Howards End


4:50 pm - 7:50 pm, Sunday, March 15 on Film4 +1 (47)

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About this Broadcast

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A chance encounter during a cruise throws the romantic Schlegel sisters into the paths of the Wilcoxes, an industrious family headed by the well-meaning but strait-laced Henry. When aristocratic matriarch Ruth Wilcox bequeaths her family home to Margaret Schlegel, her children are outraged and dispose of the will, setting the stage for a conflict with tragic consequences. Merchant Ivory period drama, based on EM Forster's novel, starring Emma Thompson, Anthony Hopkins and Helena Bonham Carter


1992 HD subtitles audio-description
Historical/Period Drama Literary Adaptation Movie/Drama Romance

Cast & Crew

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Anthony Hopkins (Actor) .. Henry Wilcox
Emma Thompson (Actor) .. Margaret Schlegel
Helena Bonham Carter (Actor) .. Helen Schlegel
Vanessa Redgrave (Actor) .. Ruth Wilcox
Sam West (Actor) .. Leonard Bast
Joseph Bennett (Actor) .. Paul Wilcox
Prunella Scales (Actor) .. Aunt Juley
Adrian Ross Magenty (Actor) .. Tibby Schlegel
James Ivory (Director)

More Information

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Did You Know..

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Anthony Hopkins (Actor) .. Henry Wilcox
Born: December 31, 1937 in Margam, near Port Talbot
Best Known For: The Silence of the Lambs
Early-life: Born Philip Anthony Hopkins on December 31, 1937, in Margam, near Port Talbot, South Wales, the only child of a baker. He claims he was an introverted child who did poorly at school, finding solace in playing the piano; he is now considered a virtuoso. He was inspired to become an actor after meeting local boy Richard Burton. After national service, Hopkins studied at the Cardiff College of Music and Art before enrolling at Rada.
Career: Hopkins's first professional work was on stage. He later joined Laurence Olivier's National Theatre, but left to make acclaimed movie The Lion in Winter. A steady stream of TV and film work followed (as well as some theatre appearances), including War and Peace, The Lindbergh Kidnapping Case, The Bunker, A Bridge Too Far, The Elephant Man, and Across the Lake. But Hopkins didn't become a major Hollywood star until after giving up alcohol. He won an Oscar for 1991's The Silence of the Lambs, and since then has starred in such hits as The Remains of the Day, Howards End, Hannibal, Shadowlands, Thor and Hitchcock.
Quote: 'The Welsh people have a talent for acting that one does not find in the English. The English lack heart.'
Trivia: Hopkins was knighted in 1993 and away from movies, he loves to paint and take road trips across the US.
Emma Thompson (Actor) .. Margaret Schlegel
Born: April 15, 1959 in London
Best Known For: Being one of Britain's premier actresses.
Early-life: Born April 15, 1959, in Paddington, London. Her father was Eric Thompson, a stage director and the man behind the British version of The Magic Roundabout. Her mother is actress Phyllida Law and her sister, Sophie, is also a thespian. She originally wanted to be a writer, but the acting bug bit while at Cambridge University (her contemporaries included Stephen Fry, Tony Slattery and Hugh Laurie). Her performances were so impressive an agent signed her two years before she finished her studies.
Career: After a spell as a stand-up comic, Thompson teamed up with Fry and Laurie for TV sketch show Alfresco, starred in West End smash Me and My Girl, and acclaimed dramas Tutti Frutti and Fortunes of War. Her first film was 1989's The Tall Guy. Already a familiar face in the UK, she became an international star thanks to her Oscar-winning role in 1992's Howards End. She later won another Academy Award, this time for writing the screenplay for Sense and Sensibility. She also wrote as well as starred in Nanny McPhee and its sequel. Thompson's other movies include Dead Again, In the Name of the Father, The Remains of the Day, Junior, Primary Colors, Love Actually, Stranger Than Fiction, I Am Legend, Brideshead Revisited, The Boat That Rocked, three Harry Potter movies and Saving Mr Banks.
Quote: 'I mind having to look pretty, because it is so much more of an effort.'
Trivia: She speaks French and Spanish fluently.
Helena Bonham Carter (Actor) .. Helen Schlegel
Born: June 26, 1966 in London
Best Known For: Appearing in numerous period dramas.
Early-life: Born May 26, 1966, in Golders Green, London. She has two older brothers. Her father, Raymond, was a prominent banker who was left quadriplegic and partially blind following an operation to remove a brain tumour in 1979. He died in 2004. Her mother, Elena, is a psychotherapist. At the age of 16, Helena won a national writing competition, and used the prize money to pay for her entry in the actors' directory Spotlight, but her big break came when her photo appeared in the magazine Tatler. Encouraged by her father, she decided against going to university and began considering film offers.
Career: Helena's professional debut came at 16 in a TV commercial, swiftly followed by small-screen movie Pattern of Roses. The film Lady Jane followed, but it was 1985's A Room with a View which made her a star. Roles in Hamlet, Howards End and Frankenstein followed, and she was Oscar-nominated for 1997's The Wings of the Dove. The actress went on to prove she could do more than just period drama in projects such as Fight Club, Planet of the Apes, Big Fish, and Charlie and the Chocolate Factory, and lent her voice to animated movies Corpse Bride and Wallace and Gromit in The Curse of the Were-Rabbit. She made her musical debut in the big-screen version of Sweeney Todd: The Demon Barber of Fleet Street. She's since appeared in Dark Shadows, Les Miserables and Burton & Taylor, and played Bellatrix Lestrange in several of the Harry Potter movies.
Quote: 'I hate this image of me as a prim Edwardian. I want to shock everyone.'
Trivia: In 2014, she was appointed to Britain's national Holocaust Commission.
Vanessa Redgrave (Actor) .. Ruth Wilcox
Born: January 30, 1937 in London
Best Known For: Being the most prominent member of the Redgrave theatrical dynasty.
Early-life: Born on January 30, 1937, in London, while her father Michael was on stage in Hamlet at the Old Vic with Laurence Olivier. Her mother, Rachel Kempson, was also an actor. Her sister Lynn and brother Corin followed them into the profession. Vanessa originally wanted to be a dancer, but was turned down by the Royal Ballet School for being too tall, prompting her to study at the Central School of Speech and Drama in London.
Career: Redgrave's first professional job was at Frinton Summer Theatre. She made her West End debut opposite her father in A Touch of the Sun, and starred alongside him in 1958's Behind the Mask, her film debut. She became a face of the 1960s thanks to movies such as Blowup, Isadora and Camelot before winning a Best Supporting Actress Oscar in 1977 for Julia. Redgrave has continued to appear on the big screen in productions such as Agatha, Yanks, Wetherby, Howards End, Mission: Impossible, Wilde, Venus, Atonement, Song for Marion and Ralph Fiennes' acclaimed film version of Coriolanus. She's also an activist who works tirelessly for various causes, often creating controversy with her forthright views.
Quote: 'Of course, I am misrepresented very often, but so is everybody who has got something to say.'
Sam West (Actor) .. Leonard Bast
Joseph Bennett (Actor) .. Paul Wilcox
Prunella Scales (Actor) .. Aunt Juley
Born: June 22, 1932 in Sutton Abinger, Surrey
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.
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?''
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.
Adrian Ross Magenty (Actor) .. Tibby Schlegel
James Ivory (Director)

Before / After

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