Tudor Rose

They gave her a Perfect Lover, then Plotted her Excecution. A Romance which Out-Triumphed the Most Terrible Crime in History

8.1
19361h 20m

The tragic story of Lady Jane Grey, the young queen who reigned in England for nine days before she was executed.

Cast

Photo of Nova Pilbeam

Nova Pilbeam

Lady Jane Grey

Photo of Cedric Hardwicke

Cedric Hardwicke

Earl of Warwick

Photo of John Mills

John Mills

Lord Guilford Dudley

Photo of Felix Aylmer

Felix Aylmer

Edward Seymour

Photo of Leslie Perrins

Leslie Perrins

Thomas Seymour

Photo of Frank Cellier

Frank Cellier

Henry VIII

Photo of Gwen Ffrangcon Davies

Gwen Ffrangcon Davies

Mary Tudor (as Gwen Ffrangcon-Davies)

Photo of Martita Hunt

Martita Hunt

Jane's Mother

Photo of Miles Malleson

Miles Malleson

Jane's Father

Photo of C. V. France

C. V. France

Clergy at Execution

Photo of John Laurie

John Laurie

John Knox

More Like This

Reviews

G

CinemaSerf

7/10

Nova Pilbeam draws the short straw in this interesting, if not exactly enthralling, depiction of the power-struggles that followed the death of Henry VIII in England. Edward VI (a rather lively performance from the 17 year old Desmond Tester) is not the healthiest of young men, and those in his council - initially led by Edward Seymour (Felix Aylmer) then by the Earl of Warwick (Sir Cedric Hardwicke) try to manipulate the succession. The latter prevails and upon the untimely death of the young king, he places the Lady Jane Grey - whom Henry VIII directed be 4th in the line of his own succession (she was his great niece) - ahead of the Princesses Mary and Elizabeth and so she is now, reluctantly, the Queen. To cement her precarious position she is quickly married off to a rather jolly, put politically unaware Guilford Dudley (John Mills) - the son of Warwick, so he can consolidate his control over the new puppet queen. Unfortunately for him, Princess Mary (Gwen Davies) raises troops and subverts this cunning treason. The story is established history, and the plot follows it fairly honestly. Pilbeam does elicit some degree of sympathy as she is clearly a pawn in the games of others - and both Aylmer and an on-form Hardwicke manage to create some sense of the duplicity with which these two men sought to usurp the Royal authority. The sets and costumes look fine, the dialogue maybe a bit too wordy, but it even features some genuine music written by Henry VIII and if you like a good old historical drama, then this will happily pass 80 minutes.

You've reached the end.