‘Wolf Hall’ steps up to fill void ‘Downton’ will leave
By Lynn Elber
AP Television Writer
LOS ANGELES
Sure, “Downton Abbey” is easy to love with its romance, high fashion and Ye Olde McMansion.
But PBS’ “Wolf Hall” boasts its own seductive strength, courtesy of a 16th-century powerbroker who would be at ease in “House of Cards” and the dashing English king he serves.
Drawn from Hilary Mantel’s pair of award-winning historical novels that follow Thomas Cromwell as he maneuvers his way through the court of King Henry VIII, “Wolf Hall” stars acclaimed British stage actor Mark Rylance as Cromwell and Damian Lewis (“Homeland”) as Henry.
The six-part drama, debuting at 10 p.m. Sunday and co-starring Claire Foy as Anne Boleyn, is a worthy “Masterpiece” sibling to “Downton Abbey” and the series’ canon, said Rebecca Eaton, executive producer of the long-running series.
Recent word that ratings sensation “Downton” will conclude next year magnifies the importance of “Wolf Hall” and other successors.
The 20th century “Upstairs, Downstairs” saga drew new viewers to “Masterpiece” but also may have created expectations of a never-ending stream of similar fare.
How will viewers respond? While Eaton acknowledges that “Wolf Hall” is more somber in tone and look than eye-candy “Downton,” she contends that’s not necessarily a drawback.
“Masterpiece” is an anthology series “and that is part of the beauty of what we do,” she said.
“You could also argue there is an audience that will come to it because it isn’t ‘Downton Abbey’: the Hilary Mantel people or the Netflix ‘House of Cards’ people who want something with more grit, something darker.”
Colin Callender, executive producer of “Wolf Hall,” which garnered a big audience for Britain’s BBC2, agreed with the assessment.
He compares Cromwell — who shared family ties with 17th century British political and military leader Oliver Cromwell — to recent popular TV antiheroes.
“In a world post-’Sopranos’ and post-’Breaking Bad’ and Walter White and ‘House of Cards’ and Frank Underwood, I think the audience embraces and is intrigued by characters that straddle a moral line,” Callender said.
He credits screenwriter Peter Straughan for effectively distilling the novels’ combined thousand pages into a focused “revenge story” in which Cromwell attempts to destroy the men who toppled his mentor, Cardinal Wolsey (Jonathan Pryce). Peter Kosminsky was the director.
“At one point Cromwell says, ‘I need guilty men. They may not be guilty of the things charged, but they’re guilty nonetheless,”’ Callender says, reciting the lines with gusto.
“Homeland” fans may be drawn in by the prospect of seeing Lewis’ energetic and mercurial Henry, one far removed from the traditional image of a stolid, bulky ruler.
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