately taken with the story, and over the years the novel has become one of my favourites. I therefore decided to watch the serial when it was recently repeated on the "Talking Pictures" TV channel.

    I must admit that I did not enjoy it as much as the book. The main reason is that it is seriously overlong. Thirteen hour-long episodes is far too many for a reasonably short novel. (For the same reason I have never been a great fan of Granada's interminable adaptation of Evelyn Waugh's "Brideshead Revisited", even though I am well aware that some people will acclaim it as one of he greatest television serials ever made). Neither the rather bland Christopher Blake as Edward nor Mel Martin as Lydia make much impression. (Coincidentally, the girlfriend I referred to was also called Mel). At 28 and 30 they were also perhaps rather too old for their roles; Edward and Lydia are supposed to be in their late teens or early twenties, and their youth and inexperience are an important factor in the story.

    There are better performances from a pre-stardom Jeremy Irons as Alex, from the future Doctor Who Peter Davison as Tom and from Sherrie Hewson as Tom's rather plain sister Nancy, who is besotted with Edward but despairs of ever being able to win him away from the bewitching Lydia. Among the supporting cast I also liked Michael Aldridge as Lydia's awful old Uncle Rollo and David Ryall as Edward's bullying, patronising editor Bretherton, who has a bigger role here than he played in the novel. Nevertheless, this serial will never eclipse the original book in my affections. 6/10.
    9DennisJOBrien

    A miniseries that captures the book perfectly

    This excellent series was brought to American TV audiences on PBS' "Masterpiece Theatre" in 1979, two years after it first was aired in Great Britain. I saw it then, bought the book by H.E. Bates, and later purchased the DVD set. This is a superb adaptation of a subtle literary work on British pastoral life, the many segments of the series giving adequate time to fully bring out the nuance of the book. It has encouraged me to visit England many times to savor the beauty of the countryside and small town charm. I think the author would have been very pleased to see how well his book had been adapted for television, and sadly he died just a few years before the project was completed.

    Mel Martin and Christopher Blake give touching performances, and it is sad to see that Christopher Blake has died in 2004 while only in his mid-50's. You get to see Jeremy Irons do some fine work long before he earned his Oscar. Peter Davison is also excellent, before he became famous in "All Creatures Great and Small" and "Dr. Who." The distinguished older actors and actresses in this production remind us of the enormous pool of talent that can be found in Great Britain, where noted stage stars frequently appear in television dramas. I highly recommend this DVD set.
    drednm

    Achingly Beautiful

    LOVE FOR LYDIA is a leisurely paced and meticulous miniseries of the old school. It's based on a semi-autobiographical novel by H. E. Bates and chronicles the lives of several young adults in the mid-1920s in a small town in the north of England.

    Lydia Aspen (Mel Martin) is at first a shy and awkward young heiress who comes to town to live with her old maiden aunts (Beatrix Lehmann, Rachel Kempson) and the brutish uncle (Michael Aldridge) in their isolated mansion. The Bates character, Edward Richardson (Christopher Blake), is sent to interview the reclusive aunts on the death of their brother (Lydia's father). The aunts take a shine to the shy young man and encourage him to take Lydia out (ice skating, local dances). Of course the boy is instantly smitten with Lydia, but she is not quite what she seems and as she comes into her own, we find that she is willful, eccentric, and more than a little cruel.

    The series is about more than the fumblings of young love. It's also a sharp look the British social norms of 100 years ago. The Aspens are a socially untouchable family in their stone mansion. Their isolation is broken only by trips to church. There's not really a "middle class" at this time in England, but Richardson represents a working class that has some education and upward mobility, as opposed to the "laborers" in the system who are uneducated and simply grind away at their menial jobs. Richardson and his group are just as snobbish to their underlings as Lydia is to Richardson's group.

    The cast includes a very young Jeremy Irons as Richardson's friend Alex, who spends all his time drinking and roaring about in his roadster. There's also a farm family (Peter Davison, Sherrie Hewson) who have gone through the school system. Beneath them is the brooding Blackie (Ralph Arliss) who works as an auto mechanic and part-time driver. Among this group, we see rivalries for Lydia, love won, love lost, and the changing fortunes of all as we head toward the Great Depression.

    Don't be fooled. This is not a sappy love story. This is a complex story with complex characters. It's an achingly beautiful look lives intertwined.

    Issued as a DVD set many years ago. I don't believe this has ever been "restored" or issued on Blu-ray.
    9Dan1863Sickles

    Turbulent, Romantic, Glamorous and Sexy!

    LOVE FOR LYDIA is the sexy, sophisticated story of the dizzy and exciting but also rather empty lifestyle of English society people during the wild Twenties decade. The central character, Lydia, is a beautiful but rather shy girl at first. Then she inherits a great deal of money and begins to realize that she is a very desirable catch -- and that men will let her get away with almost anything!

    The one man who truly loves Lydia is Richardson, a would-be writer from a rather poor and humble local family. On a cold winter day, Lydia has her first kiss from him, but instead of making her fall for him it merely sparks her interest in men in general. Before long Lydia is the talk of the town, dashing about in her flashy new clothes and going to hot, Twenties-style dances where she is always the center of attention. One by one, all the handsomest and most exciting young men in the neighborhood simply collapse at her feet -- rich and stylish Alec Sanderson, sweet and trusting Tom Holland, and even the tough local mechanic, mean and muscular and hairy-chested Blackie Flannagan. Lydia toys with all three men at once, totally enjoying both the sense of power and the pleasure. Totally ignoring the pain in Richardson's eyes, she grows more and more reckless, until at last tragedy strikes. Lydia sees herself as she truly is -- weak, greedy and selfish. She wants to change, but by now even loyal and faithful Richardson is tired of her. Is it too late for Lydia -- too late for love?

    LOVE FOR LYDIA is a sumptuous and beautifully filmed romantic epic. The big dance scenes are exhilarating, but the quiet scenes draw you in too. Lydia changes from a shy schoolgirl to a glamorous and sexy siren.

    But in her quiet moments you can see her basic insecurity, like the way she lies on the bed listening to the same jazz love song over and over. Night after night she dances till 2 or 3AM, and then next day is still asleep past noon.

    There's an aimless quality to her life, and an emptiness as well. It shows in the way she downs a drink before dinner or takes a quick hit from a pocketbook flask. Glamorous and sexy, but you feel the human side of it -- the loneliness and the waste. A very good British series.
    5gingerninjasz

    Lulled By Lydia

    I always like period dramas, not least because they are an escape from the modern world in which we live in. Coming across this 1977 drama, I was even more intrigued when I learned this was written by H. E Bates, who did The Darling Buds of May stories. This is a far more darker and melancholy story than that 1990's series, but just as poignant and moving at times. But it's one that suffered a troubled production, with original writer Richard Bates (son of the author) sacked a third of the way through, costing them £100,000 in reshoots, the original director resigning midway through and a producer suffering a heart attack during production. And sad to say it more than affects the final cut of this 1977 adaptation, which suffers from far too many episodes from far too many writers who seemed to wish to wring out every page onto the screen.

    The story begins in 1921 when young newspaper reporter Edward Richardson (though rarely addressed by his first name) is asked by his boss Bretherton (a wonderfully acerbic David Ryall) to go up to the "Big House", a rambling country estate, to interview the Aspen family after the death of their brother in a hunting accident. Richardson is not keen - indeed he never seems keen to work - as the family consist of two elderly sisters and a somewhat seedy brother, but when he finally pays a visit to the Big House he is somewhat surprised to learn that their niece Lydia has moved in with them after the death of their brother. Young, quiet and seemingly introverted, he is asked by her Aunt Bertie to take her out ice skating, worried that remaining in the isolated country estate will be detrimental to her wellbeing and the hope that meeting people her own age will bring her out of herself. So Richardson becomes a sort of guardian as he shows her about the place and introduces her to his friends, and it isn't before long that he is falling in love with her. Unfortunately for him so do his friends, and as Lydia comes out of herself and they start attending numerous dances at country estates and village halls, Richardson begins to realize that Lydia is not the wallflower that he initially thought but one who loves being the centre of attention of men.

    The problem early on in this adaptation is that the above described is ALL that happens for the first SIX episodes. The first episode may reflect well the isolation and bleakness of the Big House and what it must feel for a young newly orphaned girl like Lydia to come to, knowing nobody and with only elderly relatives to converse with. But the episode moves at such a crawl, and contrary to what I hoped it doesn't get any speedier. It isn't until episode 7 - halfway through the 13 episodes - that things finally start to happen when a fire interrupts Lydia's big 21st birthday bash, where all the village are attending. Amusingly Lydia is put out by the attention the fire has on the guests and decides to lead a party down to where it is. Her aunts are puzzled by her attitude, leading Uncle Rollo (a ramblingly seedy Michael Aldridge) to quip "Maybe it's because she's no longer the centre of attention." It's interesting that Lydia detests her Uncle Rollo, but that is due to the fact he is the one person who isn't taken in by her and who sees her as she really is. And it's Lydia's ability to bewitch the young men in her life - Richardson, his friends Alex Sanderson and Tom Holland, and cab driver Blackie Johnson, who ferries the group to and from parties - that creates the turmoil to come and also affects the women in their lives, such as Tom's sister Nancy, who desperately loves Richardson, and Nora Jepson, Alex's on/off girlfriend who eventually becomes a drinking cohort to Lydia. As the series finally becomes interesting, Lydia's unconscious inconsiderateness and lack of awareness to other people's feelings leads - along with Richardson's own jealousy and selfishness - to untold tragedy, where during the course of the series two characters die, one enters into a marriage with someone they do not love and two others are stricken with tuberculosis.

    There are some wonderful performances in this. Beatrice Lehman gives a lovely performance as the wise Aunt Bertie, who knows what youth like despite her advancing years, while Wendy Gifford makes a coquettish mother to Jeremy Irons and Christopher Hancock is wonderfully decent as Richardson's easy going and understanding father. This series is also notable for a number of stars who had not yet found fame, including Jeremy Irons, Peter Davidson and a star making role for Mel Martin as Lydia. Indeed, Mel Martin so inhabits the character and all her nuances that in a way it reflected many of the roles she later received in her career. While Peter Davidson is given somewhat of a bland character in the nice but dull Tom Holland, Jeremy Irons is wonderfully charismatic as the perpetually inebriated Alex Sanderson, doing a Sebastian four years before Brideshead Revisited. Another one of note is Sherrie Hewson as the lovelorn Nancy Holland. She is so heartbreakingly touching as Nancy, who continually harbours hope that Richardson, her former boyfriend until Lydia comes along, will realize that she loves him and come back to her. In one scene she invites Richardson over to her home while her family are out and even up to her bedroom in her efforts to attract him, showing she is prepared to sleep with him if it will make him love her again in an era before contraception and risks were high. It's agonising to watch her time and again humiliate herself for him, and Hewson shows, as with with her later role in Flickers (1980) what a superb actress she was at this time, and such a shame her comedy work overshadows this.

    Another problem with this drama is that the friends are far more appealing than it's two leads. Indeed, when it first begins Richardson (Christopher Blake) proves frustratingly irritating. He has a job as a reporter for the Evensford newspaper but instead idles about dreaming of being a writer. Indeed, he proves reluctant to do any work in an era where unemployment was high and money was short, and as he becomes obsessed with Lydia he frequently skips work to take her out - so much so that you enjoy the moments when Bretherton roasts him. David Ryall is wonderfully amusing in this, with his scathing nickname of "Clutterhead" for him (he might as well be called that, for few call him by his first name in this), but you know when you are enjoying someone belittling the lead character that something is wrong here. And the trouble is that despite Christopher Blake doing a decent job at conveying the lovelorn devotion of Richardson, as the drama progresses he becomes ever more unlikable. Richardson has aspirations of being a writer, but he is in fact a snob who thinks he is better than his surroundings and the people around him. When Lydia starts paying attention to Blackie Johnson, who drives the group to all the dances going on, he is disgusted that Lydia would consort with a working class mechanic. His jealousy is such that it results in the inadvertent death of one character, while he is so self absorbed he doesn't notice when two characters need him at their most vulnerable, leading to yet another death. Even when he has the chance to make it as a writer, he is so utterly rude to the publisher's daughter that he becomes obnoxious.

    Lydia's character is not always appealing, but at least with her you understand her actions. Her character seeks an escape from her surroundings and situation, and when she sees an opportunity in Richardson - helped by her far seeing Aunt Bertie - she takes her chance to embrace her youth and enjoy life. She likes the effect she has on men and seeing how far they will go for her devotion, but at the same time has little sense of how deeply they will feel for her. When Richardson proposes to her, she rejects him because she has no plans for settling down yet. She wants to enjoy her youth while she has it, and while her self absorbed attitude is not always appealing at least I could understand her character's motivations. Where she grates is in her complete lack of awareness for other people's feelings, perfectly reflected by the character of Blackie Johnson, who proves a devoted admirer of hers, used and often abused by her. It's to Mel Martin's credit that she makes her so beguiling for such a self centred character. And this is why despite her nature I could understand where she was coming from. With Richardson, I could not. He just came across as an insufferable prig that only improved in the last episode.

    At times it's hard to criticize this series, as it does a lovely job at depicting the raw emotions and lives of it's characters, while it's theme tune is hauntingly melancholy. It is beautifully shot and it's period designs are perfect of the era. Indeed, it has to be said that the makers did a good job at how the series looked, and there is something poetical about the scenery, from the icy winters to the summer countryside in bloom. The performances are nearly all universally good, with Sherrie Hewson and Jeremy Irons among the standouts, while Mel Martin is perfect as the imperfect title character. But the problem persists that Love For Lydia, for all it's beauty and it's poignancy, is deathly slow to get going. Thirteen episodes is far too long and should of been cut by at least half. And while it demonstrates perfectly the complications of unrequited love and the mess people make of others lives, it still doesn't disguise the fact that the two main protagonists in this are unlikable. It's hard to know how they could end this story, but it's conclusion merely left me thinking of those characters whose lives had been ruined and feelings discarded along the way. If someone had let rip into these two characters about how they treat people I might of felt differently, but by the end of this 13 part epic it felt a wasted journey into their lives.

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    • Curiosidades
      The car Blackie Johnson drives as a taxi is Lincoln Town Car from the late nineteen twenties.
    • Conexões
      Referenced in The Kidnappers (1999)

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    Perguntas frequentes14

    • How many seasons does Love for Lydia have?Fornecido pela Alexa

    Detalhes

    Editar
    • Data de lançamento
      • 9 de setembro de 1977 (Reino Unido)
    • País de origem
      • Reino Unido
    • Idioma
      • Inglês
    • Também conhecido como
      • Liebe zu Lydia
    • Locações de filme
      • Irthlingborough, Northamptonshire, Inglaterra, Reino Unido(town of Evensford)
    • Empresa de produção
      • London Weekend Television (LWT)
    • Consulte mais créditos da empresa na IMDbPro

    Especificações técnicas

    Editar
    • Tempo de duração
      • 13 h(780 min)
    • Cor
      • Color
    • Mixagem de som
      • Mono
    • Proporção
      • 1.33 : 1

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