Prisoners'_Wives

<i>Prisoners' Wives</i>

Prisoners' Wives

British television series


Prisoners' Wives is a BBC drama series, created and written by Julie Gearey and starring Polly Walker, Pippa Haywood, Emma Rigby, Natalie Gavin, Sally Carman and Karla Crome, with supporting cast including Iain Glen, Adam Gillen, Jonas Armstrong, Reuben Johnson, Enzo Cilenti and Owen Roe. The series centres on four very different women, each struggling to cope with a significant man in her life serving time in prison.[1][2][3] The series is set in Sheffield, South Yorkshire. Series one was six episodes long, and premiered on Tuesday 31 January 2012. Series two was a shorter run of four episodes, and began on Thursday 14 March 2013 on BBC One.[4][5]

Quick Facts Prisoners' Wives, Genre ...

Main cast

Series 1

Series 2

  • Polly Walker as Francesca Miller
  • Pippa Haywood as Harriet Allison
  • Sally Carman as Kim Haines
  • Karla Crome as Aisling O'Connor

Supporting cast

Series 1

Series 2

Episodes

Series 1

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Series 2

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Production

Prisoners’ Wives is executive produced for Tiger Aspect by Roanna Benn, Rebecca de Souza and Greg Brenman (Tiger's Head of Drama) and for the BBC by Christopher Aird. Damon Thomas and Harry Bradbeer direct with Anna Ferguson as producer and Abi Bach as co-producer. The series was commissioned for BBC One by Ben Stephenson and Danny Cohen for airing in early 2012.

Ratings

The first series attracted an average consolidated audience of 5.26 million. The average consolidated audience for the second series was 4.86 million.


References

  1. Nicola Methven (18 November 2011). "Move over Mistresses – it's time for new BBC1 drama Prisoners' Wives". Daily Mirror. Retrieved 15 January 2012.
  2. "Polly Walker to Star in BBC Drama Prisoners' Wives". BestBritishTv. 12 December 2011. Retrieved 15 January 2012.
  3. CM4. "Prisoners' Wives". BBC Media Centre. Retrieved 15 January 2012.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  4. "Prisoners' Wives – Series 2 – Episode 1 | Prisoners' Wives". Archived from the original on 5 May 2013. Retrieved 7 March 2013.
  5. "'Prisoners' Wives' second series confirmed". Digital Spy. 26 April 2012. Retrieved 24 August 2012.
  6. "BARB Top 30s". Barb.co.uk. Retrieved 13 October 2017.

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