• Source: Renaissance: The Blood and the Beauty
    • Renaissance: The Blood and the Beauty is a three-part BBC docu-drama series starring Charles Dance as Michelangelo Buonarroti.


      Premise


      The series looks at the atmosphere of power politics and rivalry within which some of the greatest works of art of Michelangelo, Leonardo da Vinci and Raphael.


      Cast


      Charles Dance as Michelangelo Buonarroti
      Eddie Mann as young Michelangelo
      Jonny Glynn as Leonardo da Vinci
      Joshua Duffy as Raphael
      Sophie Okonedo as the narrator
      Laurent Winkler as Pope Julius II
      Barnabás Réti as Ludovico Sforza
      Károly Hajduk as Girolamo Savonarola
      Ferenc Pataki as Lorenzo de' Medici


      Production


      The three-part series is made by the BBC in collaboration with US network PBS. The series features actor Charles Dance as the artist Michelangelo. The script uses language taken directly from Michelangelo’s correspondence. Dance's part in the series was filmed in Islington, London. The series has contributions from contemporary artists such as Antony Gormley, Alison Lapper, and David LaChapelle as well as other experts.
      The series has Sophie Okonedo as the narrator, and also features Eddie Mann as young Michelangelo, Jonny Glynn as Leonardo da Vinci, Joshua Duffy as Raphael with Laurent Winkler as Pope Julius II, Barnabás Réti as Ludovico Sforza, Károly Hajduk as Girolamo Savonarola and Ferenc Pataki as Lorenzo de' Medici.
      In October 2024, the series was acquired by Movistar+ in Spain.


      Broadcast


      The series premiered in the United Kingdom on 2 December 2024 on BBC Two.


      Reception


      In The Guardian Hollie Richardson called it a "classy documentary drama series". Anita Singh in The Daily Telegraph praised the performance of Dance as Michelangelo, describing him as "great, bringing all the gravitas and wisdom you would expect", but questioned the decision not to have speaking parts for the actors portraying Leonardo da Vinci or Raphael. Dan Einav in The Financial Times favoured the documentary aspect of the series mentioning that some viewers will enjoy being "eruditely guided through some of the world’s most extraordinary paintings and sculptures by a line-up of art historians, biographers and artists".


      References

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