She's Been Away
She's Been Away is a 1989 British television play by Stephen Poliakoff and directed by Sir Peter Hall. [1][2] In her final appearance it starred Dame Peggy Ashcroft, who won two awards at the Venice International Film Festival for her performance, as did Geraldine James.[3][4]
Plot
The closure of a mental institution threatens to leave the elderly Lillian (Peggy Ashcroft) homeless. Her wealthy nephew Hugh (James Fox) takes her in, putting additional strain on his wife Harriet (Geraldine James). Gradually, an awkward friendship develops between Harriet, on the verge of a nervous breakdown herself, and Lillian, who has spent fifty years as a mental patient.
gollark: This also implies that the perfect programming language does, in fact, exist. I wonder if anyone worked out which one it is.
gollark: Consider: it is better for a programming language to exist than to not exist. Therefore, the maximally great programming language exists. Macron does not exist. So it is not the maximally great programming language.
gollark: Well, I can actually disprove that.
gollark: Macron is not real and thus is bad.
gollark: The only language worse than Macron.
References
- "She's Been Away (1989)". BFI.
- "BBC One - Screen One, Series 1, She's Been Away". BBC.
- LLC, New York Media (2 December 1991). "New York Magazine". New York Media, LLC – via Google Books.
- "Volpi Cup for Best Actress". Portale di Venezia®.
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