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  1. Wives and Daughters

    Wives and Daughters

    TV-PG2002 · Romance · 1 season

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  1. Episode Guide

    • 1. S1 E1
      1. S1 E1 Nov 28, 1999
      • A girl and her stepsister come of age in 19th-century England.
    • 2. S1 E2
      2. S1 E2 Dec 5, 1999
      • Cynthia's stepsister Molly arrives from France.
    • 3. S1 E3
      3. S1 E3 Dec 12, 1999
      • Roger arrives in Africa; Cynthia captures hearts in London; Molly is drawn into Cynthia's secret.
  2. Wives and Daughters: With Francesca Annis, Justine Waddell, Bill Paterson, Keeley Hawes. The daughter of a country doctor copes with an unwanted stepmother, an impetuous stepsister, burdensome secrets, the town gossips, and the tug on her own heartstrings for a man who thinks of her only as a friend.

  3. Plot summary. Television and radio adaptations. References. External links. Wives and Daughters, An Every-Day Story is a novel by English author Elizabeth Gaskell, first published in the Cornhill Magazine as a serial from August 1864 to January 1866.

  4. Wives and Daughters is a 1999 four-part BBC serial adapted from the 1864 novel Wives and Daughters: An Everyday Story by Victorian author Elizabeth Gaskell. [1] The series was a joint production of the BBC and WGBH Boston, an American public broadcast station and 'won high audience ratings' when it first screened in the UK in 1999.

  5. Wives and Daughters (TV Mini Series 1999) cast and crew credits, including actors, actresses, directors, writers and more.

  6. Season 1 – Wives and Daughters. Based on Elizabeth Cleghorn Gaskell's novel about families in a 19th-century English country town.

  7. Molly Gibson, whose mother has long ago died, is brought up by her father Dr. Gibson. At the age of 17, Molly visits and immediately befriends the Hamleys, her neighbors, especially she and the youngest son Roger Hamley, studying in Cambridge, become good friends.

  8. Wives and Daughters, novel by Elizabeth Gaskell, first published serially in The Cornhill Magazine (August 1864–January 1866) and then in book form in 1866; it was unfinished at the time of her death in November 1865. Known as her last, longest, and perhaps finest work, it concerns the interlocking fortunes of several families in the country ...

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