'Masterpiece' Orders Up 'Mrs. Churchill' Limited Series

'Masterpiece' Orders Up 'Mrs. Churchill' Limited Series

The Television Critics Association press tour dedicates two days to PBS' myriad offerings, with one of the leading slots going to Masterpiece. This year, the anthology series trumpeted the ongoing hits All Creatures Great and Small and Miss Scarlet and The Duke, and the highly anticipated Magpie Murders, which debuts in the fall. But the panel also had one more surprise, a new limited series in development in partnership with Maven Screen Media, based on the life of Clementine Hozier. She became the wife of the famed war-time Prime Minister, Winston Churchill.

Though there have been multiple series and movies focused on Winston Churchill, from his pre-war years, to his post-war attempts at a comeback, there has been little in the way of focusing on his wife, who only has a few biographical books on her life. And yet, Clementine Hozier was a fascinating woman. Legally, she was declared the daughter of Sir Henry Hozier and Lady Blanche Ogilvy (daughter of the 10th Earl of Airlie). However, Hozier's well-known infertility issues and Lady Blanche's tendency to take lovers means her paternity has been a subject of much debate. (Lady Blanche insisted Clementine's biological father was horseman Capt. William George "Bay" Middleton, no relationship to Duchess Catherine.)

The five-part drama will delve into Clementine Churchill's public and private life. Writer Margaret Nagle (The Good Lie) has been commissioned to write an original script, the working title of which is Mrs. Churchill. She will executive produce alongside Maven founders Celine Rattray and Trudie Styler, Masterpiece head Susanne Simpson, and Origin Pictures' David Thompson and Sayako Teitelbaum. Simpson called the forthcoming series "the untold story of a fiercely Independent and very modern heroine who risked everything to save her country and the world from fascism--and her husband from himself. Clementine's story has slipped through the cracks of history."