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Life in Squares

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Genre
  
Drama

Composer(s)
  
Edmund Butt

Original language(s)
  
English

First episode date
  
27 July 2015

Written by
  
Amanda Coe

Director
  
Simon Kaijser da Silva

6.6/10
IMDb

Directed by
  
Simon Kaijser

Country of origin
  
United Kingdom

No. of series
  
1

Final episode date
  
10 August 2015

Network
  
BBC Two

Life in Squares httpsimagesnasslimagesamazoncomimagesMM

Similar
  
Grantchester, Death Comes to Pemberley, Happy Valley, Arthur & George, A Mother's Son

Life in squares trailer bbc two


Life in Squares is a British television mini-series that was broadcast on BBC Two from 27 July to 10 August 2015. The title comes from Dorothy Parker's witticism that the Bloomsbury Group, whose lives it portrays, had "lived in squares, painted in circles and loved in triangles".

Contents

Life in Squares Life In Squares A new BBC series about the radical Bloomsbury Group

Plot

Life in Squares BBC Two Life in Squares

The three-part serial centres on the close and often fraught relationship between sisters, Vanessa Bell and Virginia Woolf, and Vanessa’s sexually complicated alliance with gay artist Duncan Grant as they, and their group of like-minded friends, navigate their way through love, sex and artistic life through the first half of the 20th century.

Production

Life in Squares New BBC drama Life in Squares to track lives of Bloomsbury Set The

The series was commissioned by Ben Stephenson and Lucy Richer, and produced by Ecosse Films in association with Tiger Aspect Productions. The executive producers are Lucy Bedford, Amanda Coe, Douglas Rae and Lucy Richer. Filming began in August 2014 in London and Charleston Farmhouse.

Cast

The main roles were played by:

Life in Squares Life in Squares BBC2 TV review Selfindulgent and oversexed

  • Eve Best as Older Vanessa Bell
  • Ed Birch as Lytton Strachey
  • Lucy Boynton as Angelica Garnett
  • Jack Davenport as David Garnett
  • Jerome Finch as Saxon Sydney-Turner
  • Phoebe Fox as Young Vanessa Bell
  • Andrew Havill as Older Clive Bell
  • Guy Henry as Older Leonard Woolf
  • Sam Hoare as Young Clive Bell
  • Finn Jones as Julian Bell
  • Edmund Kingsley as John Maynard Keynes
  • Lydia Leonard as Virginia Woolf
  • James Northcote as Adrian Stephen
  • James Norton as Young Duncan Grant
  • Rupert Penry-Jones as Older Duncan Grant
  • Al Weaver as Young Leonard Woolf
  • Critical reception

    Life in Squares Life in Squares Coming Soon To BBC 2 The Consulting Detective

    Writing in UK newspaper The Guardian, Lucy Mangan found that, "The drama took a certain effort of will to get into. You just have to accept that you are in a world where people convened salons, and probably did say things like 'Childe Harold is a load of posturing nonsense! It can’t hold a candle to Don Juan, even if the alexandrines are forced to breaking point!'". However, having made this effort Mangan, added: "[…] it’s very, very good. From Phoebe Fox and Lydia Leonard as the loving/warring sisters Vanessa, soon-to-be-Bell, and Virginia, slightly-later-to-be-Woolf, around whose increasingly strained relationship the story essentially revolves, to the doctor in a single scene realising his patient (the painter Duncan Grant) is 'an invert', the performances are uniformly wonderful (though Ed Birch as Lytton Strachey has so far the best part and the best time). And the script – once you take that linguistic leap of faith – is glorious. 'That’s what they do,' muses Virginia as she and Vanessa ponder the proclivities of the men in their house and lives. 'Exclude us. From clubs. Schools. Orifices.' Though on the last, Vanessa comes to disagree. She marries the uninverted Clive Bell and sends her sister a letter. 'Copulation a tremendous success!' Attagirl".

    Life in Squares Life In Squares39 Star Rupert PenryJones Believes Bloomsbury Group

    In The Independent, Ellen E Jones was less impressed, writing: "The romantic entanglements of this set are so complicated that there is an undeniable achievement in laying them out clearly, as writer Amanda Coe has done here. Alas, the work's the thing and while this opening episode contained all the gossip, it conveyed none of the depth of thought or artistic feeling that must ultimately justify our interest (if any) in these people". She concluded by citing both BBC Radio 4’s parody of the Bloomsbury Group, Gloomsbury, and the "excellent" BBC Four documentary How to Be Bohemian, as having "advanced an alternative view of the set as, essentially, self-indulgent ninnies, cosseted by their wealth. If you've had the pleasure of either programme it would have been especially difficult to take this new drama seriously".

    The BBC was criticised for not warning about the explicit gay content at the beginning of the programme, and their response was as follows: "The episode in question did in fact carry an announcement before the programme started warning viewers that it contained strong language and scenes of a sexual nature. We approach our portrayal of homosexual relationships in exactly the same way as we do heterosexual relationships and the content of the programme was handled with extreme care by the programme makers". Consequently there are no plans to distinguish between "explicit gay content" and "explicit (hetero)sexual content" in future programmes.

    Broadcast

    Internationally, the series premiered in Australia on 27 October 2015 on BBC First.

    References

    Life in Squares Wikipedia