Hunderby (TV Series)

2012·United Kingdom·30 min.
Hunderby (TV Series)
Non rated
Available on
None platform

Hunderby, set in the 1800s, features Helene (Alexandra Roach, The Iron Lady), a shipwreck survivor washed ashore near a small English village. There, she is swept off her feet by widowed pastor Edmund (Alex MacQueen, The Inbetweeners, This Is England 88) and the two soon marry, the puritanical Edmund believing his bride to be untouched by another man. But she has a history, a dark past that she cannot escape. As Helene moves into Edmund's home, she falls under the watchful eye of housekeeper Dorothy (Julia Davis) who is more than a little involved in her master’s life, and quite obsessed with his dead first wife, Arabelle - to whom Helene simply does not compare. While Helene battles to keep her past a secret, she must navigate Dorothy’s devious scheming, her husband's harsh critique and a potential new love interest. Also starring are Rufus Jones (Holy Flying Circus) as Doctor Foggerty, Rosie Cavaliero (Spy) as the Doctor’s crippled wife Hester, Jane Stanness (Nighty Night) as local gossip Biddy Ritherfoot and Rosalind Knight (Midsomer Murders) as Edmund’s mother Mathilde. Rebekah Staton (Spy) and Ben Bishop (Whitechapel) play frisky couple Annie and Tom, who are staff at Edmund’s home. Alexander Armstrong (The Armstrong & Miller Show) plays Brother Joseph from the local church, Daniel Lawrence Taylor (How Not To Live Your Life)is Geoff, a mute shipwreck survivor, and Kevin Eldon (This Is Jinsy) is a mysterious hunchbacked figure from Helene’s past, John Whiffin. 'The genius of Julia Davis comes to Sky Atlantic HD', said Lucy Lumsden, Head of Comedy for Sky. 'Her sick and twisted sense of humour has found its natural home and we can't wait to unleash it onto our customers.' Hunderby is Julia Davis’s first series since the award-winning Nighty Night. Along with Kathy Burke's Walking and Talking, it forms a raft of new comedy on Sky Atlantic. The series is a Baby Cow Production and is executive produced by Henry Normal, Armando Iannucci and Lindsay Hughes, and produced by John Rushton.