Some news from Larkrisetocandleford.com disclamer not ment to copy write only posting usefull in
Writer and Executive Producer of Lark Rise To Candleford, Bill Gallagher returns to BBC One with a brand new series set in the seductive and glamorous world of the first ever department store in a booming Northern city.

Based on the novel by Emile Zola, The Ladies’ Paradise is a rags-to-riches story about a young girl in the 1890s who arrives in the city and falls in love with the intoxicating and dangerous charms of the modern world. Made homeless by the death of her father, and with nothing to live on but her wits, Denise comes to work as a shop girl at the glittering store, just at the moment when society is waking up to the joys and temptations of shopping. But behind the dazzling facade of the store, she finds a world of intrigues, affairs and shopfloor power struggles.

Creator and writer Bill Gallagher says: “This project has been close to my heart for a long time and I’m thrilled to be making it with the BBC. The Ladies’ Paradise is set at exactly the same time as Lark Rise – but now we’re in the city, at a time of great change and upheaval, so the series is exciting and constantly dramatic. Like Lark Rise we will explore the lives of a colourful cast of characters struggling to survive and flourish in difficult and dangerous times.”

Ben Stephenson, Controller, BBC Drama Commissioning says: “A romantic, thrilling and sexy post-watershed relationship drama set in a bustling Northern department store where Bill Gallagher’s well-crafted characters will bring an addictive mix of scandal and gossip to BBC One.”

The series is made by BBC Drama Productions and created and written by Bill Gallagher for transmission on BBC One in 2013. It begins filming on location next summer.

 
Caroline Arless is out of debtor's prison and back home in Lark Rise, as the series based on the novels by Flora Thompson, and adapted by Bill Gallagher, concludes. However, she doesn't get the warm welcome she's expecting.
Queenie blames her for being absent when her young son died of measles and Alf is sceptical that Caroline has put her feckless ways behind her and that she is back to stay. Minnie, on the other hand, assumes that, with Caroline back to look after her children, it's only a matter of time before Alf comes to propose.When Minnie discovers that Alf can't contemplate marriage while his siblings need him, and while his mother is still getting herself into trouble, Minnie is heartbroken. Is she brave enough to stand up to the fearsome Caroline and take charge of her own fate? And will Alf ever feel free to cast off his burdens and embrace happiness?Over in Candleford, meanwhile, Thomas has returned from a visit to his sisters' to discover a cold and distant Margaret. She snaps at everything he says and criticises his every deed. What can be the reason behind her new-found loathing of her once beloved husband? 
lrtcfans.weebly.com’s comment : Anyone thinking what I’m thinking on the Margaret and Thomas story line!?
Elsewhere, Gabriel has finally completed his machine and, after mounting an impressive demonstration, farmers are clamouring to purchase his ground-breaking invention. Not everyone in Lark Rise welcomes the arrival of progress to the hamlet, though. Queenie, especially, fears what it will do to their simple way of life.Dorcas is initially thrilled at Gabriel's success, until she realises that it will inevitably mean his departure from Candleford. It forces her to look into her future and ask herself what she truly wants. But will she find the courage to reveal her deepest feelings and how will Gabriel respond?







 
These are both websites about some very sad news series 4 as you know is to be 6 episodes and I will cherish them alll and keep Lark Rise to Candleford in my heart forever and enjoy these last few episodes with my favorite episodes, as I write this news I cry for the first time I’ve actually cryed about a TV show ending. Thats right guys this is the last series. I will remember to pass this on to my future children. Lark Rise to Candleford has been the best show in history the best drama I’ve ever seen. Better than the Waltons, Little House on the Prarie, any show I ever saw it tears my to pieces to aee it go. over the time its been on PBS i have become obssed written fanfics and thought of storys. Thought of it before bed to lull myself to sleep when I had Insomnia. We shall all keep it dear to our hearts. Always Lark Rise to Candleford lives on forever in all of us. We will always remember this w Those of us who are teens we must pass it on to our children. We want our children to find as much joy in this show as we have and always will
http://www.mirror.co.uk/news/top-sto...5875-22866653/
http://www.mirror.co.uk/news/top-sto...5875-22866641/


Miss. Emily Good
 
http://postalheritage.org.uk/history/people/women 
Take a look at this its most intruiging someone on larkrisetocandleford.com found it her name is Sherry I'm not quite sure,but i belive she wrote the Dorcas an
 
i am proud to announce that i will start having an ep guide for series 4 of Lark Rise to Candleford for those of you who need spoilers. I cant belive its almost that time again this is my  early 
xmas present to you all Merry Christmas everyone 
 
Lark Rise To Candleford, Bill Gallagher’s adaptation of Flora Thompson’s charming memoir of her Oxfordshire childhood, is the perfect winter warmer for the New Year on BBC One.

The drama sees the welcome return of favourite characters including Julia Sawalha as post mistress Dorcas Lane; Olivia Hallinan as Laura Timmins, her assistant in the Post Office; Claudie Blakley as Laura’s mother, Emma; Ben Aldridge as handsome journalist and Laura’s sweetheart Daniel Parish; John Dagleish as Alf Arless; and Ruby Bentall as Minnie. Victoria Hamilton is Ruby Pratt, back to help run the fashionable clothes stores in Candleford with her sister Pearl, played by Matilda Ziegler.

Joining the much-loved cast for the fourth series is Richard Harrington (Holby Blue, Collision), who plays Gabriel Cochrane, the handsome and once-wealthy owner of a large iron foundry. Here, Richard tells us about his character and writer and executive producer Bill Gallagher explains how Gabriel fits into the drama. “He is a very interesting character. He comes to Candleford down on his luck, having suffered a tragic loss in his life with the death of his wife, which culminated in him losing his family business,” says Richard.

“Prior to his wife’s death, he was offered a loan by the bank to expand. He didn’t really want the loan but went along with it because his business may have been under threat if he hadn’t. Then his adored wife became desperately ill, and instead of expanding the business, he did what his heart told him to do and made sure that the last months of her life were spent seeing and doing as much as she could.”

Gabriel, now homeless and penniless and grieving his wife, arrives in Candleford looking for a new start. Dorcas offers him a job as blacksmith and a room above the forge. It will tide him over until he regains his wealth and position. As well as restoring his fortunes, Gabriel is determined to bring down the banker who he blames for the loss of his home and business. He quickly wins the support of the people of Candleford as he mounts his campaign against the bank.

“What is striking about Gabriel is that he is a man who acts first and thinks later,” says Richard. “Everything he does is for a good cause. He has got a very big heart and he is very considerate of other people. I think that is what his great quality is and why people try and help him.”

Executive producer/writer Bill Gallagher explains how the new character came about: “Before I finished writing series three I had some clear ideas of what I wanted to do with the characters in series four, particularly Dorcas. This meant introducing a new character, a man who has lost everything – his wife, his home, his business. I wanted to create someone who had to start life again.

“Gabriel was my invention. We had portrayed a man of wealth and standing in Sir Timothy, and a self-made man in James Dowland, so I felt it might be interesting to look at a man who has lost his position and fortune. However, having created Gabriel we draw on things from the books to bring him to life and make him part of the community that Flora Thompson so vividly depicted.

“The difficulty in creating a love interest for Dorcas is that her situation as post mistress would be affected were she to marry. She would lose her place and would have to leave the Post Office. I decided to turn this to our advantage, to make the drama about her dilemma, and to make this still more interesting by making this man an employee of hers. It created an interesting dynamic that could look at the issues of her situation and the times in which Dorcas lived.”

Richard says: “Theirs is a turbulent and charged relationship, and they have a respect for each other as they have both been desperately hurt by love as it transpires that his wife wasn’t all that she was made out to be. So they tread very carefully with each other but they gravitate towards each other.

So what is Gabriel’s perspective on the folk of Candleford and neighbouring hamlet Lark Rise, and what is in store for him?

“He is a great mediator between the two worlds,” says Richard. “He sees past class and doesn’t really belong to either, so treats everyone with the same respect. He says what he thinks and he doesn’t do that for effect, he just does it because he is a unique man.

With an average of more than 6.8 million viewers for series three, what was it like for Richard joining the cast and crew of such a popular drama?

“They were wonderful and I couldn’t have wished for a better welcome,” he says. “The crew and the cast are astounding and they give you all the infrastructure and tools to do your job, and if I can’t do my job after the welcome I had then there is something wrong with me! It was a great pleasure to come into work and tackle these enormously big scenes.”

Talking about his co-star Julia Sawalha, Richard continues: “I think our dynamic as actors together worked really well and I felt safe in her company and respected her completely. She doesn’t miss a beat and she is so intuitive and bright so you have to up your game a bit.”

Filming took just over three months around Bath and Bristol. “It is stunning there and even though I belong to the Candleford clan there is something magical about the Lark Rise set,” recalls Richard. “I particularly loved filming my first
episode because it sets me up as a character. It is always very exciting when you play a new character because you don’t really know what you are going to do until you open your mouth. You can prepare to a certain extent but until you actually get on to the set with the costumes and stand there with the characters it doesn’t really come alive. I think I quickly got into it and that is due to the fact that I was with an esteemed cast and crew who were willing you to do well.”

Lark Rise To Candleford, Bill Gallagher’s adaptation of Flora Thompson’s charming memoir of her Oxfordshire childhood, is the perfect winter warmer for the New Year on BBC One.

The drama sees the welcome return of favourite characters including Julia Sawalha as post mistress Dorcas Lane; Olivia Hallinan as Laura Timmins, her assistant in the Post Office; Claudie Blakley as Laura’s mother, Emma; Ben Aldridge as handsome journalist and Laura’s sweetheart Daniel Parish; John Dagleish as Alf Arless; and Ruby Bentall as Minnie. Victoria Hamilton is Ruby Pratt, back to help run the fashionable clothes stores in Candleford with her sister Pearl, played by Matilda Ziegler.

Joining the much-loved cast for the fourth series is Richard Harrington (Holby Blue, Collision), who plays Gabriel Cochrane, the handsome and once-wealthy owner of a large iron foundry. Here, Richard tells us about his character and writer and executive producer Bill Gallagher explains how Gabriel fits into the drama. “He is a very interesting character. He comes to Candleford down on his luck, having suffered a tragic loss in his life with the death of his wife, which culminated in him losing his family business,” says Richard.

“Prior to his wife’s death, he was offered a loan by the bank to expand. He didn’t really want the loan but went along with it because his business may have been under threat if he hadn’t. Then his adored wife became desperately ill, and instead of expanding the business, he did what his heart told him to do and made sure that the last months of her life were spent seeing and doing as much as she could.”

Gabriel, now homeless and penniless and grieving his wife, arrives in Candleford looking for a new start. Dorcas offers him a job as blacksmith and a room above the forge. It will tide him over until he regains his wealth and position. As well as restoring his fortunes, Gabriel is determined to bring down the banker who he blames for the loss of his home and business. He quickly wins the support of the people of Candleford as he mounts his campaign against the bank.

“What is striking about Gabriel is that he is a man who acts first and thinks later,” says Richard. “Everything he does is for a good cause. He has got a very big heart and he is very considerate of other people. I think that is what his great quality is and why people try and help him.”

Executive producer/writer Bill Gallagher explains how the new character came about: “Before I finished writing series three I had some clear ideas of what I wanted to do with the characters in series four, particularly Dorcas. This meant introducing a new character, a man who has lost everything – his wife, his home, his business. I wanted to create someone who had to start life again.

“Gabriel was my invention. We had portrayed a man of wealth and standing in Sir Timothy, and a self-made man in James Dowland, so I felt it might be interesting to look at a man who has lost his position and fortune. However, having created Gabriel we draw on things from the books to bring him to life and make him part of the community that Flora Thompson so vividly depicted.

“The difficulty in creating a love interest for Dorcas is that her situation as post mistress would be affected were she to marry. She would lose her place and would have to leave the Post Office. I decided to turn this to our advantage, to make the drama about her dilemma, and to make this still more interesting by making this man an employee of hers. It created an interesting dynamic that could look at the issues of her situation and the times in which Dorcas lived.”

Richard says: “Theirs is a turbulent and charged relationship, and they have a respect for each other as they have both been desperately hurt by love as it transpires that his wife wasn’t all that she was made out to be. So they tread very carefully with each other but they gravitate towards each other.

So what is Gabriel’s perspective on the folk of Candleford and neighbouring hamlet Lark Rise, and what is in store for him?

“He is a great mediator between the two worlds,” says Richard. “He sees past class and doesn’t really belong to either, so treats everyone with the same respect. He says what he thinks and he doesn’t do that for effect, he just does it because he is a unique man.

With an average of more than 6.8 million viewers for series three, what was it like for Richard joining the cast and crew of such a popular drama?

“They were wonderful and I couldn’t have wished for a better welcome,” he says. “The crew and the cast are astounding and they give you all the infrastructure and tools to do your job, and if I can’t do my job after the welcome I had then there is something wrong with me! It was a great pleasure to come into work and tackle these enormously big scenes.”

Talking about his co-star Julia Sawalha, Richard continues: “I think our dynamic as actors together worked really well and I felt safe in her company and respected her completely. She doesn’t miss a beat and she is so intuitive and bright so you have to up your game a bit.”

Filming took just over three months around Bath and Bristol. “It is stunning there and even though I belong to the Candleford clan there is something magical about the Lark Rise set,” recalls Richard. “I particularly loved filming my first
episode because it sets me up as a character. It is always very exciting when you play a new character because you don’t really know what you are going to do until you open your mouth. You can prepare to a certain extent but until you actually get on to the set with the costumes and stand there with the characters it doesn’t really come alive. I think I quickly got into it and that is due to the fact that I was with an esteemed cast and crew who were willing you to do well.”  from larkrisetocandleford.com


 
There has been a rumor going around that brendan coyle willl not be in series 4 because he will be in  Down town Abbey does anyone know anything else about this 
 
hey special shout out to joe and melissa i love ur comments continuing on i would love to have at least a few epiosodes from series 4 but i cant seem to find any thing online if any one knows any thing please tell me on comments and also i need u guys to tell ur friends about this   site spread it on 
 
thx for ur support 
Emily G
 
Awsome news guys look what i found on larkrisetocandleford.com The BBC has ordered a fourth season of its period drama Lark Rise to Candleford which stars Julia Sawalha, Olivia Hallinan and Linda Bassett. The news that a fourth season of the drama, based on the series of books by Flora Thompson, was confirmed on BBC One’s rural magazine programme Countryfile last night. 


information found on www.larkrisetocandleford.com