Cider with Rosie
GenreBiography
Drama
Romance
Based onCider with Rosie (book)
by Laurie Lee[1]
Screenplay byJohn Mortimer
Directed byCharles Beeson
StarringJuliet Stevenson
Narrated byLaurie Lee
Music byGeoffrey Burgon
Country of originUnited Kingdom
Original languageEnglish
Production
Executive producersRebecca Eaton
Jonathan Powell
ProducersAdrian Bate
Annie Rees (associate producer)
CinematographyRex Maidment
EditorDavid Blackmore
Running time100 minutes
Production companyCarlton Television
Original release
Release27 December 1998 (1998-12-27)

Cider with Rosie is a British television film of 1998 directed by Charles Beeson, with a screenplay by John Mortimer, starring Juliet Stevenson, based on the 1959 book of the same name by Laurie Lee.

The film was made by Carlton Television for ITV and was first broadcast in Britain on 27 December 1998. It was broadcast in the US as the second episode of Series 28 of Masterpiece Theatre and was later issued as an ITV Studios DVD.

Plot

The film is about the poet Laurie Lee's childhood and youth, between the ages of four and twenty-one, growing up in the Cotswold village of Slad, Gloucestershire, in the years following the First World War. It follows the ending of the traditional English village way of life, with the coming of motor cars and electricity, the death of the local squire, and the influence of the church ebbing away. As part of that breaking-down process, Lee's father abandons his family, leaving his wife to bring up eight children. One theme is Lee's awakening sexuality, as he grows older, and the title refers to his first flirtation, with a village girl called Rosie.

The main action of the film ends before Lee sets off on his early travels, which are dealt with in As I Walked Out One Midsummer Morning.

Videohound says of the film "Laurie's childhood consists of school, church, village festivals, eccentric relations and neighbors, and the usual childhood tribulations".[2]

Production

John Mortimer and Laurie Lee had been friends from the 1950s on.[3] Soon after Lee's death in 1997, Mortimer spoke at a memorial service for Lee and then turned his friend's autobiographical book Cider with Rosie into a screenplay, persuading Carlton Television to produce it.[4] Charles Beeson was appointed as Director.[5]

Lee's home village of Slad was found to have changed too much since the 1920s to be used as the main film location, with conservatories added to cottages and other modern alterations.[6] In its place another village, Sapperton, near Cirencester, was used for filming most of the outdoor scenes, with the main street gravelled to overcome the out-of-character 1990s road surface. Several other Cotswold villages and the town of Stroud were also used as locations,[6] as was Clevedon in Somerset,[7] while Lee's final home in Slad, Rose Cottage, became the film location for the Slad village pub.[4]

Juliet Stevenson was cast to play the pivotal character of Lee's mother, Annie, and she read the late Mrs Lee's letters in preparation for the role.[4] Laurie Lee's own voice, recorded in 1988, was used for the narration, which gave the film extra impact,[4] and the scriptwriter's daughter Emily Mortimer was cast as the mad Miss Flynn.[3]

Casting director Pippa Hall gave a small boy, William Moseley, a walk-on part in the film, and seven years later she remembered him and cast him as Peter Pevensie in The Lion, the Witch, and the Wardrobe (2005).[8]

Reception

Country Life said in its review

This is not the first time that Lee's 1959 masterpiece, Cider With Rosie, has been adapted... Hugh Whitemore's 1971 script for the BBC was rendered into a beguiling, sunny fantasy under Claude Whatham's softly focused direction. The 1998 film, scheduled for December 27, takes a more realistic view of Cotswold rural life between 1918 and 1935. Indeed it is the most definitive screen version we are ever likely to get. John Mortimer's screenplay is faithfully crafted. The book is autobiography dressed and moulded through a poet's flighty imagination and lyrical prose, Charles Beeson's direction allows for this... There is a lot of fun and laughter in the Lee household, where 'our mother' is left to bring up eight children after her husband deserts, and there is a rich mixture of village eccentrics."[9]

Valerie Grove, John Mortimer's biographer, later wrote of Emily Mortimer as "ethereally haunting as mad Miss Flynn, who drowns in the village pond."[3]

Cast

Book

  • Laurie Lee, Cider with Rosie (Penguin Books, 1959), ISBN 0-14-001682-1
  • Laurie Lee, Edge of Day: Boyhood in the West of England, first US edition, 1960[10]

See also

Notes

  1. Alan Goble, The Complete Index to Literary Sources in Film (1999), p. 279
  2. VideoHound's Golden Movie Retriever 2001 (Gale, 2000), p. xlix
  3. 1 2 3 Valerie Grove, A Voyage Round John Mortimer (2008), p. 98
  4. 1 2 3 4 Valerie Grove, Laurie Lee: the well-loved stranger (Viking, 1999), p. 520
  5. Jerry Roberts, ed., Encyclopedia of Television Film Directors (2009), p. 34
  6. 1 2 Barbara Hooper, Cider with Laurie: Laurie Lee Remembered (Peter Owen Ltd, 1999), p. 181
  7. Somerset — Art, Films and Television archived 30 September 2010, accessed 17 January 2018
  8. Roya Nikkhah, William Moseley on Prince Caspian in The Daily Telegraph dated 3 July 2008
  9. Country Life, Volume 192, Issues 50–53 (1998), p. 56
  10. John T. Frederick, "Speaking of Books", in The Rotarian (Vol. 97, No. 2, August 1960), p. 39: "The Edge of Day, by Laurie Lee... this book appeared in 1959 in England, under the title Cider with Rosie..."
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