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Beverley Cross (1931–1998)

Author of Clash of the Titans [1981 film]

18+ Works 652 Members 5 Reviews

About the Author

Image credit: Beverley Cross

Works by Beverley Cross

Associated Works

Clash of the Titans (1981) — Screenplay — 450 copies
The Six Wives of Henry VIII [1970 TV mini series] (1970) — Screenwriter — 30 copies, 1 review
Genghis Khan [1965 film] (1965) — Screenwriter — 12 copies

Tagged

Common Knowledge

Legal name
Cross, Alan Beverley
Birthdate
1931-04-13
Date of death
1998-03-20
Gender
male
Occupations
screenwriter
playwright
Relationships
Smith, Maggie (wife)
Nationality
UK
Birthplace
London, England, UK
Associated Place (for map)
England, UK

Members

Reviews

8 reviews
Beverley Cross' 1985 stage production of The Scarlet Pimpernel - the play of the novel of the play of the novel, so to speak!

A lot of the original text by Baroness Orczy is incorporated into the script, including dialogue between Marguerite and Armand (The Orchard), Chauvelin (The Accredited Agent) - and Sir Percy, in my favourite chapter, Richmond, which doesn't usually make the cut! The 1934 film is another obvious influence.

There are some bizarre changes, however. Suzanne de Tournay is show more rescued alone, which makes practical sense, but she then inherits lines spoken by her mother and brother in the book - including challenging Sir Percy to a duel! (Marguerite steps in and offers to fight her instead!) And the St Cyr family are renamed, randomly. A game of bowls at Blakeney Manor is introduced, along with a couple of songs, including 'Eldorado' by Edgar Allen Poe, from 1849! The ending sticks close to the book, apart from Marguerite pulls a gun on Chauvelin, and Brogard the innkeeper is now a 'hunchback' (and comes in for some very un-PC abuse).

I looked up the original actors - Donald Sinden, Joanna McCallum and Charles Kay - and they all look rather old for the roles, so I'm glad that I missed this production!

Edit: Apparently, this production was based on a prompt copy of the original stage play from 1905, with Fred Terry and Julia Neilson! Hence the great chunks of dialogue from the novel - which was written first but was only published after the success of the play. And the 1934 film obviously drew on the play, rather than the other way round!
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A demigod fights monsters so he can marry a princess.

1/4 (Bad).

Well that was awful. I expected it to be corny and clunky in execution, but I did not expect the basic story ideas to be this much of a disaster.
½

Awards

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Statistics

Works
18
Also by
3
Members
652
Popularity
#38,720
Rating
½ 3.4
Reviews
5
ISBNs
28

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