> Skip to content
[]
Play sample
  • Published: 21 May 2020
  • ISBN: 9781529128215
  • Imprint: BBC DL
  • Format: Audio Download
  • Length: 4 hr 38 min
  • Narrators: Juliet Aubrey, Olivia Vinall, Charles Edwards, John Heffernan

Middlemarch




George Eliot's beloved story of life, love and politics in an English town, as heard on BBC Radio 4 – plus bonus documentary In Our Time: Middlemarch

George Eliot's beloved story of life, love and politics in an English town

A jewel in the classic literature crown, Middlemarch was selected as one of the BBC’s ‘100 Novels That Shaped Our World’. Its epic arc takes in politics, tragedy, romance and comedy, interweaving multiple narratives to make up a thrilling ensemble tale.

Set in the 1830s, this ‘study of provincial life’ introduces us to young, idealistic Dorothea Brooke, who accepts a proposal from scholarly Edward Casaubon, hoping to forge a loving partnership of intellectual equals. But on honeymoon in Rome, she swiftly becomes disillusioned. Trapped in an unhappy marriage, she finds solace in her friendship with Casaubon’s cousin, Will Ladislaw – only for her controlling husband to suspect her of betrayal, and set out to test her loyalty.

Meanwhile, mayor’s son Fred Vincy embarks on a steep economic learning curve, risking his burgeoning relationship with Mary Garth. When he contracts typhoid, he is treated by the town’s new medical man, Tertius Lydgate, who becomes drawn to Fred’s sister, Rosamond. Eager to win her hand, the doctor seeks help from the wealthy Mr Bulstrode – a decision he will come to regret...

As their stories shift, viewpoints twist together and lives collide and realign in a compelling ‘convergence of human lots’ that shows us an entire world in microcosm. Juliet Aubrey stars as the Narrator, George Eliot, with Olivia Vinall as Dorothea, Charles Edwards as Casaubon and John Heffernan as Dr Lydgate.

Also featured is a bonus edition of In Our Time, in which Melvyn Bragg and guests discuss George Eliot’s classic novel, described by Virginia Woolf as ‘one of the few English novels written for grown-up people'.

Cast and credits
The Narrator, George Eliot – Juliet Aubrey
Dorothea – Olivia Vinall
Edward Casaubon – Charles Edwards
Dr Lydgate – John Heffernan
Will Ladislaw – Joseph Quinn
Arthur Brooke/Caleb Garth/Mr Trumball – Neil McCaul
Sir James Chettam – Hugh Skinner
Rev Farebrother – Miles Jupp
Nicholas Bulstrode – Adrian Scarborough
Celia – Lucy Reynolds
Peter Featherstone/Standish/John Raffles – Clive Hayward
Fred Vincy/Auction bidder – Will Kirk
Rosamond – Laura Christy
Mr Vincy/Mr Bambridge – Rick Warden
Mrs Cadwallader/Mrs Plymdale – Jessica Turner
Adolf Naumann/Barman – Adam Courting
Dr Hawley/Clerk – Greg Jones
Servant/Mrs Abel – Sinead MacInnes
Tantripp/Mary Garth – Scarlett Courtney
Mrs Garth – Alison Belbin
Letty Garth – Grace Doherty
Farmer/Mr Hopkins – Ikky Elyas
Tertius Lydgate – John Heffernan
Harriet Bulstrode – Rosie Cavaliero
Mrs Vincy/Farebrother’s aunt – Heather Craney

Written by George Eliot
Adapted by Katie Hims
Directed by Jessica Dromgoole and Tracey Neale

First broadcast BBC Radio 4, 23 November-7 December 2019

  • Published: 21 May 2020
  • ISBN: 9781529128215
  • Imprint: BBC DL
  • Format: Audio Download
  • Length: 4 hr 38 min
  • Narrators: Juliet Aubrey, Olivia Vinall, Charles Edwards, John Heffernan

Other books in the series

The New Penguin Book Of American Short Stories, From Washington Irving To Lydia Davis
A Dog's Heart
The Black Tulip
The Lady of the Camellias
Selected Poetry
On Sparta
Man and Superman
Saint Joan
Botchan
Military Dispatches

About the author

George Eliot

George Eliot was born Mary Anne Evans in Chilvers Coton, England in 1819 on an estate managed by her father. When her mother did she left school to run the household, continuing her education alone in the estate’s library. She was multi-lingual and steeped in classical literature by the time a series of her essays and translations led to an invitation to London to edit the prestigious Westminster Review—anonymously, for fear a female editor would put off readers. When nearly 40 she published the story collection Scenes of Clerical Life, under the pseudonym George Eliot, partly because she was living with a married man, radical publisher George Henry Lewes, and feared being shunned by the public. Bu tin 1849 her fist novel Adam Bede, with its startling realism and psychologically astute characterizations, caused a sensation—and prompted an imposter to claim authorship. Evans revealed herself and was indeed ostracized, although less so with each successful new book, from The Mill on the Floss to Silas Marner and Middlemarch. After 25 years together Lewes died and, still grieving, she married their banker, a man 20 years her junior. She died shortly thereafter in 1880.

Also by George Eliot

See all