The Gathering Storm
Brief Synopsis
Cast & Crew
Richard Loncraine
Albert Finney
Vanessa Redgrave
Jim Broadbent
Linus Roache
Lena Headey
Film Details
Technical Specs
Synopsis
An intimate look at the marriage of Winston and Clementine Churchill during a particularly troubled moment in their lives. In the years before World War II, Churchill found himself on the fringe of British politics and a lone voice in the wilderness as he warned the world of a Nazi threat. Together with Clementine, he had to confront the demons of depression and the possibility of insolvency before he could reemerge as a reinvigorated political leader and hero.
Director
Richard Loncraine
Cast
Albert Finney
Vanessa Redgrave
Jim Broadbent
Linus Roache
Lena Headey
Tom Wilkinson
Derek Jacobi
Ronnie Barker
Gottfried John
Walter Sittler
Celia Imrie
Hugh Bonneville
Anthony Brophy
Edward Hardwicke
Joanna Mccallum
Tom Hiddleston
Timothy Bentinck
Diana Hoddinott
Dolly Wells
Emma Seigel
Lyndsey Marshal
Nancy Carroll
Danielle King
Laurie Flexman
Rohan Mccullough
John Standing
Simon Williams
Kenneth Hadley
Gerrard Mcarthur
Russell Barr
Crew
Christopher Ackland
Mona Adams
Luke Alkin
Kary Antholis
Luciana Arrighi
Kenny Atherfold
David Balfour
Clive Beard
Jenny Beavan
Frances Bennett
Sue Berger
Angus Bickerton
James Bigwood
Tamana Bleasdale
P. J. Bloom
Terry Blyther
Paul Borg
Camin Bourne
Stephen Bream
Anna Bregman
Dave Brennan
Debbie Brodie
Gavin Buckley
Jo Burn
John Butler
Bruce Cain
Peter Casey
David Cheesman
Aaron Chetwynd
Elaine Chin
James Clark
Stuart Clarke
Marlon Cole
Gary Colkett
Ed Colyer
Felicity Cottrell
Simon Cozens
Emily Craig
Simon Crook
Matt Curtis
John Darley
Steve Dent
Steve Dent
David Dilks
Gillian Dodders
Frank Doelger
Stephanie Dolker
Jim Dowdall
Chris Dowling
Ricky Dunning
Lisa Ellzey
Louis Elman
Ray Espinola
Andy Evans
Glyn Evans
Sean Farrow
John Ferguson
Neil Finnighan
James Foster
Ray Freeborn
Sally French
Liz Gallacher
Mark Geeson
Paul Ghirardani
Brian Gibbs
Ben Gladstone
Lee Goddard
Jonathan Godfrey
Howard Goodall
Richard Goodwin
Ian Green
Kate Grimble
Michael Halpern
Leah Hamilton
Michael Hannan
Peter Hannan
Frances Hannon
Philippa Hart
Gordon Hayman
David Haynes
John Hayward
Paul Heasman
Barrie Hemsley
Robert Hill
Nick Hobbs
Ann Hummel
Andrew Hunt
David James
Vivien Jordan
Nick Kenealy
Carole Kenwright
Phil Kenyon
Nichola Kerr
Ali Keshavji
Duncan Kinnaird
Evyen Klean
Eddie Knight
Anna Kot
Irene Lamb
Diana Lander
Derek Lea
Deborah Leakey
Milly Leigh
Mark Lisbon
Oliver Loncraine
Stephen Marquiss
Cory Mccrum-abdo
Alan Mcpherson
Angus Meryon
Paul Mills
Andrew Mollo
Stuart Monteith
David Morris
Boo Motjuoadi
Mark Mottram
Terry Naff
Frances Pardell
Daniel Parker
Daniel Parker
Daniel Parker
Belinda Parrish
Dilip Patel
Julie Payne
Grahame Peters
Ron Phillips
John Pledger
Richard Pryke
Larry Ramin
Adrian Ratley
Kay Raven
Denis Rich
Ian Richards
Deborah Richardson
Stephen Rose
Tracey Scoffield
Ridley Scott
Tony Scott
Lee Sheward
Colin Simmons
Sunita Singh
Barry Smalls
Robert E Smith
Tracey Smith
Clare Spragge
John Stanborough
Amie Stephenson
David Stephenson
John Street
Steve Street
Graham Sutton
Jason Swanscott
Anthony Szuch
Bob Taylor
Jason Taylor
Kevin Taylor
Natalie Taylor
Gregor Telfer
Gary Thomas
Samantha Thomas
David M. Thompson
Bruno Tonioli
Ann Townsend
John Turner
Joyce Turner
Keith Vowles
Josephine Warne
John Wells
Laurence Wells
Richard Whelan
Tom Whitehead
Hugh Whitemore
Hugh Whitemore
Terry Wilde
Andrew Wilkinson
John Wilson
John Wilson
Paul Wiltshire
Lotta Wolgers
Colin Wood
Anna Worley
Film Details
Technical Specs
Articles
Ronnie Barker (1929-2005)
He was born Ronald William George Barker in Bedford, England on September 25, 1929 and raised in Oxford. Educated at the City of Oxford High School, he took a job as a clerk at Westminster Bank, all the while harboring dreams of becoming an actor.
He was offered his first break in 1948 when he joined the Manchester Repertory Company. His roles were small, but for a starry-eyed 19-year-old it could not have been more fascinating. Three years later, he joined the Oxford Playhouse where he gained more experience, particularly in comedy, and in 1955, director Peter Hall gave him his first big opportunity at the famed Arts Theatre in London, where he worked steadily and developed his craft over the next several years.
After some success on BBC radio, Barker moved into films. His parts were small, but his comic timing and avuncular mannerism made him memorable in some sharp comedies: the little known Terry Thomas gem Kill or Cure (1962); a put-upon customer at a railway station in Doctor in Distress (1963); his first prominent film role as doleful sad sack in The Bargee (1964); and a cameo in the pleasant if harmless family outing Runaway Railway (1965).
Yet his achievements in film paled in comparison to his success on television, which would prove to be Barker's calling card. In 1966, commentator David Frost would hire him (along with Ronnie Corbett and John Cleese) for The Frost Report, a wildly popular revue show that would satirize the popular fads and political situations of the day. From there, he moved onto Frost on Sunday the following year which was also hit. Not coincidentally, his good fortune on television led to improved film parts: a dramatic turn in a spy thriller starring veteran character actor Van Heflin The Man Outside (1967); and as a ghost who tries to help young children save a historical landmark in Ghost of a Chance (1968).
Still, his success up to this point was marginal when compared to the golden stride he hit in the '70s. He starred in no less than three hit series that decade: the popular sketch comedy opposite Ronnie Corbett in The Two Ronnies (1971-1987); the endearing prison sitcom Porridge (1973-1977); and as a frugal Northern shopkeeper with a penchant for stammering in Open All Hours (1973-1985). All three of these programs had developed a huge cult following in America over the years due to their screening on public television, and it's safe to say that Barker was, if not an international star, a very welcome talent and presence to million of fans worldwide.
This decade would also contain his most lauded film performance - that of Friar Tuck in Richard Lester's Robin and Marian (1976), co-starring Sean Connery and Audrey Hepburn. Barker offered a cheeky take on this established character with just the right touch of pathos, making him an essential component to this robust adventure film. Oddly, despite his good critical notices, he made only one more film that decade, a full theatrical feature based on his television series, Porridge (1979).
Barker was still a popular fixture in British entertainment when he semi-retired in 1987. He spent most of his time operating an antique shop in the Oxfordshire village of Chipping Norton, but he was always coaxed back for an occasional appearance, the most impressive by far were his two serio-comic turns in The Gathering Storm (2002), playing the wise manservant to Albert Finney's Winston Churchill; and the HBO special My House in Umbria (2003), a moving portrayal as a retired general maintaining his wit and dignity after tragic circumstances opposite Dame Maggie Smith. Barker is survived by his wife of 48 years, Joy; a daughter, Charlotte; and sons, Adam and Larry.
by Michael T. Toole
Ronnie Barker (1929-2005)
Quotes
Trivia
Miscellaneous Notes
Nominated for the 2003 British Academy Television Award (Actress) (Vanessa Redgrave) by The British Academy of Film and Television Arts (BAFTA).
Nominated for the 2003 David L. Wolper Producer of the Year Award (Long-Form Television) by the Producers Guild of America (PGA).
Winner of the 2002 Peabody Award from the Grady College of Journalism and Mass Communication at the University of Georgia.
Winner of the 2003 British Academy Television Award (Actor) (Albert Finney) from The British Academy of Film and Television Arts (BAFTA).
Winner of the 2003 Writers Guild Award for Outstanding Achievement in Television Writing (Original Long Form) (Hugh Whitemore, Story by Larry Ramin and Hugh Whitemore) from the Writers Guild of America (WGA).
Aired in United States April 27, 2002
Aired in United States February 4, 2003