Queens of Mystery: Murder in the Dark: First Chapter


9:45 pm - 10:31 pm, Today on KNME HDTV (5.1)

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About this Broadcast
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Murder in the Dark: First Chapter

Season 1, Episode 1

When a murder occurs in her hometown, a newly-promoted detective must investigate -- but struggles to keep her three crime-writing aunts out of the investigation.

repeat 2019 English Stereo
Mystery & Suspense Crime Comedy-drama Season Premiere Series Premiere

Cast & Crew
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Olivia Vinall (Actor) .. Matilda Stone
Julie Graham (Actor) .. Cat Stone
Sarah Woodward (Actor) .. Beth Stone
Siobhan Redmond (Actor) .. Jane Stone
Martin Trenaman (Actor) .. Inspector Derek Thorne
Juliet Stevenson (Actor) .. The Narrator
Connie Wilkins (Actor) .. Matilda age 12
Sarah Middleton (Actor) .. Rachel the Receptionist
Selina Cadell (Actor) .. Lady Antiona Hiddledean
Joseph Millson (Actor) .. Oscar Prescott
Chu Omambala (Actor) .. Benjamin Kingston
Georgina Rich (Actor) .. Emily Rose
Omid Djalili (Actor) .. Guy Ashton
Maxim De Villiers (Actor) .. Charlie Palmer
Gregg Chillin (Actor) .. Tobias Young
David Bamber (Actor) .. Maximillian Sinclair
James Ballanger (Actor) .. George
Scott Plumridge (Actor) .. Police Officer
Matt Rentell (Actor) .. Author Jarvis Pollocks

More Information
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Did You Know..
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Olivia Vinall (Actor) .. Matilda Stone
Julie Graham (Actor) .. Cat Stone
Born: July 24, 1965
Birthplace: Irvine, Ayrshire, Scotland
Trivia: Made her television debut as Kathleen Kelly in a 1986 episode of Taggart. Made her film debut as Hazel in the 1988 film The Fruit Machine.Between 2000 and 2003, played Megan Hartnoll in ITV comedy-drama At Home with the Braithwaites. Starred as Sheron Dawson on the ITV sitcom Benidorm between 2016 and 2018.As of 2019, has played Rhona Kelly in Shetland since 2014.
Sarah Woodward (Actor) .. Beth Stone
Born: April 03, 1963
Siobhan Redmond (Actor) .. Jane Stone
Born: August 27, 1959
Birthplace: Tollcross, Glasgow, Scotland
Martin Trenaman (Actor) .. Inspector Derek Thorne
Juliet Stevenson (Actor) .. The Narrator
Born: October 30, 1956
Birthplace: Kelvedon, Essex, England
Trivia: Ranked among Great Britain's most esteemed stage actresses, Juliet Stevenson also occasionally lends her talent to film and television productions. In film, she received the most acclaim for Truly, Madly, Deeply (1991). A graduate of London's Royal Academy of Dramatic Art, she first made waves in classical theater in the early '80s. She also occasionally worked in more modern productions, such as Ariel Dorfman's Death and the Maiden, for which Stevenson originated the role of the vengeful Paulina. In 1987, Stevenson entered television in the British/American film Helix/The Race for the Double Helix (1987). She followed this up with several feature films, making her American debut co-starring with Gwyneth Paltrow in Emma (1996).
Connie Wilkins (Actor) .. Matilda age 12
Sarah Middleton (Actor) .. Rachel the Receptionist
Selina Cadell (Actor) .. Lady Antiona Hiddledean
Born: June 21, 1953
Joseph Millson (Actor) .. Oscar Prescott
Born: April 27, 1974
Birthplace: Berkshire, England
Trivia: Had a near-death experience at the age of 15, when he cut his knee during a game of football; he was taken to hospital and injected with a general anaesthetic, which caused an allergic reaction resulting in a heart attack and temporary paralysis. Was suspended from school at the age of 16 for punching a headmaster; because of this, he received only 3 GCSEs, in his favourite subjects: English, drama and history. Nominated for the RSC Ian Charleston Award in 2003 for Best Classical Actor under 30 for his role as Orlando in As You Like It. Originated the role of Raoul in the 2010 West End production of Love Never Dies, the sequel to Phantom of the Opera. Voiced George Orwell (and his real-life persona, Eric Blair) in The Real George Orwell series on BBC Radio 4 in 2013. Played the title role in Macbeth at Shakespeare's Globe Theatre in 2013.
Chu Omambala (Actor) .. Benjamin Kingston
Georgina Rich (Actor) .. Emily Rose
Omid Djalili (Actor) .. Guy Ashton
Born: September 30, 1965
Birthplace: Chelsea, London, England
Trivia: Acclaimed as one of Britain's funniest standup comedians, Omid Djalili also retained the distinction of being the country's sole Iranian standup act. Following the smashing success in the 1995 Edinburgh Festival and such satirical U.K. efforts as Small Potatoes (2001) and Between Iraq and a Hard Place (2003), Djalili seemed poised to take the U.S. by storm with his supporting role in the new Whoopi Goldberg sitcom Whoopi. Born to an Iranian journalist and photographer who had settled in London in 1957, Djalili's father was both a contributor to Iran's top newspapers and a translator for the Iranian embassy. Severing his ties with the Iranian government following the 1979 Iranian revolution, the elder Djalili opened a medical hostile for Iranian immigrants, and it was there that young Omid witnessed his father's unique ability to entertain and began to get a true sense of the cultural differences between native-born Londoners and their Iranian immigrant counterparts. His enrollment in London's multi-cultural Holland Park school also served to provide young Djalili with a strong catalog of various foreign accents that would later prove key to his success as a standup act. Djalili graduated from the University of Ulster with a degree in English and theater arts in 1988, and embarked on a series of odd jobs after returning to London and being rejected from 16 different drama schools. Gradually working his way from the outskirts of the theater scene to small roles on stage and screen, it wasn't long before Djalili met his future wife, Annabel Knight, at a friends wedding and the two began collaborating on various projects. After working themselves into the experimental theater scene in the Czech Republic via a cultural exchange program, the couple was preparing to have their first child when Mrs. Knight decided to pen a one man play for her husband to star in. An introspective, humorous, and honest depiction of the struggle for truth in the face of religious prosecution, A Strange Bit of History proved an enormous hit after debuting in Edinburgh to capacity crowds. His crossover appeal in part the result of his ability to relate to numerous foreign cultures, Djalili took home the coveted LWT Stand Up Award in 1997 and has since gone on to numerous film and television roles. Djalili endeared himself to U.K. television audiences in the late '90s, and after making his film debut in the 1999 Hollywood blockbuster The Mummy, it seemed as if his appeal had made the sometimes difficult translation from the U.K. to the U.S. Alternating between work in Europe and America into the new millennium, Djalili received stateside exposure with roles in such high-profile releases as The World is Not Enough (1999) and Spy Game (2001) while maintaining U.K. credibility with supporting performances in Mean Machine (2001) and The Calcium Kid (2003). Following the premiere of Whoopi, Djalili began preparation for his role as Pablo Picasso in the feature Modigliani (2004). Over the next several years, Djalili would continue to remain a force on screen, appearing in films like Casanova and The Infadel, as well as TV series like The Paul Reiser Show.
Maxim De Villiers (Actor) .. Charlie Palmer
Gregg Chillin (Actor) .. Tobias Young
Born: January 01, 1988
Birthplace: England
Trivia: Appeared in productions of DNA and The Miracle at the National Theatre. Played the recurring role of Owen in the first season of the BBC's Being Human. Didn't get to know Kidnap and Ransom costar Trevor Eve until the second time they worked together.
David Bamber (Actor) .. Maximillian Sinclair
Born: September 19, 1954
Birthplace: Walkden, Lancashire
Trivia: Walkden, England, native David Bamber nearly avoided the proscenium altogether, with early plans to enter a training program for special education instructors. At the last yawning moment, however, Bamber decided to jump ship and head into acting, courtesy of the dramatic arts program at Bristol University and -- later -- a scholarship to the Royal Academy of Dramatic Art (RADA). As a student, the thespian distinguished himself from many of his colleagues by acquiring a marked preference for contemporary material over classicist plays. As a stage actor, Bamber (though openly heterosexual, with a wife and children) sustained a particularly fine reputation for convincing portrayals of (often repressed) gay characters in such plays as My Night with Reg and Pride and Prejudice. He also gained recognition for comic physicality deemed brilliant by many critics. In terms of on-camera work, Bamber's work (somewhat ironically) has leaned more toward period material than his stage efforts. Following an appearance in the all-star British seriocomedy Privates on Parade (1982), he signed for roles in such projects as the made-for-television outings The Merchant of Venice (2001) and Pollyanna (2002), and the HBO miniseries Rome (2005) as Marcus Tillius Cicero. In 2008, Bamber joined co-stars Tom Cruise, Tom Wilkinson, Kenneth Branagh, and others for the Cruise-produced Hitler assassination thriller Valkyrie with a frightening turn as Adolf Hitler.
James Ballanger (Actor) .. George
Scott Plumridge (Actor) .. Police Officer
Matt Rentell (Actor) .. Author Jarvis Pollocks

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