Plot
Len Green ( Pete Postlethwaite) is a bank robber. During his long career as a getaway driver, he has served many sentences and spent a fair proportion of his life behind bars. Now middle-aged, with a very expensive house, bought with the proceeds of the robberies, and an attractive wife, Gloria ( Geraldine James) and five daughters, four of whom are grown up – Faith ( Claire Rushbrook), Hope ( Kaye Wragg), Chastity ( Laura Rogers), Charity ( Caroline Hayes) and Dolores (Billie Cook) (the only one who is still a child) – to whom he is devoted, he resolves to change his lifestyle and "go straight". But having joined his Uncle Irwin ( Frank Finlay) in the family firm of undertakers, he is faced with many temptations, in the form of the seven deadly sins, which test his resolve to stay out of trouble. Len's friends ask him to help out with one last robbery. His wife, who can't accept that she will no longer have a steady income, steals a priceless necklace, which Len vows to return. And after so many years in prison, Len asks himself the questions: does his wife still love him? And can he still satisfy her in bed?Awards
Producer Liza Marshall won a Royal Television Society Award for Best Newcomer in 2001, and Ivory an Edgar Allan Poe Award for Best Miniseries in 2002. In the 2001 BAFTAs, the series was nominated for Best Actor (Postlethwaite), Best Actress (James) and Best Drama Series (Marshall and Ivory), but won none of these categories.Cast
* Pete Postlethwaite as Len Green * Geraldine James as Gloria Green * Caroline Hayes as Charity Green * Frank Finlay as Irwin Green * Philip Jackson as Mickey Thomas * Neil Stuke as Carl Rogers * Kenneth MacDonald as Oy * Kaye Wragg as Hope Green * Claire Rushbrook as Faith Blackwell * Denise Black as Matisse Clegg * Laura Rogers as Chastity Green * Amanda Abbington as Belinda Edgeley * Billie Cook as Dolores Green * Nick Raggett as Rabbit * Trevor Peacock as MaureyEpisodes
References
External links
* * {{DEFAULTSORT:Sins, The BBC television dramas 2000 British television series debuts 2000 British television series endings 2000s British drama television series 2000s British television miniseries British English-language television shows Television shows set in funeral homes Seven deadly sins in popular culture