The sun has set on Channel 4’s period drama Much like the British Empire itself, Indian Summers has retreated into history. Channel 4 has confirmed that the period drama, set during the British Raj, will not be returning for a third series. “We’re incredibly proud of Indian Summers and have loved having it in the schedule, the channel said in a statement. “But with a number of new drama launches
DESPITE tropical heatwaves, long hours and vicious mosquito bites, Indian Summers star Jemima West still reckons she’s landed the best job on TV. Ask what Indian Summers star Jemima West misses most when she’s on location and the actress, who spends six months a year in the sweltering Malaysian heat, doesn’t hesitate. “I miss fresh air, wearing a coat and feeling the breeze in the evening,” sighs London-based Jemima. “In
A lot has changed for Alice, where do we find her at the start of season 2? Well three years have gone by and Alice is still in India, not in the place we thought we’d left her. She’s married to a man who no one knows is her actual husband that she left behind three years prior to that. He has come back and they are raising their son
Check out below the trailer for Indian Summers Season 2 ! Indian Summers – exclusive trailer for the second series: ‘Butter wouldn’t melt’ Jemima West, Julie Walters, Henry Lloyd-Hughes and Nikesh Patel will be joined by Rachel Griffiths, Art Malik and Sugandha Garg in the second series of Channel 4’s drama It’s back to the British Raj and the hill of Simla as Channel 4’s colonial period drama returns early
INDIAN Summers has been branded as the new Downton Abbey, and rightly so. The period drama, currently airing on Foxtel’s BBC First channel, centres on the divide between the British elite and lower classes. It also features lavish costumes and is beautifully filmed, thanks to its setting at the foothills of the Himalayas in 1932 India. The 10-part series traces the decline of the British Empire and the birth of