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BBC's I, Claudius drama series

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Edmond Dantès

Dantès the White
I_Claudius_titles.jpg


The acclaimed blackly comic historical drama series returns to terrestrial TV. Set amidst a web of power, corruption and lies, it chronicles the reigns of the Roman emperors - Augustus, Tiberius, Caligula and finally Claudius.


Based on

i-claudius.jpg
claudius-the-god.jpg


Synopsis
I, Claudius is a 1976 BBC Television adaptation of Robert Graves's I, Claudius and Claudius the God. Written by Jack Pulman, it proved one of the corporation's most successful drama serials of all time.

It starred Derek Jacobi as Claudius, with Siân Phillips, Brian Blessed, George Baker, John Hurt and Patrick Stewart.

I, Claudius follows the history of Rome, narrated by the elderly Claudius, from the death of Marcellus, nephew and son-in-law of Augustus, in the first episode to Claudius' own death in the last. The series opens with Augustus, the emperor of Rome, attempting to find an heir, and his wife, Livia, plotting to elevate her own son Tiberius to this position.

The plotting and double-crossing continue for many decades, through the conspiracy of Sejanus and the rule of the lunatic emperor Caligula, culminating in the seemingly accidental rise to power by Claudius.
Episode guide
1. A Touch of Murder

Rome, 24–23 BC. Emperor Augustus begins to favour his nephew Marcellus over his friend Agrippa, who leaves Rome in protest. Livia wants her son Tiberius to become Augustus' heir, so she secretly poisons Marcellus, who eventually dies. Augustus has Agrippa return to Rome, and to seal their renewed friendship, he gives his daughter Julia, Marcellus' widow, to Agrippa to be his wife, infuriating Livia, who wanted Julia to marry Tiberius. 
2. Family Affairs

Rome, 9 BC. Nine years have passed. Agrippa is dead and Tiberius has been forced to marry Julia, divorcing Vispania Agrippina, which has upset him. He meets Vispania secretly and strikes Julia, which angers Augustus. Augustus knows he was meeting Vispania but Livia says it wasn't in secret and she knew about it. Tiberius' brother Drusus, a general on campaign who favors a return to the Republic, smashes his leg by falling off a horse. His condition worsens under the oversight of Livia's personal physician and he dies in the presence of his wife, Antonia, and their recently born son Claudius. Augustus looks forward to sharing his power with his grandsons Lucius and Gaius when they come of age. 
3. Waiting in the Wings

Rome, AD 3–5. Gaius has died and Tiberius has been banished to Rhodes for his mistreatment of Julia. One day in the garden, the young Claudius catches a wolf cub dropped from an eagle's claws, leading a seer to predict that he will protect Rome in an hour of need. Livia tricks Lucius into revealing Julia's infidelities and a grief-stricken Augustus banishes her from Rome. The death of Lucius in a boating accident ends Tiberius' exile and he returns to Rome to be named, along with Postumus, as co-heir to Augustus' throne. 
4. What Shall We Do About Claudius?

Rome, AD 9. Three Roman legions have been massacred in Germania at the Battle of the Teutoburg Forest. Tiberius and Germanicus are dispatched to exact revenge. While Claudius is in the library researching his family's history he is advised by Pollio, the historian, to play up his infirmities to enhance his place in his family as a harmless fool, and thus no threat to anyone. Augustus has determined that Postumus will succeed him as Emperor, but Livia overhears this. She tells Livilla she knows of her affair with Postumus and that during the Republic there was civil war and that a single ruler is needed to bring peace, so the succession can't be disputed. With Livilla's help, Postumus is framed for rape. Postumus tells Augustus Livia has been killing those who could prevent Tiberius succeeding but is not believed. Before he is banished, Postumus tells Claudius his (correct) suspicions of all the people whom Livia has killed and reiterates the advice that Claudius should continue to play the fool. The episode ends with his marriage to Plautia Urgulanilla, who is so much taller than Claudius that he becomes the butt of his family's uproarious, mocking laughter at their wedding.
5. Poison is Queen

Rome, AD 13–14. Germanicus has defeated the Germans and returns to Rome in triumph. Claudius tells him of Postumus' suspicions and Germanicus passes this information on to Augustus. On a trip to Corsica, Augustus stops to see Postumus and, now aware of Postumus' innocence, promises to change his will in favor of Postumus. Livia learns of this from a Vestal Virgin and is able to convince her to let her see the will. Soon afterward Augustus falls ill. He recovers slightly when he begins to eat only food that he has grown himself and picked by hand, but his recovery is short-lived, the implication being that Livia poisons Augustus' figs while they still ripen on the vine. A Praetorian officer, Sejanus, is dispatched to kill Postumus and Tiberius prepares to take over as Emperor, being left two-thirds of Augustus' property while Livia takes the remaining third. 
6. Some Justice

Rome, AD 19–20. Tiberius, with Sejanus' help, is ruling with an iron hand. Only Germanicus is preventing total tyranny, but he dies in Syria under mysterious circumstances. His wife Agrippina accuses Piso and his wife Plancina of complicity in Germanicus' death, and they are tried in the Senate to avert any subversion of the courts. Martina, the poisoner, is hidden by Herod Agrippa, but she is found by Livia's agents. She reveals to Livia that Germanicus' own son, Caligula, aided her in bringing about his death by terrifying him into thinking he had been cursed. Threatened in court, Piso blackmails Livia and Tiberius with evidence that they approved of Germanicus' murder. Plancina nearly convinces Piso to commit suicide, saying Livia agreed their Family wouldn't be punished if this happened. When Piso has second thoughts, Plancina stabs him, bringing the trial to an end, and Agrippina and her friends have to be satisfied that at least "some justice" was done. 
7. Queen of Heaven

Rome, AD 23/29. Tiberius now only lives for his perversions, in which Caligula is only too happy to join. Sejanus oversees continual treason trials of notable citizens, and sleeps with Livilla, who becomes so enamored of him that she poisons her husband Castor to be able to marry Sejanus. Sejanus forces Claudius to marry his adopted sister Aelia, after telling him his wife is pregnant by another meaning he should divorce her. Anticipating her coming death, Livia confesses to Claudius all of her misdeeds and her fear that they will keep her locked in hell for eternity. She also reveals to Claudius that an unpublished Sibylline prophecy claims that he will become Emperor and makes him promise to make her a goddess when he rules so she can escape torment. 
8. Reign of Terror

Rome, AD 30–31. Tiberius has retired to Capri. Sejanus has divorced his wife and approaches Tiberius about marrying Livilla. Tiberius refuses as the marriage would mean Sejanus would be elevated in rank but suggests that he could marry Livilla's daughter Helen. This infuriates Livilla, who poisons Helen. Sejanus sets his final plans for taking power in motion by conniving in the banishment of Agrippina and her son Nero and having her other son Drusus arrested. Antonia discovers letters between Sejanus and her daughter implicating them in several deaths and a plan to murder Tiberius. Claudius smuggles the evidence to Tiberius under his Mother's orders. At Caligula's suggestion, Tiberius orders Macro to murder Sejanus, his family, and his followers. Meanwhile Antonia locks Livilla in her room and says she will stay there till she dies. 
9. Zeus, by Jove!

Rome, AD 37–38. Tiberius dies (actually smothered to death by Macro with Caligula's connivance), leaving Caligula and Gemellus as his joint heirs. Claudius' life-long friend Herod has returned to Rome in time for Caligula's ascension. Caligula passes popular decrees and the Senate make him Consul, he chooses Claudius as the other Consul despite Claudius not wanting this. Caligula displays signs of mental instability, falls into a coma, but then recovers, at which point he declares that he has become Zeus. Claudius hopes this will cause Caligula to be deposed and the Republic will be restored, but the Senate accept Caligula's claims of divinity. A Senator who told Macro during Caligula's coma he would give his life if Caligula lived is told by Caligula to commit suicide, failing to do so he is killed. Caligula has Gemellus killed and declares his sister Drusilla his wife and fellow goddess Hera. Antonia commits suicide, disgusted with the depths of depravity that her family and Rome have sunk to. Fearing that his child will become greater than he, Caligula tries to recreate the birth of Athena: as Zeus reportedly did with Hera, Caligula cuts his unborn child from his sister's belly and eats it. 
10. Hail Who?

Rome, AD 40–41. Claudius is living with the ex-prostitute Calpurnia in meagre circumstances. Caligula has turned the palace into a brothel where he sells the wives of high-ranking Senate members to the highest bidder during sexual orgies and forces Claudius to take money at the door. He takes his legions on a campaign to Germany to put down an alleged rebellion and then to the English Channel where he attempts to do battle with Neptune, and brings back shells as booty. He tries to kill Senators for not holding triumphs for this, despite having told them not to, but Claudius and his wife Caesonia convince him not to. He also makes his horse Incitatus a senator, and forces Claudius to marry Messalina as a joke. Cassius Chaerea, a leading general whom the Emperor continually mocks, forms a plan with several others to assassinate Caligula. They strike during the games held to celebrate Augustus, killing Caligula after luring him away from his German Guards through a side exit, his wife Caesonia, and their infant daughter Julia Drusilla. While the Praetorian Guard are looting the palace, they come upon Claudius and decide to make him emperor, despite Claudius saying he wants a Republic. 
11. Fool's Luck

Rome, AD 41–43.The leaders of the guard and Herod convince Claudius that he should take up the Imperial crown. Claudius in turn convinces the Senate of the same. Cassius is condemned to death but the other conspirators against Caligula are set free. Livia is finally deified and made a goddess. After successfully bearing Claudius children, Messalina convinces him to share the burdens of power with her. As Herod will soon be leaving to take control of the lands in the East that Claudius has granted him, Messalina suggests that Appius Silanus, a Senator, be brought in to assist her husband. Later her mother Domitia and Silanus marry. Before Herod leaves he warns Claudius that, as Emperor, Claudius must trust no one, not his advisors, not his wife, not even Herod himself. Messalina attempts to seduce Silanus and tells him that Claudius approves. Silanus then attempts to kill Claudius in the hopes of ending the line of depraved rulers. Messalina, with her mother's help, convinces Claudius of her innocence and Silanus is put to death. 
12. A God in Colchester

Rome, AD 47–48. Claudius is leading his troops in an invasion of Britain. Messalina's sexual excesses lead her to challenge the well-known prostitute Scilla to a contest to see who can take the most men in an evening; she wins easily. Claudius returns in triumph, and learns that Herod has organized a rebellion in the eastern provinces against his rule. Herod believes that he is the "King of the Jews", but he dies before completing his plans. Messalina takes Gaius Silius as her lover, and they divorce their respective spouses and marry, thinking that Rome will rally around them and proclaim them rulers. Forced to act, Claudius' servants Pallas and Narcissus enlist Calpurnia to tell the Emperor the truth. In the end he believes them and the conspirators are arrested and killed. As Claudius is mourning the fact that all whom he cared for are gone, he learns that the Britons have dedicated a temple to him in Colchester making him a god. 
13. Old King's Log

Rome, AD 54. Claudius' benevolent rule of Rome leads the populace to accepting an emperor, but Claudius feels that this was a mistake. He decides that Rome must come to hate its ruling family, overthrow it, and restore the Republic. To do this, he marries his niece Agrippinilla and adopts her son Nero, making him co-heir with his son Britannicus. Because of a prophecy, Claudius knows that Nero will become the next ruler of Rome, but he still tries to protect Britannicus by planning to send him to Britain so that he may take over later when Nero dies; unfortunately, Britannicus' sense of honor will not allow him to fall in with Claudius' plans and Claudius, knowing the ultimate future, must leave his son to his fate. Ready for his end, Claudius voluntarily eats a poisoned mushroom from his wife's fork and dies. Looking for Claudius' will, Agrippinilla and Nero come upon his autobiography and burn it. Lying on his bier, Claudius and the Sibyl, knowing that Britannicus, Agripinilla and Nero will ultimately die violently, have a good laugh over the fact that he buried another copy of his book to be found later. Claudius is told that though the Republic won't be restored Nero will be last of the Claudians and the Emperors that follow mostly won't be as bad. 
Airing: Currently on BBC Four. Numerous video releases.

mJaONAnEOF2Rc4jm4kzUS0A.jpg




It has aged somewhat, but it still retains its brilliance and a sophistication far beyond that portrayed in HBO's Rome. Siân Phillips is the stand-out performer throughout the series with her masterful depiction of Livia.
 

efyu_lemonardo

May I have a cookie?
Wow, nice to see this series get its own thread!
Classic television right here, even if I haven't watched it in years.

Edmond Dantès;54231360 said:
It's also a rare opportunity to see what Patrick Stewart would look like with a full head of hair.

Claudius+
I still call BS
 
I haven't seen this, but I think people in our mainstream culture give Claudius way to little credit.


Personally he is my favorite emperor. Why? Because he was one of those that did a lot of things right, despite being a ultimator, a dictator and ruler of a bloody empire.


He was weak, he was a limp, he was not handsome and he stuttered. Emperors were supposed to be demi gods. Closer to the actual gods than mere mortals. He didn't have the attributes and he was not a warrior.

But he was kind, he was smart, he was a strategist and he had this weird compassion for the well being of his world, which extended even out to slaves. He was the first emperor to give some basic rights to slaves, something which was not common in the world at that time.

He expanded the empire, and the legions won some great victories during his reign.
 

Edmond Dantès

Dantès the White
I haven't seen this, but I think people in our mainstream culture give Claudius way to little credit.


Personally he is my favorite emperor. Why? Because he was one of those that did a lot of things right, despite being a ultimator, a dictator and ruler of a bloody empire.


He was weak, he was a limp, he was not handsome and he stuttered. Emperors were supposed to be demi gods. Closer to the actual gods than mere mortals. He didn't have the attributes and he was not a warrior.

But he was kind, he was smart, he was a strategist and he had this weird compassion for the well being of his world, which extended even out to slaves. He was the first emperor to give some basic rights to slaves, something which was not common in the world at that time.

He expanded the empire, and the legions won some great victories during his reign.
Very well put and it certainly mirrors his depiction in this series.
 

Edmond Dantès

Dantès the White
Some trivia for episodes 4, 5 and 6.

Episode 4:
-Horace, the speaker at the banquet, actually died a good decade before the events of this episode.
This episode introduces Derek Jacobi as Claudius the young man.
-Unnamed in the series, 'Claudius’ Bride' was named Urgulanilla.
-Around this time, the unmentioned Agrippa-Julia daughter, Julia the Younger (Julilla) committed some adulteries and was also banished by her grandfather.
-Yes, Rocky Horror fans: That’s Patricia Quinn, Magenta herself (not to mention the title lips), as Livilla.
-John Castle (Postumus) had played the young Augustus in 1972’s Antony and Cleopatra, with Charlton Heston (according to Jacobi, an early contender for the role of Claudius) and Hildegarde Neil (Mrs. Brian Blessed) in the title roles.
-In her speech to Livilla, the beautiful rival Livia mentioned was Cleopatra.
-Brian Blessed would constantly crack his old-age makeup during the more emotional scenes (and George Baker- the complete opposite of grumpy Tiberius- didn't help matters by making jokes that had the actor laughing!).
-This is the only episode where no one dies.
Episode 5:
-Claudius' son by Urgulanilla was named Drusillus.
-The episode’s title comes from the novel. Claudius tells of how he came upon an ancient chest from Northern Syria. Inside the chest was a portrait with the title Poison is Queen. The portrait, created centuries before Rome, bears the uncanny resemblance of Livia. Also in the novel, Claudius cries out that title when informed of Augustus’ death.
-During the filming of Augustus’ death scene, the lights suddenly went out, frightening Brain Blessed (thinking it was the curse said to plague any adaptation of the novel) and causing a retake.
-The serial deviates from the novel in terms of the fate of Postumus. In the novel, Augustus managed to secretly spirit Postumus out of the island (replacing him with a double & changing the guards). After his grandfather's death, Postumus secretly meets up with Claudius, the latter sending a message to Germanicus for military aid in usurping Tiberius and Livia. But Livia intercepts the letter, learns Postumus' whereabouts, and has the prince arrested, tortured, and executed.
Episode 6
-Germanicus and Agrippina had ten children. Only six survived infancy. Only five of these children are portrayed in this series: Nero, Drusus, Drusilla Gaius Caligula, and Agrippina (here called Agrippinilla). The youngest, Livilla (called Lesbia by Graves), does not appear, although she is mentioned several times.
-Caligula's real name is Gaius. His popular title is a nickname meaning ‘little boot.’ He earned it from his father's soldiers, dressing up in Caliga- special army boots- for attention. Incidentally, Gaius hated his nickname.
-Although Plancina gets away with murder, a decade later she will be framed for treason and executed.
-At about this time, Julia, Augustus' daughter, Agrippina's mother, and Caligula's grandmother, died in her exile. Tiberius is said to have shortened her food supply, and she starved to death.
-Fiona Walker (Agrippina) had been married to director Herbert Wise. Another Mrs. Herbert Wise, Moira Redmond, portrays Domitia in "Fool's Luck" and "A God in Colchester." If that isn't enough nepotism, Barbara Young, who will play Agrippinilla in "Old King Log", is Mrs. Jack Pulman! (Pulman had his wife appear in several of his TV adaptation War and Peace, Crime and Punishment etc.)
 
Edmond Dantès;54231918 said:
Very well put and it certainly mirrors his depiction in this series.

That's awesome! I guess I need to check it out then. I saw a documentary(think it was BBC or History Channel) were each episode followed a different roman god.

You know.. for all the crazy obession with Games of Thrones, I think the game of the Roman Empire is pretty close at being just as apeshit insane and unbeliveable as GoT. Not in the super natural stuff but just.. the fact that these people actually lived.


I actually think about Cladius daily in everyday life. If I see handicapped people or people with burned faces or something, I always get really sad, but then thinking about him, it makes me optimistic about the whole thing.

It's one thing to be dealt a shitty hand in life, but then to defy your supposed destiny and kick ass. That's incredible!
 

Edmond Dantès

Dantès the White
Trivia for 7. Queen of Heaven.

-The children of Castor and Livilla were Julia (called Helen in this series) and Gemellus (the survivor of twins).

-One wonders where Claudius' son Drusillus went. Historically, he died around this time period, choking on a pear. Graves has Livia murder her great-grandson because Sejanus was planning to marry his daughter to the boy behind the matriarch's back.

-Livia gives Claudius the Sibylline verses. Here it is by Robert Graves "The Succession of the Hairy Ones":

A hundred years of the Punic Curse/ And Rome will be slave to a hairy man,/ A hairy man that is scant of hair,/ Every man's woman and each woman's man./ The steed that he rides shall have toes for hooves./ he shall die at the hand of his son, no son,/ and not on the field of war.

The hairy one next to enslave the State/ Shall be son, no son, of this hairy last./ He shall have hair in a generous mop./ He shall give Rome marble in place of clay And fetter her fast with unseen chains,/ And shall die at the hand of his wife, no wife,/ To the gain of his son, no son.

The hairy third to enslave the State/ Shall be son, no son, of his hairy last./ He shall be mud well mixed with blood,/ A hairy man that is scant of hair./ He shall give Rome victories and defeat/ And die to the gain of his son, no son-/ A pillow shall be his sword.

The hairy fourth to enslave the State/ Shall be son, no son, of his hairy last./ A hairy man that is scant of hair,/ He shall give Rome poisons and blasphemies/ And shall die from a kick of his aged horse/ That carried him as a child

The hairy fifth to enslave the State/ To enslave the State, though against his will,/ Shall be that idiot whom all despised./ He shall have hair in a generous mop./ He shall give Rome water and winter bread/ And die at the hand of his wife, no wife/ To the gain of his son, no son.

The hairy sixth to enslave the State/ Shall be son, no son, of this hairy last./ he shall give Rome fiddlers and fear and fire./ His hand shall be red with a parent's blood./ No hairy seventh to him succeeds/ And blood shall gush from his tomb.

-Urgulanilla's (Claudius' first wife) illegitimate daughter (sired by a freedman) was named Claudia.

-Some info about Thrasyllus' prophecy of this God who will die the same year as Livia: Graves puts Livia's death in 29 AD. At the time when I, CLAUDIUS was written, some historians set that year as the date of the Crucifixion.

-This is the first episode not to begin or end with Caesar Claudius.

-Neil Dickson, here portraying a Praetorian Guard, will reprise his role (well, the role is a Praetorian Guard under Tiberius) in the 1985 TV mini-series A.D.: ANNO DOMINI, starring James Mason (Tiberius), Richard Kiley (Claudius), Paul McEnery (Caligula), Ian McShane (Sejanus), Colleen Dewhurst (Antonia), Susan Sarandon (Livilla) and Damien Thomas (Herod Agrippa). Another player, Angela Morant, also portrayed Octavia in I, Claudius Episode 1.

-Caligula getting on his grandmother's death bed was a last-minute addition by John Hurt.
 

mclem

Member
I've only seen one episode of this when it was repeated some time ago, and all I can remember is that I managed to conflate two character's names into one - Postumus Agrippa - and got rather distracted by wondering if you can catch flu in Germany after you die.
 

Edmond Dantès

Dantès the White
"Rome, you are finished! Finished! You are despicable..."

Trivia for Episode 8: Reign of Terror
-Gallus was the man Vispania (Tiberius' first wife) married, as well as the son of Pollio (the author who befriends Claudius in "What Shall We Do About Claudius?"). He died in his prison cell of consumption.

-Agrippina's insult 'Blood-soaked Mud' is a quote previously given to Tiberius during his exile in Rhodes.

-Antonia's punishment for Livilla was foreshadowed in "Waiting in the Wings", when she scolded the girl to 'Go to your room, you shall have nothing to eat for the rest of the day!'

-In the novel, Aelia managed to escape her family's fate by being pregnant with Claudius' child. The daughter she produced, Antonia, is not mentioned in the series.

-What happens to Agrippina and her two eldest children? Agrippina, partially blinded by Tiberius' beating, was exiled and, despite force-feeding, managed to starve herself to death. Nero was pressured into suicide. Drusus starved to death in his prison cell, eating the stuffing of his mattress to no avail.

-Some broadcasts of this episode (particularly the original American broadcast on Christmas Day, 1977) would excise the scene of Macro ordering the rape of Sejanus' daughter.
 

Edmond Dantès

Dantès the White
Trivia - Episode 9: Zeus, By Jove!

"I was never really ill. I was undergoing a metamorphosis."
"Oh... was it painful?"
"It was like a birth... in which the mother delivers herself."

-Gemellus- the survivor of twins- was the son of Tiberius' son Castor and Livilla (although the novel suggests he might be Sejanus' love child).

-The Mutiny that Caligula ‘stopped’ happened in Lower Germany in 14 AD. The soldiers under Germanicus rebelled over a lack of wages. When they seized Agrippina and baby Caligula (whom they made their mascot), the soldiers evidently became remorseful and put down their arms.

-Caligula mentions sleeping with all three of his sisters. Drusilla, Agrippinilla (Agrippina the Younger) and Lesbia (Livilla), who is absent from this series (although her husband will appear in the next episode).

-Perhaps the greatest deviation Jack Pulman’s adaptation made from the novel is Drusilla’s fate. Although the novel accuses Caligula of killing his sister, any description about the how and why are not mentioned.

-There has been much question about how the episode was supposed to end. One account is that the ending is really what is broadcast, with the shocked Claudius leaving the door. Another account is that the scene would have continued with the door slowly opening to reveal Drusilla’s butchered corpse; a scene that so offended the BBC censors that it was deleted and scrapped.

-Macro would not long outlive Gemellus, Antonia, and Drusilla. Caligula condemned him for treason (conspiracy with his wife, whom Caligula had an affair).
 
I remember when I watched this as a kid with my dad. Enjoyed it then and tried to show my friends, but they were bored by it. I guess I was a strange kid. :/
 

Edmond Dantès

Dantès the White
Recently rewatched the series and I'm still taken aback by Siân Phillips' depiction of Livia.

The HBO/BBC2 reimagining has a lot to live up to, if it still goes into production. The rights were secured three years ago and not a whisper has been heard since. A dead project it may be and for the best.
 

Mollymauk

Member
Fantastic mini-series. The acting is out of this world. Don't be intimidated by it. It's thoroughly entertaining and very accessible.
 
Damn, I remember seeing this so many years ago. Livia was such a bitch. The acting in general is excellent and at times the show was genuinely quite funny. Blast from the past!
 
I've seen the back end of an episode with Brian Blessed in and I enjoyed what I saw. I liked how they hid what must have been a modest budget.
 

Currygan

at last, for christ's sake
I remember watching this so many years ago, and being blown away by the acting. I have to rewatch it asap
 

Edmond Dantès

Dantès the White
The acting was indeed superb from all involved. They did have superb source material to work with, which helped a great deal.

Some say that Derek Jacobi hammed it up with his depiction of Claudius. There was a degree of it yes, but on the whole he proved to be the right choice for Cladius.
 

Gorger

Member
I got this on DVD as well, fantastic show. Definitely give it a try if you haven't seen it.

It's not on Netflix unfortunately :(
 
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