British TV Star Brenda Blethyn Brings Classic Novel

Brenda Blethyn teams with emerging star Jessica Reynolds in a new adaptation of A Woman of Substance

People Brenda Blethyn, right, with co-star at a screening for A Woman of Substance, on Mar. 3, 2026Credit: Ben Whitley/PA Images via Getty

NEED TO KNOW

  • The pair play Emma Harte at different stages of her rags-to-riches story

  • The original TV show was broadcast in the U.S. in 1985 following Barbara Taylor Bradford's bestselling novel

For veteran actorBrenda Blethyn,playing the heroine in the new dramatization of 1980s blockbusterA Woman of Substancehad a poignant resonance.

Blethyn, who plays Emma Harte inBarbara Taylor Bradford's bestselling story and is most recognized stateside for her role as Mrs. Bennet in the 2005 adaptation ofPride & Prejudice, has roots in a similar background.

Like Emma, who starts out in life as a maid to a tyrannical family in an old country mansion, Blethyn's mother was also a kitchen maid. "Any story about someone who triumphs over adversity is good to do," Blethyn said at an exclusive screening in London.

"My mum started life as a skivvy in a big house, down in Kent [England] — it's where she met my dad — he was a chauffeur. She used to tell me loads of stories about how hard the work was. And, you know, for very little pay. She would work about three or four jobs a day to make ends meet," the actress said.

Brenda Blethyn with showrunners Roanna Bardsley, left, and Katherine Jakeways at a screening of A Woman of Substance, in London on Mar. 3, 2026Credit: Ben Whitley/PA Images via Getty

Blethyn, 80, added, "We were very, very poor growing up. But mum and dad always used to say you're as good as anybody else and if you work hard, you can achieve it," she told a screening in London. "That's the work ethic that Emma's mother instills upon her, saying the plan with the capital P is go for it, work hard."

Jessica Reynolds (OutlanderandHouse of Guinness) plays the younger version of Emma, emerging from poverty while working as a maid. Reynolds and Blethyn hadn't met until Blethyn headed to the Yorkshire hills to see Reynolds doing one of her scenes.

"Jessica came out of the house that was Emma's home, and we sort of looked at each other across the moor," she recalled adding she called out "Emma!" to her costar.

Jessica Reynolds, left, and Brenda Blethyn in London on Mar. 3, 2026Credit: Ben Whitley/PA Images via Getty

Reynolds — who calls her costar an "icon" — adds, "It really did feel quite romantic. It was a really beautiful moment. We didn't say much, but we gave each other a big hug, it was beautiful."

She talked about how she initially dismissed auditioning as she didn't think her Irish background would work for the producers. She thought there would be many other actresses who were "going up that are gonna be able to step up to that in a way that well, in my head, that I wouldn't be able to," she said.

After landing the role, Reynolds said she was "so immersed in her . . . I stayed in the accent. I was like speaking in a Yorkshire accent in my sleep, no joke like. One morning like I woke up in the middle of the night and started speaking in a Yorkshire accent."

"She was a real part of me and she, she goes through such a journey, such ups and downs." She said that her character and her were so "bound together" that she "wrote a wee note" to say goodbye to her.

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Another star of the production is the stunning and sometimes harsh Yorkshire countryside and producers have used the same country mansion – Broughton Hall – that doubled up as fictional Fairley Hall in the original TV version in the 1980s.

The eight-parter will be shown in the U.S. on Britbox in the coming months.Channel Fourwill broadcast the series in the U.K. on Mar. 11. An original adaptation of the book was an international hit in 1984 and 1985, starringJenny Seagroveand Deborah Kerr.

Jessica Reynolds who plays the young Emma Harte, at a screening in London on Mar. 3, 2026Credit: Ben Whitley/PA Images via Getty

News of the new adaptation came in the wake of Barbara Taylor Bradford's death at 91 in November 2024.

While Bradford wasn't able to see the second dramatization of her first hit book, she had been aware of its production and took a keen interest in its early progress.

A Woman of Substancewas the book that made her a name internationally. Published in 1979, it stayed on theNew York Timesbestseller list for 43 weeks. She went on to write 39 other novels includingThree Weeks in Paris(2002),To Be the Best(1988), and her most recent titleThe Wonder of It All(November 2023), selling more than 90 million copies in total.

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The author was born in May 1933 and was raised in Leeds, Yorkshire, in northern England. A voracious reader, she was the only child in the city to be allowed two library cards, and sold her first short story to a magazine at age 10.

At 15, she left school to embark on her writing career and joined the U.K. newspaper,Yorkshire Evening Post. She became a reporter a year later and was named its first woman's editor by age 18.

At age 20, Taylor Bradford moved to London and worked as a columnist and editor on the British national newspapers. A pinnacle of her life was when the celebrated author was awarded an OBE for her services to literature byQueen Elizabeth IIin 2007.

In May 2025, much of her collection of jewelry, art — and even her typewriter — was auctioned.

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British TV Star Brenda Blethyn Brings Classic Novel “A Woman of Substance” to Screen

Brenda Blethyn teams with emerging star Jessica Reynolds in a new adaptation of A Woman of Substance NEED TO ...
Damon Stoudamire fired as Georgia Tech basketball coach after 3 years

Georgia Techhas decided to fireDamon Stoudamireas its coach following a three-year stint, the school announced Sunday, March 8.

USA TODAY Sports

The Yellow Jackets made the move one day after their 79-76 loss to Clemson in the last game of the regular season. With a 2-16 mark in Atlantic Coast Conference play, Georgia Tech finished 18th out of 18th in the league and did not qualify for theACC tournament.

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With Saturday's loss, the Yellow Jackets ended the season on a 12-game losing streak. The last win for Georgia Tech was a 78-74 road win over North Carolina State on Jan. 17. The Yellow Jackets won just two out of 17 games since the calendar flipped to 2026. They ended 2025 at 9-5.

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Stoudamire, who played in the NBA for 13 years, went 42-55 in three seasons with Georgia Tech. The Yellow Jackets failed to make the NCAA Tournament under Stoudamire, who replaced Josh Pastner following a seven-year stint.

Georgia Tech owes Stoudamire $2.6 million during the next two years for the remainder of his contract, unless he takes another job.

Georgia Tech has not made an NCAA Tournament appearance since the 2020-21 season and has just four appearances since finishing as the runner-up in the 2004 tournament to Connecticut.

Prior to taking the job with the Yellow Jackets, Stoudamire was an assistant coach for the Boston Celtics. He also coached Pacific from 2016 to 2021, posting a 71-77 record in five seasons with the program.

Stoudamire played college basketball at Arizona from 1991-95 before becoming a first-round pick in the 1995 NBA Draft by the Toronto Raptors. He was rookie of the year for the Raptors in 1995 and also played for the Trail Blazers, Memphis Grizzlies and San Antonio Spurs.

Damon Stoudamire coaching record

  • Pacific (2016-17): 11-22, 4-14 WCC

  • Pacific (2017-18): 14-18, 9-9 WCC

  • Pacific (2018-19): 14-18, 4-12 WCC

  • Pacific (2019-20): 23-10, 11-5 WCC

  • Pacific (2020-21): 9-9, 6-7 WCC

  • Georgia Tech (2023-24): 14-18, 7-13 ACC

  • Georgia Tech (2024-25): 17-17, 10-10 ACC

  • Georgia Tech (2025-26): 11-20, 2-16 ACC

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:Ga Tech fires Damon Stoudamire as men's basketball coach

Damon Stoudamire fired as Georgia Tech basketball coach after 3 years

Georgia Techhas decided to fireDamon Stoudamireas its coach following a three-year stint, the school announced Sunda...
Bill Maher reveals what Trump texted him after their White House dinner

Bill Maheris hitting back asPresident Donald Trumpcontinues to bash him on social media.

USA TODAY

On the March 6 episode of "Real Time," the comedian addressed the fact that he was the subject of several of Trump's Truth Social posts earlier in the day. Without comment, the presidentsharedmultiplenews articlescovering his previous remarks slamming Maher as a jerk.

After pointing out that these posts were coming amid the United States'conflict with Iran, Maher expressed bewilderment and said, "This is getting weird."

Trump previously lambasted Maher in a Truth Social post in February, sayingit was a "total waste of time"for the two to have dinner together at the White House in 2025. The dinner was set up by their mutual friend Kid Rock, and Trump complained that Maher's HBO show has been "very boring" and "ANTI TRUMP" ever since they sat down together.

On his latest episode, Maher devoted a segment to responding to Trump's post. He alleged that Trump texted him "soon after" their dinner last year to complain that "I was still part of the lunatic left" and say that Trump "should have won a Nobel Prize for ending wars," to which Maher said he responded, "Yeah, and I should have won 20 Emmys."

According to Maher, he and Trump "argued for a while" via text, and Trump "ended by saying, 'Bill, you know what? Don't change. I wouldn't know what to do with you if you did.' "

"OK, that's the normal human being I saw the night we broke bread, and as long as I think there's even a spark of a possibility of bringing that guy out more, I will not consider the dinner a waste of time, even as I now see we're back to name calling," Maher said.

Bill Maher, right, responded to President Donald Trump's Truth Social post about him on the March 6 episode of "Real Time."

Maher objected to several of the claims Trump made in his Truth Social post about the dinner, maintaining that despite what the president said, he didn't "ask for" the dinner, he wasn't "nervous" or "scared," and it wasn't a "quick" sit-down.

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"I was having a good time," Maher said. "So were you, Don, because we were talking like real humans, not like that crazy act you put on in public."

Bill Maher hits back:Comedian responds to President Trump's scathing post about their dinner

Maher went on to show clips of him giving Trump credit for some things he has done in office to illustrate that he doesn't suffer from "Trump derangement syndrome" like the president has claimed, though he argued Trump is suffering from "Bill Maher derangement syndrome." Maher noted he has defended his decision to have dinner with Trump, even as some on the left criticized him for doing so.

<p style=Comedian Jimmy Kimmel's late-night talk show, "Jimmy Kimmel Live!", will resume production after it was pulled off the air Sept. 17, following comments he made in the wake of Charlie Kirk's killing. Kimmel, a frequent critic of Donald Trump, often earned the ire of the president.

After the announcement, Trump urged other networks to do the same. Scroll to see the other late-night talk show hosts that have feuded with the president over the years.

" style="max-width:100%; height:auto; border-radius:6px; margin:10px 0;" loading="lazy" /> <p style=In 2016, Jimmy Fallon interviewed Trump ahead of the election, ruffling the then-candidate's signature orange hair. After the interview received backlash, Fallon said he regretted parts of the interview. In response, Trump took to social media to criticize the "Tonight Show" host, writing: "@jimmyfallon is now whimpering to all that he did the famous 'hair show' with me (where he seriously messed up my hair), & that he would have now done it differently because it is said to have 'humanized' me-he is taking heat. He called & said 'monster ratings.' Be a man Jimmy!"

Fallon is pictured here at the Met Gala on May 5, 2025, in New York City.

" style="max-width:100%; height:auto; border-radius:6px; margin:10px 0;" loading="lazy" /> <p style="The Daily Show" host Jon Stewart has a history of heated exchanges with Trump.

In 2013, Trump tweeted, "I promise you that I'm much smarter than Jonathan Leibowitz - I mean Jon Stewart @TheDailyShow. Who, by the way, is totally overrated." Stewart is a sharp critic of Trump, often taking aim at the political movement he has created.


Here, Stewart is pictured at "The Daily Show" official Emmy Screening on June 7, 2025, in Los Angeles.

" style="max-width:100%; height:auto; border-radius:6px; margin:10px 0;" loading="lazy" /> <p style=John Oliver, a "Daily Show" alum who now hosts "Last Week Tonight" is also a frequent Trump critic, and feuded publicly with the president over a potential show appearance in 2015.

Oliver said he wasn't interested in having Trump on his show, which Trump responded to on X, writing: "John Oliver had his people call to ask me to be on his very boring and low-rated show, I said 'NO THANKS' Waste of time & energy!" Oliver refuted that report.


Here, Oliver is pictured in at the 77th Primetime Emmy Awards on Sept. 14, 2025, in Los Angeles.

" style="max-width:100%; height:auto; border-radius:6px; margin:10px 0;" loading="lazy" /> <p style=When CBS announced the network was terminating "The Late Show with Stephen Colbert" after the 2025-2026 season, Trump took to social media to celebrate.

"I absolutely love that Colbert got fired, his talent was even less than his ratings," the president wrote. Among his late-night peers, Colbert was among Trump's sharpest critics.

Colbert is pictured here at Apple TV+'s Primetime Emmy party red carpet on Sept. 14, 2025, in West Hollywood.

" style="max-width:100%; height:auto; border-radius:6px; margin:10px 0;" loading="lazy" /> <p style=Seth Meyers, the host of "Late Night" on NBC is a frequent critic of Trump and his administration.

The ire, it seems, is mutual, with the president writing previously on social media: "How bad is Seth Meyers on NBC, a 'network' run by a truly bad group of people - Remember, they also run MSDNC. I got stuck watching Marble Mouth Meyers the other night, the first time in months, and every time I watch this moron I feel an obligation to say how dumb and untalented he is, merely a slot filler for the Scum that runs Comcast."

Meyers is pictured here at SiriusXM's "The Howard Stern Show" on June 17, 2025, in New York City.

" style="max-width:100%; height:auto; border-radius:6px; margin:10px 0;" loading="lazy" />

Jimmy Kimmel, Jon Stewart, see late-night hosts who have beefed with President Trump

Comedian Jimmy Kimmel's late-night talk show, "Jimmy Kimmel Live!", willresume production after it was pulled off the airSept. 17, following comments he made in the wake of Charlie Kirk's killing. Kimmel, a frequent critic of Donald Trump, often earned the ire of the president.After the announcement, Trump urged other networks to do the same. Scroll to see the other late-night talk show hosts that have feuded with the president over the years.

"Despite all the hate I got from my side, I never threw you under the bus and said, 'Oh, you're right, I shouldn't have ate steak with Hitler,' because that's stupid," Maher said, addressing Trump.

At the same time, Maher told Trump that there's "lots of stuff you do that is not my idea of success, and I have every right to say so in a democracy."

Trump calls Bill Maher a 'jerk':The president says their dinner was a 'total waste of time'

Maher previously addressed Trump's post about him on the Feb. 20 episode of "Real Time." The comedian said he "didn't think" his dinner with Trump was a waste of time and suggested Trump was upset because he expected Maher would stop criticizing him after their meeting.

"I never said I would!" Maher said. "I know how women feel now: A guy buys you dinner and then expects you to put out. I'm not that guy."

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:Bill Maher describes texts with Trump after White House dinner

Bill Maher reveals what Trump texted him after their White House dinner

Bill Maheris hitting back asPresident Donald Trumpcontinues to bash him on social media. On the March 6 epis...
Mi Hyang Lee wins Blue Bay for first LPGA victory in 8 years

South Korea's Mi Hyang Lee overcame a pair of double bogeys on the front nine and recorded a birdie on the final hole to seize a one-stroke win at the Blue Bay LPGA on Sunday at Hainan Island, China.

Field Level Media

Lee, 32, won her third LPGA title and first since capturing the 2017 Women's Scottish Open after firing a 1-over-par 73 on Sunday to finish with an 11-under 277 at the Jian Lake Blue Bay Golf Course.

She finished one stroke better than China's Weiwei Zhang (69 on Sunday), who failed to hold the lead after a bogey on the 17th hole.

"Still kind of a little bit shake my hands," Lee said of her nerves. "First hole make birdie, but like two double front nine and then finish 4-over so was almost give up, but my caddie just kept telling me keep fighting, fighting. I really fought by myself, just didn't give up, and then I just got to make a lot of birdies, so I think amazing. Feels amazing, yes."

Lee became only the second South Korean to win the Blue Bay LPGA, joining 2015 champion Sei Young Kim

Auston Kim (71) made three birdies over the final five holes to reside in a third-place tie with Aditi Ashok (72) of India.

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"I'm proud of the three birdies that I made coming in, but it really (stinks) to play that well Thursday (67), Friday (68), and not get it done. Really frustrating," Kim said. "I hope moving forward I won't make the same mistakes that I did this week and play better."

Lee saw her three-stroke lead evaporate following double bogeys on the fifth and ninth holes before making birdies on the 10th and 13th holes.

She took advantage of Zhang's misstep on the 17th hole by hitting the pin on her third shot at the par-5 18th hole. She tapped in from 2 feet out to win the tournament.

"I just keep watching the scoreboard. I think that's why this -- that give me a lot of confidence," Lee said. "I just keep making one more birdie, two more birdie, and so it was -- yeah, just keep watching it, the scoreboard. I knew Weiwei and Rio (Takeda of Japan) play well, too."

Takeda (73), the defending champion, tied for fifth with South Koreans Hye-Jin Choi (74) and A Lim Kim (73) and China's Yu Liu (74).

--Field Level Media

Mi Hyang Lee wins Blue Bay for first LPGA victory in 8 years

South Korea's Mi Hyang Lee overcame a pair of double bogeys on the front nine and recorded a birdie on the final...

 

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