Foyle's War: The French Drop


8:00 pm - 9:35 pm, Friday, December 12 on KQEDDT2 (9.2)

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About this Broadcast
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The French Drop

Foyle investigates a secret spy organisation that may have been involved with the death of the MI5 chief's son.

repeat 2004 English Stereo
Crime Drama Crime Season Premiere

Cast & Crew
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Michael Kitchen (Actor) .. Christopher Foyle
Anthony Howell (Actor) .. Paul Milner
Julian Ovenden (Actor) .. Andrew Foyle
Jake Harders (Actor) .. French Agent
Mark Berry (Actor) .. William Messinger
Amanda Pointer (Actor) .. Admiralty Receptionist
Samuel West (Actor) .. Lt. Col. James Wintringham
Timothy Carlton (Actor) .. Admiral James Francis
Ronald Pickup (Actor) .. Sir Giles Messinger
Rupert Frazer (Actor) .. Commander Charles Howard
Brian Poyser (Actor) .. Rev. Aubrey Stewart
Geoffrey Freshwater (Actor) .. Sergeant Eric Rivers
John Grillo (Actor) .. Watchmaker
Angela Thorne (Actor) .. Lady Anne Messinger
Goran Kostic (Actor) .. Jan Komorowski
Markus Napier (Actor) .. German SD Officer
Tony Haygarth (Actor) .. Leo Maccoby
William Scott-Masson (Actor) .. Jacques Dumont

More Information
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Did You Know..
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Michael Kitchen (Actor) .. Christopher Foyle
Born: October 31, 1948
Birthplace: Leicester, Leicestershire, England
Trivia: Since performing in a play at the City of Leicester Boys School, Michael Kitchen has done practically all there is for an actor to do: motion pictures, TV films, TV miniseries, stage plays, radio plays, and audio cassettes. International film audiences probably know him best as Chief of Staff Bill Tanner in the Pierce Brosnan James Bond productions, although he has played major roles in other high-profile movies, such as Out of Africa (1985) and Mrs. Dalloway (1997). He is also well known to worldwide TV audiences for major roles in popular miniseries, including The Brontes of Haworth (1973), A Fall of Eagles (1974), Freud (1984), and Oliver Twist (1999). 2000 was a remarkable year for Kitchen -- incredibly, he completed the following productions during that year: Proof of Life, a major film in which he shared the screen with Russell Crowe and Meg Ryan; Lorna Doone, a three-hour TV miniseries; Always and Everyone, an eight-hour TV series resembling America's ER; The Secret World of Michael Fry, a TV miniseries; The Railway Children, a TV film shown in the U.K. and in the U.S. on Masterpiece Theatre; New Year's Day, a major motion picture; and Second Sight: Parasomnia, another TV film. For an encore in 2001, he played the title role in Foyle's War, an eight-hour TV series about a World War II-era detective, then played Foyle again in another eight-hour series in 2002. He also signed on for another James Bond film, his third. Between 1971 -- when he appeared in the film Unman, Wittering and Zigo -- and the present, Kitchen has never wanted for work. The reason, quite simply, is that he is one of Britain's finest and most versatile actors. He has walked across the stages of the most prestigious playhouses in England, performing the works of Shakespeare, Oscar Wilde, and other important playwrights. In motion pictures, he has also acted parts in productions based on the works of Franz Kafka (The Trial, 1993), Robert Louis Stevenson (Kidnapped, 1995), John Le Carre (The Russia House, 1990), and Nevil Shute (Crossing to Freedom, 1990).
Anthony Howell (Actor) .. Paul Milner
Born: June 27, 1971
Birthplace: The Lake District, England
Trivia: Studied architecture at Manchester University before applying to drama school. Performed in the year-long international tour of Geometry of Miracles. Joined the Royal Shakespeare Company in 2000, performing in As You Like It, Romeo and Juliet and The Comedy of Errors. Played Paul Milner in Foyle's War from 2002 to 2010. In 2006, starred as Charles in the first stage adaptation of The French Lieutenant's Woman.
Julian Ovenden (Actor) .. Andrew Foyle
Born: November 29, 1975
Birthplace: Sheffield, England
Trivia: To refer to British actor Julian Ovenden as a "thespian" marks the understatement to end all understatements. The son of Queen Elizabeth II's chaplain, Ovenden came of age in a regal environment and, at an early point, demonstrated his sharpest and clearest talent in the musical realm. By seven years old, Ovenden received an invitation to sing at St. Paul's Cathedral; by the age of 13, he won a musical scholarship to Eton College. A tenure at Oxford University on a choral scholarship followed, as did post-graduate studies at London's esteemed Webber-Douglas Academy of Performing Arts, which found Ovenden acting opposite such legends as Nigel Hawthorne and under the aegis of director Michael Grandage.Ovenden pursued film and television acting alongside his theatrical and musical work from the earliest stages of his career. His first high-profile filmed role arrived around 2002, when cast in the Working Title telemovie Come Together opposite James D'Arcy. A popular turn as a doctor on the British series The Royal ensued, as did a role in the widely viewed miniseries Foyle's War (as Andrew Foyle) alongside the revered Michael Kitchen (Out of Africa). In 2004, Ovenden put his vocal and dramatic talents to use for a single television project: the Arthur Seidelman-directed telemovie A Christmas Carol: The Musical, starring Kelsey Grammer as Ebenezer Scrooge and Jane Krakowski as The Ghost of Christmas Past. Ovenden played Fred Anderson in that film. Meanwhile, the actor continued to pursue both theatrical and cinematic projects with equal vitality. Ovenden also signed for a regular supporting role on the 2008 series drama Cashmere Mafia, produced by Darren Star; however, the series didn't make it past its first season.
Jake Harders (Actor) .. French Agent
Mark Berry (Actor) .. William Messinger
Amanda Pointer (Actor) .. Admiralty Receptionist
Samuel West (Actor) .. Lt. Col. James Wintringham
Born: June 19, 1966
Birthplace: Hammersmith, London, England
Trivia: One of Britain's more underrated actors, Samuel West first became known to international audiences in 1992 as the perpetually unfortunate Leonard Bast in the acclaimed Ismail Merchant/James Ivory adaptation of E.M. Forster's Howards End.The son of actors Timothy West and Prunella Scales, West was born in London on June 19, 1966. Taking to science rather than to acting when he was growing up, he attended Oxford University, where he planned to study physics. However, an interest in acting finally took hold, and West switched his studies to English and became involved with the University Experimental Theatre Club and Dramatic Society, touring Africa with it in 1986.Upon his graduation in 1988, West secured his first film role as a German aristocrat in Reunion. Although the film was critically well-received, it was largely unseen, and West subsequently did most of his work on television. His acclaimed performance in Howards End, for which he earned a British Academy Award nomination, gave him both greater respect and recognition. He went on to appear in a number of films of varying quality, doing particularly notable work in Persuasion (1995), Carrington (1995), and Jane Eyre (1996). He parodied the sort of period dramas in which he had made his name with his role as an upper-crust prig in Stiff Upper Lips in 1998, and that same year he finally broke through to modern dress in the Canadian film Rupert's Land, earning a Genie nomination for his portrayal of a clean-cut lawyer reluctantly dragged on an odyssey across the wilds of British Columbia. The following year, he was back in breeches and a frock coat for his bit part in Notting Hill, and that same year he could be seen taking to the sea in the popular British miniseries, Horatio Hornblower. In addition to his screen roles, West is known in his native country for his work on the stage, television, and radio, endearing many a listener to his deep, mellifluous voice.
Timothy Carlton (Actor) .. Admiral James Francis
Born: October 04, 1939
Ronald Pickup (Actor) .. Sir Giles Messinger
Born: June 07, 1940
Birthplace: Chester, Cheshire, England
Trivia: Trained at the RADA, Ronald Pickup made his London theatrical bow in 1964. Since that time, Pickup has played an abundance of Shakespeare on stage and television: his bravura 1984 performance as Titus Andronicus on the BBC/PBS Shakespeare Plays series can make the flesh creep even when one is only thinking about it. In films from 1968, Pickup has played such prominent roles as Stravinsky in the 1980 biopic Nijinsky. Even busier on television, he was seen as Randolph Churchill in the 1975 biopic Jennie and as Whitlock in the 1994 TV-movie Gone With the Wind-sequel Scarlet. He is also a regular or semi-regular in quite a few British TV series: Moving (1985), Oscar (1986), Fortunes of War (1987), Not with a Bang (1990) and The Riff Raff Element (1994). Additionally, Ronald Pickup has supplied the voice of Aslan in the TV adaptations of C.S. Lewis' "Narnia" stories.
Rupert Frazer (Actor) .. Commander Charles Howard
Born: March 12, 1947
Brian Poyser (Actor) .. Rev. Aubrey Stewart
Geoffrey Freshwater (Actor) .. Sergeant Eric Rivers
John Grillo (Actor) .. Watchmaker
Born: November 29, 1942
Angela Thorne (Actor) .. Lady Anne Messinger
Born: January 25, 1939
Goran Kostic (Actor) .. Jan Komorowski
Markus Napier (Actor) .. German SD Officer
Tony Haygarth (Actor) .. Leo Maccoby
William Scott-Masson (Actor) .. Jacques Dumont

Before / After
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