Eve (British TV series)

Eve is a British children's science fiction series starring Poppy Lee Friar[1] that follows the adventures of a gynoid, a female android, named Eve (also known as Project Eternity) living with a family in suburbia, trying to make sense of human life as a teenage girl.[2]

Eve
Title card
Genre
Directed by
  • Adrian McDonwall
  • Jonathan Fox Bassett
  • Adrian Mead
Starring
Theme music composerPhilip Curran
Composer(s)Philip Curran
Country of originUnited Kingdom
Original language(s)English
No. of series3
No. of episodes36 (1 special) (List of episodes)
Production
Executive producer(s)
Producer(s)
  • Peter Gallagher
  • Jeremy Swimer
  • Wendy Griffin
  • David Chikwe
Editor(s)
  • Scott McCartney
  • Ben McKinstrie
Camera setupMulti-camera
Running time28 minutes
Production company(s)Leopard Drama
Argonon
DistributorBBC Worldwide
Release
Original network
Picture formatHDTV 1080i
Audio formatDolby Digital 2.0 (For UK) & Dolby Digital 5.1 (For Australia)
Original release5 January 2015 
8 January 2017

Eve launched on CBBC on 5 January 2015 with its 13-episode first series occupying a Monday afternoon slot in the channel's schedule. This was later followed by special airing on Christmas Day 2015. A 12-episode second series followed in 2016. The third series was first confirmed by a post on Poppy Lee Friar's Instagram account and began airing on Wednesday 19 October 2016 and concluded on 8 January 2017.

Written by children's writer Emma Reeves, Eve was co-created with David Chikwe, creative director of Blacklisted Films. Emma Reeves is best known for her writing in the shows of the Tracy Beaker series.

Cast

Main

  • Poppy Lee Friar as Eve, the protagonist of the series. Eve is a newly-awakened gynoid whose appearance is based on Mary Douglas during the 1970s. In public she assumes the guise of Will's cousin from the United States. Eve is socially inept and often unaware of the many dangers she often finds herself in, but with help from her adopted family she learns to pass for a human and decide her own course.
  • Oliver Woollford as Will Clarke, a teenage boy who awakened Eve and Dr. Clarke's son. He develops a strong relationship with Eve and holds a fierce desire to protect her, even at the cost of his own safety though his stubbornness often brings him into conflict with his family and friends.
  • Eubha Akilade as Lily Watson, a genius teenage girl and socially awkward hacker who is Will's best friend. She also forms a close friendship with Eve and despite occasional jealousy, is both fascinated by and protective of the often ignorant gynoid.
  • Elijah Ayité as Abe Watson, Lily's acquisitive little brother who affectionately refers to Eve as "Robo Girl". Though a constant annoyance to Will and Lily and largely unaware or uninterested in ethics or empathy, he actually cares deeply for Eve and maintains a moral code.
  • Ben Cartwright as Dr. Nick Clarke
  • Rhona Croker as Dr. Katherine Calvin, the antagonist of the first season; a brilliant but highly contemptuous and ambitious scientist and manager of Calimov Systems. She usually holds Nick and his family in little regard.
  • Jane Asher as Mary Douglas, the transhumanist main antagonist of the series and Eve's creator. She believes humans are good only for death and destruction and thus seeks to replace them with a species of artificial intelligence that will eventually shape the future of the entire universe.

Recurring

  • Shonagh Price as Maddy Watson
  • Richie Campbell as Viv Watson
  • Jenny Bede as Rebecca Clarke
  • Ellie Grainger as KT
  • Alex Sawyer as Michael Hoffman
  • Michael Wildman as Lord Hoffman
  • Peter Collins as Mr Gwenlan
  • Rory Barraclough as Chris
  • Paksie Vernon as Laurie
  • Chris Hegarty as Cain
  • Billy Ashworth as Zac and Adam

Episodes

SeriesEpisodesOriginally aired
First airedLast aired
1135 January 2015 (2015-01-05)25 December 2015 (2015-12-25)
2124 January 2016 (2016-01-04)21 March 2016 (2016-03-21)
31019 October 2016 (2016-10-19)8 January 2017 (2017-01-08)

Awards and nominations

Ceremony Award Nominee Result
2015 British Academy Children's Awards[3] Children's Performer in 2015 Poppy Lee Friar Nominated
2015 London Screenwriters’ Festival: British Screenwriters Awards[4] Best British Children's Television Emma Reeves, Andrew Yerlett, Joe Williams, Ann Marie Di Mambro, Vivien Adam and Kirstie Swain Nominated
2016 Writers' Guild of Great Britain Awards[5] Best Children's TV Episode Emma Reeves for "Control, Alter, Delete" Won
2016 Broadcast Awards[6] Best Children's Programme Eve Shortlisted
2016 Televisual Bulldog Awards Best Children's Programme Eve Nominated
2016 Royal Television Society Scotland Awards[7] Best Children's Programme Eve Won
2016 Royal Television Society Scotland Awards[7] Best Sound John Cobban / 422.tv Won
gollark: ```lisp (let (qsort xs cont) (cond ((= xs '()) (cont '())) (true (do (let h (head xs)) (let t (tail xs)) (let part_result (partition_rec t (lambda (x) (< x h)) '(() ()))) (qsort (head part_result) (lambda (ls) (qsort (snd part_result) (lambda (rs) (cont (+ ls (list h) rs)))))) )) ))```Here is a sorting program.
gollark: Lisp is basically where you take a functional dynamically typed language and replace all the syntax with nested brackets.
gollark: As such, exactly 3 people will buy it.
gollark: The trouble with this is that despite being HIGHLY ethical, it costs many times what new generally much more powerful laptops do.
gollark: Well, you could use micropython.

References

  1. "Poppy Lee Friar". IMDb. Retrieved 27 September 2015.
  2. "BBC - Eve - Media Centre". bbc.co.uk. Retrieved 27 September 2015.
  3. "Children's in 2015 | BAFTA Awards". awards.bafta.org. Retrieved 28 January 2016.
  4. "The British Screenwriters' Awards 2015 #LondonSWF". London Screenwriters' Festival. 26 October 2015. Retrieved 7 June 2016.
  5. "Writers' Guild Award winners 2016 - Writers' Guild of Great Britain". Writers' Guild of Great Britain. Retrieved 28 January 2016.
  6. "Shortlist | Broadcast Awards". Broadcast Awards. Retrieved 28 January 2016.
  7. "RTS Scotland Awards 2016 | Royal Television Society". rts.org.uk. Retrieved 7 June 2016.
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