A Small Light
A Small Light is an eight-episode biographical historical drama miniseries created by Joan Rater and Tony Phelan, centering on the real-life efforts of Miep Gies, a Dutch office worker who, along with her husband Jan and others, sheltered Otto Frank's Jewish family—including teenager Anne Frank—from Nazi arrest in a secret annex in Amsterdam from 1942 to 1944.[1] The series portrays Gies's evolution from a lighthearted young woman into a resolute resistor against the German occupation, emphasizing her procurement of food, forged documents, and daily risks to sustain the hidden group amid escalating deportations and betrayals.[2] Starring Bel Powley as Gies, Liev Schreiber as Otto Frank, and Billie Boullet as Anne Frank, it premiered on National Geographic on May 1, 2023, before streaming on Disney+ and Hulu.[1][3] The miniseries shifts the narrative focus from Anne Frank's diary to the perspectives of her non-Jewish helpers, highlighting themes of moral courage, the banality of heroism, and the incremental erosion of freedoms under totalitarian rule in the Netherlands.[4] It draws on historical records of the Frank family's concealment in the Annex behind Otto's spice business, their eventual discovery by the Gestapo on August 4, 1944, and Gies's later recovery of Anne's writings, which Otto published as The Diary of a Young Girl.[5] Directed in part by Susanna Fogel, the production incorporates authentic details of wartime Amsterdam, including rationing, collaboration, and underground resistance networks, while dramatizing Gies's personal life and ethical dilemmas.[6] Critically lauded for its fresh angle on a familiar Holocaust story, A Small Light holds a 100% approval rating from critics on Rotten Tomatoes and an 8.4/10 average on IMDb, with praise for Powley's nuanced performance and the series' avoidance of sentimentality in favor of gritty realism.[3][1] It garnered eight awards and 17 nominations, including a Gotham Independent Film Award for Breakthrough Limited Series and Emmy nods for outstanding limited series and acting.[7] The show underscores Gies's postwar reflections on ordinary people enabling extraordinary defiance, earning recognition from bodies like the Television Academy for advancing awareness of bystander agency during genocide.[8]Synopsis
Plot Overview
A Small Light centers on Miep Gies, an Austrian-born young woman who immigrated to Amsterdam as a child and later worked as a secretary for Otto Frank at his pectin trading firm, Opekta.[5] In the early 1940s, amid Nazi occupation of the Netherlands, Miep marries her partner Jan Gies, and the couple becomes drawn into efforts to resist the escalating persecution of Jews.[4] Following the German invasion in May 1940 and the imposition of anti-Jewish laws, including registration and deportation orders, Otto Frank approaches Miep in July 1942—after his daughter Margot receives a summons for forced labor—to request assistance in hiding his family in a concealed annex above the office at Prinsengracht 263.[9][5] Miep and Jan agree to help, joining colleagues Victor Kugler and Bep Voskuijl in supplying the secret space, which initially shelters Otto, his wife Edith, and daughters Anne and Margot.[5] Over the following months, the group expands to eight individuals with the addition of the van Pels family—Hermann, his wife Auguste, and son Peter—and dentist Fritz Pfeffer.[9][5] For over two years, Miep undertakes perilous daily tasks, such as procuring rationed food, forging documents, and evading Nazi checkpoints on her bicycle to deliver essentials and morale-boosting updates from the outside world to the annex residents, all while maintaining the facade of normal operations at Opekta.[4] Jan contributes by securing black-market supplies and participating in the Dutch underground resistance, including hiding additional Jews like a student named Kuno van der Horst from 1943 onward.[5] The narrative portrays the intensifying dangers faced by the helpers, including close encounters with Gestapo inspections and the psychological strain of secrecy amid Amsterdam's growing famine and collaborationist pressures.[4] These efforts persist until August 4, 1944, when an anonymous tip leads to a raid by Nazi authorities, resulting in the arrest and deportation of all eight annex occupants to concentration camps.[9][5] In the aftermath, Miep enters the ransacked annex, discovers Anne Frank's writings including her diary, and safeguards them from looters and authorities.[9] She later returns the diary to Otto Frank upon his liberation and return to Amsterdam in 1945 as the sole annex survivor, enabling the publication of Anne's account in 1947.[5] The series frames these events through Miep's perspective, emphasizing her transformation from an ordinary office worker into a resolute protector amid the Holocaust's horrors.[4]Central Themes
The miniseries A Small Light emphasizes the heroism inherent in ordinary people making deliberate choices to resist evil during extraordinary circumstances, portraying Miep Gies as an unassuming secretary whose decision to shelter Otto Frank's family and four others from Nazi deportation exemplifies accessible moral agency rather than innate exceptionalism.[10][11] Gies's actions, including procuring food and maintaining secrecy under constant threat of discovery and execution, underscore the theme that individual defiance—rooted in basic human decency—can sustain life amid systemic persecution, as she later reflected that "very ordinary people" confronted "extraordinarily terrible times" without requiring special qualifications.[12][13] A secondary theme explores the pervasive risks and psychological toll of resistance in occupied Amsterdam, depicting the Gies household's navigation of rationing, informants, and moral dilemmas while balancing normalcy, such as personal relationships and daily routines, against the annex's hidden demands.[14] This highlights causal realism in how incremental, high-stakes decisions—like forging papers or evading Gestapo raids—directly enabled survival, while inaction elsewhere enabled the Holocaust's machinery, framing bystander passivity as a form of complicity.[15] The narrative critiques the normalization of atrocity under Nazi rule, showing how occupation eroded civil liberties through curfews, registrations, and deportations starting in 1942, compelling viewers to consider the empirical costs of altruism in a society where aiding Jews carried penalties of imprisonment or death.[16] The series also conveys resilience through small acts of humanity that pierce darkness, symbolized by its title drawn from the idea that even modest lights can counter overwhelming obscurity, as Gies's efforts preserved Anne Frank's diary post-arrest on August 4, 1944, ensuring its posthumous impact.[1] This theme aligns with Gies's own assertion that "any ordinary person" could help others without grandeur, prioritizing empirical evidence of quiet defiance over romanticized narratives of saviors, while acknowledging the ultimate tragedy of the annex's betrayal despite such endeavors.[17][9]Historical Background
Miep Gies's Real-Life Role
Miep Gies, born Hermine Santrouschitz on February 15, 1909, in Vienna, Austria, was sent to the Netherlands in December 1920 at age eleven to recuperate from malnutrition caused by post-World War I food shortages. She remained in Amsterdam after recovering, securing employment in the early 1930s at Opekta, Otto Frank's company distributing pectin for jam-making, where she started as a typist and rose to handle customer inquiries.[11][18] After marrying warehouse manager Jan Gies on July 16, 1941, she became involved in efforts to shield Jews from Nazi deportation as anti-Jewish measures intensified following Germany's May 1940 invasion of the Netherlands. On July 6, 1942—prompted by a summons for daughter Margot the prior day—the Frank family entered the Secret Annex hidden behind Opekta's offices at Prinsengracht 263; Gies, alongside Jan and colleagues Victor Kugler and Bep Voskuijl, committed to sustaining them by sourcing black-market food, coupons, and news via daily bicycle trips across ration-restricted Amsterdam, facing execution or imprisonment if discovered. The group expanded to include the van Pels family from July 13, 1942, and Fritz Pfeffer from November 16, 1942, totaling eight people reliant on the helpers' covert supply chain amid pervasive Gestapo surveillance.[11][18] Gies extended aid beyond the Annex, sheltering student Kuno van der Horst from May 1943 after he refused a Nazi loyalty oath. When plainclothes officers raided the Annex on August 4, 1944, based on an informant's tip, she witnessed the arrests and, with Bep Voskuijl, recovered Anne Frank's scattered diary pages and loose sheets from the floor, preserving them unread in her office desk until war's end to respect privacy. Gies then ventured to Sicherheitsdienst headquarters offering bribes for the detainees' release but was rebuffed, while continuing Opekta operations under German oversight to avoid suspicion.[11] In mid-July 1945, after Otto Frank returned alone from Auschwitz—having learned of Anne and Margot's deaths at Bergen-Belsen—Gies delivered the writings to him, facilitating The Diary of a Young Girl's 1947 publication. She hosted Frank in her home from 1945 to 1952 and, in her 1987 memoir Anne Frank Remembered, described her aid as unremarkable human solidarity against tyranny, not heroism. Yad Vashem honored Gies and her husband as Righteous Among the Nations on March 8, 1972, for endangering their lives to save Jews without expectation of reward.[11][18]The Frank Family and Hiding Period
The Frank family consisted of Otto Frank, a German-Jewish businessman born in 1889; his wife Edith Holländer, born in 1900; their elder daughter Margot, born February 16, 1926; and younger daughter Anne, born June 12, 1929.[19] [20] The family had relocated from Frankfurt to Amsterdam in 1933 to escape rising Nazi persecution in Germany, where Otto established a business importing pectin for jam production under the firm Opekta.[21] [22] After the German occupation of the Netherlands in May 1940, Dutch Jews faced escalating restrictions, including registration, curfews, and eventual deportation orders disguised as labor conscription.[23] [20] Otto Frank anticipated the need for concealment and, with the aid of trusted employees, prepared a hidden rear annex (Achterhuis) behind the Opekta offices at Prinsengracht 263 in Amsterdam, featuring a movable bookcase as the entrance.[24] [21] On July 5, 1942, Margot received a summons to report to a Nazi labor camp in Germany, prompting the family to enter hiding the following day, July 6, under the pretense of fleeing to the countryside.[21] [25] Anne began keeping a diary on her thirteenth birthday earlier that month, documenting family dynamics, fears, and hopes amid the confined space of about 450 square feet, where they shared rooms and adhered to strict silence during office hours to avoid detection by workers below.[24] [22] The Franks were soon joined by the van Pels family—Hermann, Auguste, and their son Peter—on July 13, 1942, followed by dentist Fritz Pfeffer on November 16, 1942, totaling eight occupants reliant on external helpers for food, news via illegal radio broadcasts, and supplies amid wartime rationing and hunger winter shortages in 1944.[24] [19] Daily routines involved whispered conversations, limited movement, interpersonal tensions exacerbated by proximity, and psychological strain from isolation and Allied invasion updates, with Anne noting growth from 5 feet 1.5 inches to 5 feet 5.5 inches during the period.[26] [27] On August 4, 1944, after 761 days in hiding, the group was discovered following an anonymous tip to the Gestapo, arrested by SS officers and Dutch police, and initially detained at a local prison before transfer to Westerbork transit camp on August 8.[28] [29] Otto Frank alone survived the subsequent deportations to Auschwitz and Bergen-Belsen, where Edith died in January 1945, and Anne and Margot succumbed to typhus in early March 1945.[21] [19]Cast and Characters
Principal Performers
Bel Powley leads the cast as Miep Gies, the real-life Dutch secretary who risked her life to shelter the Frank family and others from Nazi persecution.[1] Liev Schreiber portrays Otto Frank, the patriarch whose business employed Gies and whose post-war efforts preserved his daughter Anne's diary.[30] Joe Cole plays Jan Gies, Miep's husband and fellow helper in the annex.[31] Amira Casar depicts Edith Frank, Otto's wife and mother to Anne and Margot.[32] Billie Boullet embodies Anne Frank, the teenage diarist whose writings later became globally renowned.[33] Ashley Brooke assumes the role of Margot Frank, Anne's older sister.[34] These performances center the narrative on ordinary individuals' defiance amid the Holocaust, with casting announcements beginning in April 2022 for the key roles.[30]Character Portrayals and Inspirations
Bel Powley portrays Miep Gies, the Austrian-born office worker who immigrated to the Netherlands as a child and later assisted Otto Frank at his pectin business, Opekta, before helping to conceal his family and others from Nazi persecution between July 1942 and August 1944.[5] The depiction captures Gies's real-life reluctance turning to resolve, her procurement of food via black market contacts, and her preservation of Anne Frank's diary after the arrest, though it introduces a fictional gay brother, Cas, to heighten dramatic tension around personal stakes during the occupation.[5] Joe Cole plays Jan Gies, Miep's husband, shown as a municipal social worker who marries her in 1941 partly to safeguard her residency status amid rising anti-foreigner sentiments, while engaging in resistance efforts like forging documents and distributing ration cards—elements grounded in historical accounts, albeit with some condensed or intensified sequences for narrative pacing.[5] Liev Schreiber embodies Otto Frank, the German-Jewish businessman and patriarch who relocated his family to Amsterdam in 1933 to escape Nazi rule and orchestrated their two-year confinement in the Secret Annex, requesting Miep's aid shortly after the German invasion of the Netherlands on May 10, 1940.[5] His portrayal draws from Frank's documented leadership and post-war decision to edit and publish his daughter's diary, excluding certain passages he deemed too private or mature.[35] Billie Boullet depicts Anne Frank, the 13-year-old who began her diary on her 13th birthday in 1942, chronicling annex life until the group's discovery on August 4, 1944; the series aligns with her historical persona as outspoken and introspective, informed by the diary's contents, though her role is secondary to Miep's viewpoint, and she perished at Bergen-Belsen concentration camp in early 1945.[5] Amira Casar portrays Edith Frank, Anne's reserved mother who endured the hiding with stoic tension, dying at Auschwitz in January 1945, while Ashley Brooke plays elder daughter Margot Frank, summoned for forced labor in 1944 and also deceased at Bergen-Belsen.[5] [36] Supporting figures include Andy Nyman as Hermann van Pels, the butcher whose family joined the annex in November 1942, reflecting their real integration into the hiding group.[36] The series simplifies the roles of actual helpers like Bep Voskuijl and introduces fictional composites, such as colleague Tess, to streamline the ensemble and underscore themes of collective defiance without altering core events.[5] Overall, characterizations derive from survivor testimonies, Gies's memoir Anne Frank Remembered (1987), and archival records, prioritizing Miep's "ordinary" heroism over victimhood narratives while taking selective liberties for emotional resonance.[6]Production
Development Process
A Small Light was developed by husband-and-wife writing team Joan Rater and Tony Phelan, who conceived the project around 2017 following a visit to the Anne Frank House in Amsterdam that prompted them to explore Miep Gies's perspective on the events surrounding the Frank family's hiding.[2] The duo, previously known for their contributions to Grey's Anatomy, drew primary inspiration from Gies's 1987 memoir Anne Frank Remembered: The Story of the Woman Who Helped to Hide Anne Frank, supplemented by original research including input from a local Dutch researcher who documented additional individuals—such as two nurses—hidden by Gies and her network beyond the well-known Annex occupants.[2] Rater and Phelan positioned the series as a character-driven narrative emphasizing Gies as an "ordinary" office worker whose decisions reflected everyday heroism amid Nazi occupation, shifting focus from Anne Frank's diary to the risks faced by helpers like Gies and her husband Jan.[37] They incorporated select fictional elements, including a composite friend character for Gies named Tess, to heighten emotional accessibility and dramatic tension while adhering to verified historical details about the Gieses' lives and the two-year hiding period from 1942 to 1944.[37] Produced by ABC Signature and Keshet Studios for National Geographic, the eight-episode limited series advanced through development with unexpected ease; Rater and Phelan anticipated resistance to retelling a familiar Holocaust story but secured approval by framing it as a fresh examination of resilience and moral choice in the face of authoritarianism.[38][39] As executive producers, they oversaw scripting to balance historical gravity with moments of levity, ensuring the portrayal avoided didacticism in favor of personal agency and the incremental ethical decisions that defined Gies's actions.[37]Filming and Technical Aspects
Filming for A Small Light occurred primarily in Amsterdam, Netherlands, to capture authentic wartime settings, and in Prague, Czech Republic, for studio work and additional exteriors, spanning from July 8 to November 4, 2022.[40] [41] Specific Czech locations included Hradec Králové, Hýskov, Slapy, Hole, and Králův Dvůr, with much of the production utilizing soundstages in Prague alongside on-location shoots in Amsterdam to recreate the Nazi-occupied cityscape.[40] [42] Cinematography was handled by Stuart Howell for six episodes, including the pilot and episodes 2 and 3, and Azul Serra for the remaining two episodes.[43] [33] Howell's contributions, drawing from prior experience on The Crown, emphasized a cinematic aesthetic with golden brown tones, deliberate lighting to evoke period realism, and precise shot composition, as highlighted by executive producer and director Susanna Fogel.[44] This approach supported the series' visual fidelity to 1940s Amsterdam while managing the challenges of period authenticity on location and stage.[44] Howell received a nomination for Best TV Cinematography from the British Society of Cinematographers.[43] The production adhered to standard high-definition television parameters, including a per-episode runtime of approximately 50 minutes, a Dolby Digital sound mix, color grading, and a 16:9 aspect ratio.[45] Over five months of principal photography, the team navigated logistical demands of dual-country shoots, including recreating historical details like the Prinsengracht annex without disrupting Amsterdam's urban environment.[46]Score and Soundtrack
The original score for A Small Light was composed by Ariel Marx, who drew on influences from 1940s swing music, such as Benny Goodman's style, while incorporating modern electronic and percussive elements to create a tense, romantic, and anachronistic sound that avoided conventional period-drama orchestration.[47][48] Marx's score features pulsing rhythms and intimate motifs to underscore themes of resistance and human connection amid Holocaust-era peril, earning her an Emmy nomination in 2023 for Outstanding Original Music for a Limited or Anthology Series.[49] The 30-track A Small Light (Original Score) album, released digitally by Hollywood Records on May 19, 2023, runs approximately 83 minutes and includes cues such as "The Bookcase" (1:09), "A Prayer for Peter" (1:52), and "Ransacked" (2:13).[50][51] Este Haim served as executive music producer, curating a soundtrack that blended era-appropriate jazz and swing standards with contemporary covers by artists like Sharon Van Etten, Kamasi Washington, and Danielle Haim to evoke the 1940s Amsterdam setting while appealing to modern audiences.[48][52] The A Small Light (Songs from the Limited Series) compilation, released on May 23, 2023, features tracks including Danielle Haim's "Till We Meet Again," Kamasi Washington's "Cheryl," and Sharon Van Etten's rendition of "I Don't Want to Set the World on Fire," inspired by classics from Charlie Parker and Ella Fitzgerald.[53][52] Featured songs in episodes include Bing Crosby's "Jingle Bells," Benny Goodman's "King Porter Stomp," and Angel Olsen's "My Reverie" from Episode 4, selected to reflect the cultural vibrancy of pre-occupation Netherlands and the hidden annex's isolation.[54] This approach, as described by Haim, aimed to humanize historical events through emotionally resonant, non-literal period music.[48]Episodes
Episode Summaries
Pilot
In the premiere episode, aired on May 1, 2023, Miep Gies, depicted as a young and carefree secretary working for Otto Frank, agrees to assist in hiding the Frank family following the Nazi invasion of the Netherlands in 1940.[55] Her initial challenge involves escorting a nervous Margot Frank to the secret annex above the office, marking Miep's transition from ordinary employee to active participant in the resistance against Nazi persecution of Jews.[56]Welcome to Switzerland
Aired on May 1, 2023, this episode focuses on the early days of the Frank family's concealment in the annex, where Miep aids her Jewish dentist, Alfred, and his wife in finding a hiding place amid escalating risks.[57] Miep adopts bolder tactics to procure food and supplies, navigating Dutch streets patrolled by Nazi forces, while tensions build over the moral and logistical strains of sheltering Jews.[56]Motherland
Broadcast on May 8, 2023, the episode portrays Miep and her husband Jan taking responsibility for two Jewish children as anti-Jewish decrees, including registration requirements, intensify in Amsterdam.[57] Miep begins isolating herself from friends and family to protect the secret, while Jan commits to the Dutch Resistance, highlighting the personal sacrifices demanded by opposition to Nazi occupation.[56]The Butterfly
Aired on May 8, 2023, Miep confronts an ethical conflict when her lifelong best friend, unaware of the annex, pressures her for involvement in suspicious activities potentially linked to collaboration.[57] Meanwhile, the Franks observe Hanukkah in hiding, fostering brief moments of normalcy, as Jan advances in Resistance operations but conceals dangers from Miep to shield her from further worry.[56]Scheißfeld
This episode, aired May 15, 2023, examines strains in Miep and Jan's marriage after Jan disregards her urging to halt a high-risk Resistance mission targeting Nazi infrastructure.[57] Following a successful sabotage, Jan goes underground as reprisals loom, leaving Miep in anguish over his safety and the broader perils of wartime defiance.[56]Boiling Point
Aired on May 15, 2023, Miep shelters a Jewish student from a prying Nazi neighbor during heightened Gestapo sweeps in Amsterdam.[57] Jan secures assistance from a new contact to facilitate a friend's escape from the city, underscoring the network of covert aid amid Nazi crackdowns on suspected sympathizers.[56]What Can Be Saved
In the penultimate episode, aired May 22, 2023, Miep's deepest dread materializes as German authorities raid the secret annex, arresting Otto Frank and the hidden families after over two years of concealment.[57] The sequence captures the sudden collapse of their sanctuary, based on the historical betrayal leading to the Franks' deportation in August 1944.[56]Legacy
The series finale, aired May 22, 2023, depicts the war's conclusion in 1945, with Miep and Jan desperately seeking traces of the annex residents amid reports of concentration camp liberations.[57] Miep's preservation of Anne Frank's diary papers, discovered post-raid, sets the stage for their eventual publication, emphasizing her role in perpetuating the victims' testimonies against Nazi atrocities.[56]Release and Distribution
Premiere Details
A Small Light premiered on the National Geographic channel in the United States on May 1, 2023, with the first two episodes airing consecutively at 9:00 p.m. ET/PT.[58][59] The limited series, consisting of eight episodes, continued with one new installment each subsequent Monday at the same time slot.[1] Episodes were made available for streaming on Disney+ and Hulu the day following their linear broadcast.[60] In the United Kingdom, the series debuted on Disney+ on May 2, 2023.[38] No theatrical or special event premiere was reported; the rollout focused on television and streaming platforms under the Disney-owned National Geographic brand.[3]Platform Availability and Scheduling
A Small Light premiered on the National Geographic television channel in the United States on May 1, 2023, with the first two episodes airing back-to-back at 9:00 p.m. and 10:00 p.m. ET/PT.[58] Subsequent pairs of episodes continued this double-bill format weekly on Mondays at the same times, concluding with episodes 7 and 8 on May 22, 2023.[36] Episodes became available for streaming the following day on Hulu in the United States and on Disney+ internationally, with the full eight-episode season accessible on these platforms after the broadcast finale.[61] In September 2024, Disney removed A Small Light from both Disney+ and Hulu worldwide as part of a broader content purge affecting multiple originals.[62] As of 2025, the series is available for streaming on Amazon Prime Video in the United States, with options to purchase or rent on platforms including Amazon and Apple TV.[63][64] International availability varies by region, with some markets licensing it to services like UKTV Play following the Disney+ removal.[65]Reception
Critical Assessments
A Small Light garnered strong critical acclaim upon its release, achieving a 100% Tomatometer score on Rotten Tomatoes from 50 reviews, with the consensus highlighting Bel Powley's "arresting performance" as central to its sensitive depiction of heroism amid tragedy.[3] On Metacritic, the series earned an 83 out of 100 based on 17 reviews, positioning it among the higher-rated limited series of 2023.[66] Critics frequently commended its focus on Miep Gies as an ordinary young woman thrust into moral action, emphasizing themes of everyday resistance against totalitarianism rather than solely the plight of victims like the Frank family.[67] Performances drew particular praise, with Powley's portrayal of Gies noted for capturing her vivacity, moral clarity, and gradual hardening under Nazi occupation, transforming a potentially rote historical retelling into a character-driven narrative.[68] Liev Schreiber's Otto Frank and supporting roles, including Eleanor Holmes as Anne Frank, were lauded for adding emotional depth without overshadowing Gies's agency.[66] Reviewers appreciated the writing's un-preachy tone, blending humor with horror to illustrate how mundane choices enabled survival, as in depictions of Gies procuring ration cards and navigating Amsterdam's black market.[69] Some critiques addressed structural shortcomings, with observers noting the eight-episode length as excessive for the core story, leading to pacing lulls in the latter half where tension reportedly flagged despite the subject matter's inherent gravity.[66] Stylistic elements, such as direct fourth-wall breaks and tonal shifts between levity and brutality, were described as occasionally muddled, potentially diluting the narrative's focus on causal sequences of defiance and betrayal.[70] Despite these reservations, the series was broadly viewed as an evocative reminder of individual agency in historical crises, succeeding where prior Anne Frank adaptations had centered victimhood over rescuers' proactive risks.[67]Viewer Feedback
Audiences responded positively to A Small Light, praising its shift in focus from Anne Frank to the everyday heroism of Miep Gies and her network of helpers during the Nazi occupation of Amsterdam.[71][72] The series earned a 95% audience approval rating on Rotten Tomatoes based on verified viewer scores.[73] On IMDb, it achieved an average rating of 8.4 out of 10 from more than 14,000 user ratings as of late 2023.[1] Viewers frequently highlighted the compelling performances, particularly Bel Powley's portrayal of Miep as a spirited young woman whose ordinary life intersects with extraordinary moral choices, alongside Liev Schreiber's nuanced depiction of Otto Frank.[71][72] The emotional resonance was a recurring theme, with many describing the series as moving and inspirational for blending heartbreak with moments of humor, hope, and human resilience amid the Holocaust's atrocities—one audience member noted, "This show will both make you feel and hold you captive. I've cried every episode, sometimes out of sadness, but more often out of hope."[71] Others appreciated the production's high quality, including cinematography and writing that made historical events feel immediate and relevant without sensationalism.[72] A Rotten Tomatoes reviewer echoed this, stating, "Beautiful! There have been a lot of movies and TV series around this topic but this one was just beautifully written and portrayed, the acting was really superb!!"[72] While largely acclaiming the fresh perspective on a well-known story, some feedback pointed to perceived dramatizations that strayed from historical accounts, such as portraying Miep as excessively frivolous or party-oriented in her youth, which one IMDb user criticized as "terrible" and inconsistent with documented evidence of her character.[71] A minority also expressed unease with the use of English dialogue for Dutch characters, arguing it diminished authenticity despite subtitles or dubbing options in some markets.[71] These critiques remained outliers amid broader consensus on the series' uplifting message of individual agency against tyranny, with several viewers recommending it for its reminder that "even an ordinary secretary... can, in their own way, turn on a small light in a dark world."[1]Ratings and Viewership Data
"A Small Light" garnered positive audience metrics on major review aggregation sites following its premiere on May 1, 2023. On IMDb, the miniseries holds an average user rating of 8.4 out of 10, derived from 14,805 votes as of October 2023.[1] Rotten Tomatoes reports a 93% audience score based on verified viewer ratings, complementing its 100% critics' score from 36 reviews.[3] Specific Nielsen household ratings or total viewership figures for linear broadcasts on National Geographic, as well as streaming metrics from Disney+ and Hulu, were not publicly disclosed by the producers or platforms. Parrot Analytics data indicates varying demand levels internationally; for instance, in Mexico during April 2025, audience demand was 0.5 times the average for TV series.[74] Online engagement proxies, such as Wikipedia pageviews totaling 5,888 across tracked periods in 2025 and average active torrenters around 45, suggest modest but persistent interest post-release.[75]Historical Fidelity
Alignment with Verified Events
The miniseries accurately portrays Miep Gies' employment as a secretary at Opekta, Otto Frank's pectin distribution company located at Prinsengracht 263 in Amsterdam, where she began working in 1933 prior to the German occupation.[5] Gies, along with her husband Jan and colleagues Victor Kugler, Johannes Kleiman, and Bep Voskuijl, formed the core group of helpers who supplied the hidden residents with food, news, and other essentials procured through black market channels and ration cards at significant personal risk. This support network enabled the eight individuals—Otto, Edith, Margot, and Anne Frank; Hermann, Auguste, and Peter van Pels; and Fritz Pfeffer—to remain concealed in the Secret Annex behind a movable bookcase from July 6, 1942, until their arrest on August 4, 1944.[5] Following the Franks' receipt of a deportation order for Margot on July 5, 1942, the series correctly depicts the family's immediate relocation to the annex, with the van Pels family joining on July 13, 1942, and Pfeffer on November 16, 1942, reflecting the progressive assembly of the group as verified by postwar testimonies and archival records. Daily routines, including strict noise restrictions during business hours and reliance on helpers for external interactions, align with Gies' own accounts of the operation's logistics, such as shopping for extra groceries under Nazi scrutiny and using Jan's resistance connections for forged documents and supplies.[9] The portrayal of the August 4, 1944, raid by SS officer Karl Silberbauer and Dutch NSB collaborators, prompted by an anonymous tip, matches historical documentation, as does Gies' subsequent attempt to negotiate the prisoners' release at the Sicherheitsdienst headquarters by offering money, which was rebuffed.[5] After the Gestapo departed, Gies recovered scattered papers from the annex, including Anne Frank's diary with its red-checkered cover, preserving them intact and later entrusting them to Otto Frank upon his sole return from Auschwitz in June 1945, actions corroborated by Gies' memoir and Frank family archives.[9] These elements underscore the series' fidelity to the verified timeline and mechanics of the hiding effort, drawn from primary sources like Gies' testimony.[6]Dramatizations and Potential Inaccuracies
The miniseries A Small Light incorporates several dramatizations and fictional elements to heighten narrative tension and emphasize themes of resistance and everyday heroism, diverging from strictly historical accounts derived from Miep Gies's memoir Anne Frank Remembered and corroborating records. Creators Tony Phelan and Joan Rater have acknowledged taking creative liberties to streamline the story and connect it to broader contemporary issues, such as LGBTQ+ persecution under Nazi occupation, while maintaining the core timeline of events like the Franks' hiding from July 1942 to August 1944.[6] These alterations include composite characters and invented subplots, which compress or amplify real individuals' roles for dramatic cohesion.[5] A prominent fictionalization is the depiction of Miep Gies's foster brother Cas (sometimes referred to as Heinz in discussions), portrayed as a gay man active in the Dutch resistance who faces arrest and execution for forging documents. In reality, Miep was fostered by the Nieuwenburg family and had five foster brothers, but no historical evidence indicates any were homosexual or involved in resistance activities as shown; this character was invented by the creators to illustrate the Nazis' targeting of sexual minorities and to underscore themes of personal risk in aiding Jews.[5] Similarly, Miep's friend Tess is a fictional construct representing passive bystanders who benefited from or ignored Jewish persecution, rather than a specific historical figure, allowing the series to critique societal complicity without attributing it to real individuals.[5] The series also merges or underrepresents contributions from other Opekta employees, such as Bep Voskuijl, who played a key role in supplying the annex and maintaining secrecy but whose actions are largely subsumed into Miep's storyline for narrative focus. Some Opekta staff members are fictionalized or altered, straying from documented personnel lists at Otto Frank's pectin firm.[5] Dialogues, interpersonal dynamics—such as Miep's initial reluctance to hide the Franks being portrayed with more levity and party-girl flair than her memoir suggests—and specific confrontations with Nazi officials are dramatized for emotional impact, potentially exaggerating Miep's boldness while downplaying the calculated caution she described in interviews. The betrayer of the annex is implied to be a nosy neighbor in the series, but the informant's identity remains unknown historically, with arrests conducted by Dutch NSB police on August 4, 1944, possibly tipped off through workplace leaks or anonymous leads. Post-arrest events include accurate elements, such as Miep retrieving Anne's diary papers from the annex shortly after the raid and preserving them for Otto Frank's return in June 1945, but the series compresses the Gieses' ongoing resistance efforts, including Jan's documented food smuggling and aid to other Jews, into heightened vignettes. These choices prioritize inspirational storytelling over granular fidelity, as noted by historians, though they risk conflating verified facts with invention in viewers' perceptions of the Dutch underground's operations.[5]Accolades
Award Nominations
A Small Light garnered nominations from major television awards organizations, highlighting its lead performance, ensemble elements, original score, and limited series format. These included one Primetime Emmy nomination, four at the Critics' Choice Awards, and one at the Screen Actors Guild Awards.[8][76][77] Key nominations included:- Primetime Emmy Awards (75th, 2023): Outstanding Music Composition for a Limited or Anthology Series, Movie or Special (Original Dramatic Score) for composer Ariel Marx, for the episode "What Can Be Saved."[8]
- Critics' Choice Awards (29th, 2024): Best Limited Series.[76]
- Critics' Choice Awards (29th, 2024): Best Actress in a Limited Series or Movie Made for Television, Bel Powley.[76]
- Critics' Choice Awards (29th, 2024): Best Supporting Actress in a Limited Series or Movie Made for Television, Billie Boullet.[7]
- Screen Actors Guild Awards (30th, 2024): Outstanding Performance by a Female Actor in a Television Movie or Limited Series, Bel Powley.[77]
- Independent Spirit Awards (2024): Best Lead Performance in a New Scripted Series, Bel Powley.[78]
- British Society of Cinematographers Awards (2024): BSC Award for the episode "What Can Be Saved."[7]