Sunday, 7 January 2018
887 Thompson
First viewed : 10 November 1988
One of the great TV disasters of the eighties and probably the best example of over-indulged hubris you could find. In the second half of the eighties, you couldn't get away from critics telling you how talented Emma Thompson was. Everything she touched turned to gold at least as far as critics were concerned and her marriage to smug young actor-director Kenneth Branagh made her one half of Britain's most nauseating showbiz couple. The BBC thought they couldn't go wrong in giving her her own six-part series to demonstrate her abundant talents but were soon disabused of that notion.
Thompson ( even the title is arrogant ) went wrong from the first seconds with its title sequence of Thompson doing an awful free dance routine to Dave Brubeck's Unsquare Dance like some self-absorbed drama student and it didn't get any better. Luvvie mates like Branagh, Robbie Coltrane and Imelda Staunton dropped by to feature in over-long unfunny sketches full of high brow literary references. Perhaps someone should have remembered that she ( and Coltrane ) had been in the similarly aggravating Alfresco a few years earlier and needed some editorial control.
It was absolutely panned, a novel experience for her, and deservedly so. It's never been repeated and I'm sure Emma would rather we all forgot about it.
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