Breaking the Code


10:15 pm - 11:45 pm, Wednesday, February 18 on BBC Four HD (106)

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About this Broadcast

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Drama tracing the real-life story of mathematical genius Alan Turing, who was instrumental in cracking the Enigma code during World War Two but found the pressure of his work and homosexuality too great to bear. Starring Derek Jacobi, Prunella Scales and Richard Johnson. Part of Hidden Lives Week


subtitles
General Movie/Drama

Cast & Crew

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Derek Jacobi (Actor) .. Alan Turing
Prunella Scales (Actor) .. Sara Turing
Richard Johnson (Actor) .. Dilwyn Knox
Alun Armstrong (Actor) .. Mick Ross
Blake Ritson (Actor) .. Christopher Morcom
Julian Kerridge (Actor) .. Ron Miller
Harold Pinter (Actor) .. John Smith
Amanda Root (Actor) .. Patricia Green
John Drury (Executive producer)
Rebecca Eaton (Executive producer)
Richard Langridge (Executive producer)

More Information

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Did You Know..

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Derek Jacobi (Actor) .. Alan Turing
Born: October 22, 1938 in London
Best Known For: His classical roles.
Early-life: Derek George Jacobi was born on October 22, 1938, in Leytonstone, east London. His mother was a secretary and his father managed a department store. He is an only child. He became hooked on movies and dancing as a boy and played Hamlet at school, with the production later appearing at the Edinburgh Festival. During his time there, he was invited to meet an agent, who told him that, at 18, he was too young to become a star. Jacobi spent the next three years studying history at Cambridge, where he befriended Ian McKellen and Trevor Nunn.
Career: Following acclaimed performances at university, Jacobi joined Birmingham Rep. He was spotted by Laurence Olivier, who invited him to join the National Theatre Company. He made his film debut alongside Olivier in 1965's Othello. Since then, Jacobi has continued to make acclaimed appearances on stage and screen. Among his films are The Day of the Jackal, The Odessa File, Love Is the Devil, Gladiator, Gosford Park, The King's Speech and Hereafter. He inspired Kenneth Branagh to become an actor and worked alongside him in Henry V, Hamlet and Dead Again. Jacobi won a Bafta for I, Claudius in 1977, starred in the medieval-set series Cadfael, played The Master in Doctor Who, is the narrator of In the Night Garden and scored a surprise hit with Last Tango in Halifax.
Quote: "As an actor conscious that you are in a theatre, you still have to make it look as spontaneous as if you did not know that you are being watched by 1,000 pairs of eyes."
Trivia: He received a knighthood in 1994.
Prunella Scales (Actor) .. Sara Turing
Born: June 22, 1932 in Sutton Abinger, Surrey
Quote: "I remember an American producer coming up to me and saying: 'You're a wonderful actress. Now what are we going to do about your face?'"
Best Known For: Playing Sybil in Fawlty Towers.
Early-life: Born Prunella Margaret Rumney Illingworth on June 22, 1932, in Sutton Arbinger, Surrey. Her mother, Catherine Scales, was an actress, and her father John was a cotton salesman. When the Second World War broke out, her parents rented a farmhouse with no gas or electricity in Suffolk to escape the bombing. As a child, Prunella was shy, but discovered her passion for acting in her teens. She began training at the Old Vic Theatre School at 17, before going on to study at the Herbert Berghof Studio in New York.
Career: Following stints in repertory theatre, Scales joined the Royal Shakespeare Company and also appeared in the films Laxdale Hall and Hobson's Choice. In 1963, she starred with Richard Briers in the sitcom Marriage Lines, but didn't become a household name until 1975, when she was cast as the fearsome Sybil in Fawlty Towers. Since then, she has worked regularly in theatre, film and TV. In 1992, she was nominated for a Bafta for her performance as Queen Elizabeth II in the Alan Bennett drama A Question of Attribution, and was awarded the OBE in the same year. Other projects include Howards End (alongside son Samuel), The Shell Seekers, An Ideal Husband and Horrid Henry: The Movie.
Trivia: Scales married actor Timothy West in 1963. They have two sons - Samuel and Joseph. She and West embarked on a narrowboating holiday to celebrate their golden wedding anniversary - their jaunt was filmed and turned into a documentary series for More4. During the making of the programme, it was revealed she has a mild form of Alzheimer's.
Richard Johnson (Actor) .. Dilwyn Knox
Alun Armstrong (Actor) .. Mick Ross
Born: July 17, 1946 in Annfield Plain, near Stanley, Co Durham
Best Known For: New Tricks.
Early-life: Alun Armstrong was born in Annfield Plain, near Stanley, Co Durham, on July 17, 1946. His father was from Cumberland and his mother was from Co Durham. He attended Consett Grammar School before going to Newcastle University. Unhappy in academia, he took a job as a gravedigger, where a colleague managed to get him an interview for a behind-the-scenes job with a theatre company. That in turn led to acting work.
Career: Armstrong's screen debut came in the classic Michael Caine gangster movie Get Carter in 1971. Other early roles included parts in Whatever Happened to the Likely Lads?, Softly, Softly and The Sweeney. His many other TV roles include Austin Donaghue in Our Friends in the North, Detective Chief Inspector Frank Jefferson in In the Red, and George Mole in Adrian Mole: The Cappucino Years, alongside Alison Steadman. Film credits include The French Lieutenant's Woman (1981), Krull (1983), American Friends (1991), Patriot Games (1992) and Braveheart (1995). He has won countless accolades for his classic stage roles. He is currently best known for playing the role of Brian Lane in popular BBC series New Tricks, a part he played for 10 series.
Quote: "I'm more concerned about losing my marbles than losing parts - especially when it comes to learning lines!"
Trivia: Armstrong originated the role of Thénardier in the London production of Les Misérables and won an Olivier Award for playing the title role in Sweeney Todd.
Blake Ritson (Actor) .. Christopher Morcom
Julian Kerridge (Actor) .. Ron Miller
Harold Pinter (Actor) .. John Smith
Born: October 10, 1930 in London
Best Known For: His numerous acclaimed plays.
Early-life: Harold Pinter was born in Hackney, London, on October 10, 1930. He came from a working-class background and was raised in a Jewish household. He claimed being exposed to anti-Semitism at a young age influenced his work. He was evacuated during the Second World War and became hooked on acting in his teens. He studied at Rada and the Central School of Speech and Drama during the late 1940s and early 1950s, around the same time he published his first poems.
Career: Pinter took the stage name David Baron, and worked as an actor in repertory theatre across the UK. He began writing plays in the late 1950s, but didn't become acclaimed until 1960's The Caretaker received rave reviews. After that he never looked back. He directed various productions and wrote numerous screenplays, gaining Oscar nominations for Betrayal (1978) and The French Lieutenant's Woman (1981). He also acted in such films as Mansfield Park (1999) and The Tailor of Panama (2001), as well as TV series The Troubleshooters. Apart from The Caretaker, his other best-known plays were The Birthday Party, The Homecoming and Betrayal. He died from liver cancer on December 24, 2008 at the age of 78.
Quote: "Cricket is the greatest thing God ever created on Earth. Certainly greater than sex - although sex isn't bad either."
Trivia: He was awarded the Nobel Prize for Literature in 2005.
Amanda Root (Actor) .. Patricia Green
John Drury (Executive producer)
Rebecca Eaton (Executive producer)
Richard Langridge (Executive producer)