I, Claudius: Difference between revisions
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'''I, Claudius''' is a [[novel]] by [[Robert Graves]], first published in [[1934]], dealing with the life of the Roman emperor [[Claudius]]. Graves' interpretation of the story owes much to [[Tacitus]]. |
'''''I, Claudius''''' is a [[novel]] by [[Robert Graves]], first published in [[1934]], dealing sympathetically with the life of the Roman emperor [[Claudius]]. Graves' interpretation of the story owes much to [[Tacitus]]. |
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The book was to have been the subject of a [[1937]] film, produced by [[Alexander Korda]] and starring [[Charles Laughton]], but it was dogged by ill-luck, culminating in a serious accident involving the female star, [[Merle Oberon]], which caused filming to be abandoned. |
The book was to have been the subject of a [[1937]] film, produced by [[Alexander Korda]] and starring [[Charles Laughton]], but it was dogged by ill-luck, culminating in a serious accident involving the female star, [[Merle Oberon]], which caused filming to be abandoned. |
Revision as of 04:03, 28 January 2003
I, Claudius is a novel by Robert Graves, first published in 1934, dealing sympathetically with the life of the Roman emperor Claudius. Graves' interpretation of the story owes much to Tacitus.
The book was to have been the subject of a 1937 film, produced by Alexander Korda and starring Charles Laughton, but it was dogged by ill-luck, culminating in a serious accident involving the female star, Merle Oberon, which caused filming to be abandoned.
In 1975, the book, together with its sequel, Claudius the God, was finally adapted by the BBC and proved one of the corporation's most successful drama serials of all time. It starred Derek Jacobi as Claudius, Siân Phillips as Livia, John Hurt as Caligula and Brian Blessed as Augustus.