Princess Daisy (miniseries)

{{Short description|1983 film directed by Waris Hussein}}

{{Use mdy dates|date=March 2025}}

{{Infobox television

| image = Princess Daisy (film).jpg

| caption =

| genre = Drama
Romance

| based_on = {{based on|Princess Daisy|Judith Krantz}}

| writer = Diana Hammond

| story =

| director = Waris Hussein

| starring = Merete Van Kamp
Lindsay Wagner
Paul Michael Glaser
Robert Urich
Claudia Cardinale
Rupert Everett
Stacy Keach

| music = Lalo Schifrin

| country = United States

| language = English

| executive_producer = Steve Krantz

| producer = Lillian Gallo

| location =

| cinematography = Tony Imi
Charles Rosher Jr.

| editor = Robert F. Shugrue

| camera =

| runtime = 190 minutes

| company = Steve Krantz Productions
NBC Productions

| budget =

| network = NBC

| first_aired = {{Start date|1983|11|06}}

| last_aired = {{End date|1983|11|07}}

}}

Princess Daisy is a 1983 American television miniseries directed by Waris Hussein, based on the 1980 novel of the same name by Judith Krantz.

Plot

Princess Daisy tells the story of a young girl who is sent to England to live with her father, Prince Valensky, after her mother's death in a car crash. Unfortunately, Daisy is immediately separated from her twin sister Dani, who is a special needs child not accepted by their father. When Daisy turns 16, their father dies in a plane accident. The girl is forced to take care of her life herself, especially when her half-brother starts seeing in her more than just a sister.

Cast

class="wikitable"

! Actor !! Role

colspan="2" |Starring
Lindsay Wagner

|Francesca Valensky

Paul Michael Glaser

|Fred North

Claudia Cardinale

|Anabelle de Fourdemont Valensky

Robert Urich

|Patrick Shannon

Rupert Everett

|Ram Valensky

Sada Thompson

|Masha

Jim Metzler

|John

Stacy Keach

|Prince Alexander "Stash" Valensky

colspan="2" |Special guest stars
Barbara Bach

|Vanessa Valerian

Ringo Starr

|Robin Valerian

colspan="2" |Introducing
Merete Van Kamp

|Princess Daisy & Dani Valensky

Critical reception

Richard Corliss wrote of the miniseries, "Not even trash can guarantee the happy ending, and, alas, it happened to Jane Doe: Princess Daisy proved a small screen bust."{{cite web |url=http://www.museum.tv/eotv/miniseries.htm |publisher=Museum of Broadcast Communication |title=Miniseries |access-date=March 9, 2015}} However, The Guardian was more positive; while it criticized the acting, it concluded, "Despite all that, Princess Daisy is much better quality kitsch than Lace. It has all the same, essential mini-series requirements: vulgar opulence, beautiful people, international locations, the lot. But it also has a strong, closely packed story line, with the kind of fairy tale elements—the mirror image twin, the evil step-relation—that can remind you of childhood frissons; and it has characters in place of those perambulating coat hangers we had last week. And if we customers don't take the trouble to distinguish between good and bad rubbish, you know exactly what kind we will get in future."{{cite news|url=https://www.theguardian.com/theguardian/2012/sep/18/archive-1984-princess-daisy-tv-series|title=Television: Princess Daisy has all the essential TV mini-series requirements|last=Hebert|first=Hugh|date=September 18, 1984|work=The Guardian|access-date=2017-07-20}}

References

{{Reflist}}