The Barchester Chronicles
The Barchester Chronicles is a seven-part British television serial produced and broadcast by the BBC in 1982, adapting the first two novels of Anthony Trollope's Chronicles of Barsetshire series, The Warden (1855) and Barchester Towers (1857).[1][2]
Directed by David Giles and scripted by Alan Plater under producer Jonathan Powell, the series dramatizes ecclesiastical power struggles, moral dilemmas, and social maneuvering within the fictional 19th-century cathedral town of Barchester and its surrounding diocese.[1][2]
Central to the narrative is the scandal over the alleged misuse of funds at Hiram's Hospital almshouse by its warden, the mild-mannered Septimus Harding, prompting interventions from reformers, ambitious clergy, and family loyalties that expose tensions between tradition and reform in the Church of England.[1][2]
Featuring standout performances by Donald Pleasence as Mr. Harding, Nigel Hawthorne as the protective Archdeacon Grantly, and an early television role for Alan Rickman as the manipulative curate Obadiah Slope, the production is noted for its faithful rendering of Trollope's satirical examination of clerical ambition and provincial life.[1][2][3]