ITV's This Morning has launched its own spoof soap opera called Willoughfield.
As part of its soap week, the daytime television show will be airing four episodes to be played out over the course of this week.
Episodes centre around a mystery fire and star co-presenters Phillip Schofield and Holly Willoughby, soap guru Sharon Marshall, Denise Robertson and Sue Hill.
The first instalment aired today (May 13) and saw an arson attack at Phillip and Holly's pub, The Pholly Arms.
Phil, Denise, Sharon and Sue are the four main suspects for the crime, which has left Holly in peril.
Episode one can be found on This Morning's website here and the remaining three episodes will play out this week.
This Morning airs weekdays from 10.30am on ITV.
Digital Spy Soap Scoop video - press play below to watch Amie Parker-Williams reveal gossip on an Emmerdale van crash, EastEnders court hearing, Coronation Street...
As part of its soap week, the daytime television show will be airing four episodes to be played out over the course of this week.
Episodes centre around a mystery fire and star co-presenters Phillip Schofield and Holly Willoughby, soap guru Sharon Marshall, Denise Robertson and Sue Hill.
The first instalment aired today (May 13) and saw an arson attack at Phillip and Holly's pub, The Pholly Arms.
Phil, Denise, Sharon and Sue are the four main suspects for the crime, which has left Holly in peril.
Episode one can be found on This Morning's website here and the remaining three episodes will play out this week.
This Morning airs weekdays from 10.30am on ITV.
Digital Spy Soap Scoop video - press play below to watch Amie Parker-Williams reveal gossip on an Emmerdale van crash, EastEnders court hearing, Coronation Street...
- 5/13/2013
- Digital Spy
Originally published in 1982, Susan Hill's ghost story has been adapted for radio and TV, and a stage version has been running for more than 20 years in London's West End. Like Henry James's The Turn of the Screw, Hill's story is part of a succession of supernatural yarns planned to be told around the fireside at Christmas, but the narrator considers it too terrifying for the festive season and writes it down to be kept for a more fitting occasion. Jane Goldman's screen adaptation for the revived (or disinterred) Hammer studio has dispensed with this framing device. Instead, the young Edwardian hero, an inexperienced London solicitor, is dispatched right at the start to a flat, swampy coastal area of the Midlands to settle the affairs of a recently deceased widow, Mrs Drablow. For some reason he's called Arthur Kipps after the draper's assistant in Hg Wells's Edwardian novel Kipps,...
- 2/12/2012
- by Philip French
- The Guardian - Film News
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