Ooh, I 'd forgotten the Dr Bell thingy.
Channel 5 were calling the Roman thing Nero... (over 3 hours and I think the first of 2 parts) but on a de-boarded site of all our acquaintance it appears to be Imperium: Nero. It is, by the way, horrifically inaccurate historically (OK so is Shakespeare's Richard III, I know) but it appears - I've only managed the first hour so far - to be finding the warm, fluffy, slightly emo Nero that we haven't read much about. John Simm also phones in his Caligula - it's the Master with a curlier wig. I'll have to watch a bit more and decide whether it's so bad it's good - hope you can track it sone and compare notes.
Very interesting. Your description of an 'emo Nero' is hilarious--I love the need to revise every historical portrayal to soothe current sensibilities. Thanks very much for that information, because I'm eager to find this. When I do, I'll be sure to post it here. BTW, a couple of other of Ian's works that are worth seeing:
A Midsummer Night's Dream: really beautiful Peter Brook screen production of the legendary RSC staging with Ian and Judy Dench as Oberon and Titania
Marat/Sade: Ian gives a tour de force performance as Jean-Paul Marat
Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy: You've likely seen this, but if not it's a must
Number 10: 'Underdog', the story of the first Labour Prime Minister, Ramsay Macdonald
Mountbatten: Ian seemed an odd choice to play Indian PM Nehru, but he's quite convincing in the part
and
Mistral's Daughter: I hesitate to mention this one; a really awful US television adaptation of one of those trashy 'glamor' novels, but Ian is excellent in his role as a Jewish art dealer and pretty much redeems the film by his appearances in it.