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Flambards is a television series of 13 episodes which was broadcast in the United Kingdom in 1979 on ITV [5] [6] and in the United States in 1980. The series was based on the three Flambards novels of English author K. M. Peyton .
Flambards is a novel for children or young adults by K. M. Peyton, first published by Oxford University Press in 1967 with illustrations by Victor Ambrus. Alternatively, "Flambards" is the trilogy (1967–1969) or series (1967–1981) named after its first book. The series is set in England just before, during, and after World War I.
However, she is probably best known for her starring role as "Christina" in 13 episode miniseries Flambards (1979). [4] In her 1981 autobiography Why Didn't They Tell The Horses?, Mckenna states that when she had auditioned for the role of "Christina" in Flambards, she had never previously ridden a horse. Mckenna was so determined to gain the ...
Alan Parnaby is a British television and film actor whose career has spanned four decades and who perhaps is best known for playing William Russell in the period drama Flambards (1979). Career [ edit ]
Flambards in Summer is a novel for children or young adults by K. M. Peyton, first published by Oxford in 1969 with illustrations by Victor Ambrus. It completed the Flambards trilogy (1967–1969) although Peyton continued the story a dozen years later, and controversially reversed the ending in Flambards Divided .
Pamelyn Wanda Ferdin (born February 4, 1959) is an American animal rights activist and former actress. Ferdin's acting career was primarily during the 1960s and 1970s, though she appeared in projects sporadically in the 1980s and later years.
During the 1970s, her best-selling series Flambards was published in multiple languages, such as Italian, German, Finnish, and Swedish. [ 13 ] Writers who cite K.M. Peyton as an influence include Linda Newbery , whose young adult novel The Damage Done (2001, Scholastic) is dedicated "to Kathleen Peyton, who made me want to try."
Anton Diffring in an episode of One Step Beyond (1961). With numerous World War II film and television productions being produced in England from the 1950s, Diffring's "Germanic" physical type of blond hair, pale blue eyes and chiselled features saw him regularly cast in roles as Nazi military officers in films such as Albert R.N. (1953) and The Colditz Story (1955). [3]