Yahoo Italia Ricerca nel Web

Risultati di ricerca

  1. Adam Smith is a 1972 British series. Most episodes were written by Trevor Griffiths. The lead character was supposedly inspired by Denis Forman. [1] Plot. A Scots minister, following his wife's death, questions the purpose of his local ministry but finds it in his spiritual work for the community. Cast. Andrew Keir. Brigit Forsyth. Janet Munro.

    • Drama
  2. Adam Smith: With Andrew Keir, Kara Wilson, Freddie Earlle, Bill Gavin. A religious drama series in which a Scots minister, following his wife's death, questions the purpose of his local ministry but finds it in his spiritual work for the community.

    • (10)
    • 1972-01-23
    • Drama
    • 30
  3. Trivia. IMDbPro. All topics. Episode list. Adam Smith. Seasons. Years. 1. 2. S1.E1 ∙ Episode #1.1. Sun, Jan 23, 1972. Adam Smith is at a crisis point in his life. His wife Mary has died; it is the day of the funeral. Grief-stricken, Adam must now begin to pick up the pieces and search for a new role. Rate. S1.E2 ∙ Episode #1.2. Sun, Jan 30, 1972.

  4. Adam Smith. All Episodes 1972. Season. 1. All. Ads suck, but they help pay the bills. Hide ads with VIP. Status Ended. Network #<Network:0x00007fcbb32fb918> Premiered January 22, 1972. Runtime 1m. Total Runtime 12m (12 episodes) Country United Kingdom. Language English. Genres Drama.

  5. Adam Smith. 1 9 7 2 – 1 9 7 3 (UK) 39 x 30 minute episodes. A religious drama series from Granada in which middle-aged Church of Scotland minister Andrew Smith (Andrew Keir) – whose parish is in the small (fictional) country town of Lammerton (actually filmed in Gifford, 19 miles east of Edinburgh) – questions the purpose of his local ...

  6. Adam Smith (TV Series 1972–1973) cast and crew credits, including actors, actresses, directors, writers and more.

  7. Adam Smith was a Granada Television drama serial set in Scotland which ran over two series between 23 January 1972 and 23 March 1973. The stories were based around the work of a Church of Scotland minister, played by Andrew Keir, in a fictional Scottish village.