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Sister Boniface Mysteries is a British cosy mystery detective period comedy drama television series, created by Jude Tindall, which is produced by BBC Studios and BritBox.It is a spin-off of Father Brown, as the Sister Boniface character was introduced in "The Bride of Christ", a 2013 episode of Father Brown.
She also played a one-off character called 'Thingy' in the 'Fashion Phonies' episode of CBBC's Hotel Trubble. In January 2020, it was announced that Watson would be reprising her Sister Boniface role for a new series called Sister Boniface Mysteries, with a ten-episode first series premiering on the streaming service BritBox. [3]
The Madame Blanc Mysteries; The Marlow Murder Club (TV series) Morning Show Mysteries; Mr & Mrs Murder; Mrs Sidhu Investigates; Murder, She Baked; Murder, She Wrote; Murdoch Mysteries; My Life Is Murder
Lorna Watson returned as Sister Boniface. She played the character in 2013 in the Father Brown episode "The Bride of Christ". [30] It was confirmed this series would air in early 2022, alongside the ninth series of the parent production. [31] After debuting on BritBox, Sister Boniface Mysteries aired on Drama, with the DVD available from 16 May ...
Recurring role. Series 1; episodes 1 & 2: "Hello You" and "I Wanna Take You to a Gay Bar" Ridley: Jenna Noble Series 1; episode 2: "Hospitality" 2023 Maryland: Lauren Main role. Mini-series; episodes 1–3 Sister Boniface Mysteries: Fliss Forsyth Series 2; episode 1: "Don't Try This at Home" The Power of Parker: Bev Main role. Series 1; 5 ...
The Seven Dials Mystery (TV series) Seven Dials Mystery (upcoming TV series) Shakespeare & Hathaway: Private Investigators; Shetland (TV series) Signora Volpe; Silent Witness; Sister Boniface Mysteries; Stay Close; The Stranger (British TV series) Strike (TV series)
The series Sister Boniface Mysteries features an episode dedicated to a "Doctor Who" parody. The episode includes spoofs of the eccentric Doctor, the time and space traveling TARDIS, and the longstanding android-esque alien villain Dalek. It also showcases the 1960s creation of the show, its "Whovian" fan following, and local conventions.
When television became popular in the late 1940s and 1950s, TV Westerns quickly became an audience favorite, with 30 such shows airing at prime time by 1959. Traditional Westerns faded in popularity in the late 1960s, while new shows fused Western elements with other types of shows, such as family drama, mystery thrillers, and crime drama.