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It is a series of powerful dramatic events that reveal the life of this woman who lived in 1832 in Halifax, the cradle of the Industrial Revolution. Ann seems to be facing more benefits in her life, which she is trying to keep in front of her in general. The series will explore Anne Lester's relationships at home with her family, her servants and her industrial opponents, who will use any dirty tricks they can drop. It is a series of relationships that Ann is engaged in at the core of her life, which she continues to co-exist with.
On the whole, though, the deliberately clashing elements of Gentleman Jack are the things that make it work. They successfully communicate just how unusual Lister was and how adamantly she insisted on being herself.
Between Wainwright's crisp, fair-minded scripts and star Suranne Jones' flawless performance, it's tempting to believe that Anne Lister was the most fascinating person of the 19th century...
At first blush, this eight-episode series may look more PBS than HBO, but the second blush is a doozy -- and it would probably send "Masterpiece" pledge-drivers straight to the fainting couch.
Gentleman Jack treads a meandering line-sometimes satisfying but often frustrating, a character study whose central figure remains opaque despite her grand illustration.
It's disappointing to see the show back off potentially rich opportunities to translate Anne's interiority, which inspired the entire series after all, to the screen.
Lively, tongue-in-cheek at times and enormously playful, Gentleman Jack is an utter gem of British drama. You can't take your eyes off the central character, and you're drawn into her world and her heart with exquisite ease.
Watch [Gentleman Jack] for Jones' forceful, vivacious, smart-as-hell portrayal of a defiant iconoclast who chose to value her own integrity over whatever it was society needed her to value.