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According to the excitement of that series that follows the romantic tale of Sophia Trenchard, a youthful wonderful girl from a middle class, who goes to the party of Duke of Wilmington, where she meets an attractive person with whom she begins to fall in love and numerous years after the fact, they are met, what provokes them and lead to numerous disclosure.
So: something to pass the time as the coronavirus curfew descends, or something to send you screaming into the streets and licking the first handrail you can find? The decision is yours.
This opening episode was, in truth, mostly hors d'oeuvres with little in the way of main course as the stars regurgitated the plot points for our edification.
The encounters between Anne Trenchard, Lady Brockenhurst and the elderly Duchess of Bedford, looking back at a past in which their experiences overlapped far more than they'd realised, were powerfully affecting.
Despite a few quibbles about its pacing, Belgravia's sleek six episodes provide the TV equivalent of a beach read romp, one that is engaging and ultimately very satisfying.
Greig, best known as a comic actress, invests Anne with both shrewdness and sensitivity, and the sort of quiet confidence that allows the merchant's wife to hold her own among the grandees.