A.D.
Drama
A.D. is a 1985 television drama miniseries created and written by Vincenzo Labella and Anthony Burgess, based on Burgess' historical novel The Kingdom of the Wicked. The five-part serial is considered the third and final part of a trilogy, preceded by Moses the Lawgiver (1974) and Jesus of Nazareth (1977). Set just after Jesus' Crucifixion, the lives and adventures of His disciples are explored, and events in Rome during the reigns of Emperors Tiberius, Caligula, Claudius and Nero.
1985-03-31
en
Cast
Susan Sarandon as Livilla
Ben Vereen as Ethiopian
Tony Vogel as Aquila
Vincent Riotta as Stephanus
Rebecca Saire as Ruth
Harold Kasket as Kaiphas
Mike Gwilym as Pallas
Davyd Harries as Thomas
Bruce Winant as Seth
Damien Thomas as Herod Agrippa
Scott Hoxby as Agrippa II
Clive Arrindell as Cassius
Paul Freeman as Cornelius
Andrea Prodan as Brittanicus
Akosua Busia as Acte
Vernon Dobtcheff as Flavius Sabinus
Gerrard McArthur as Lukas
Jonathan Tafler as Aaron
Barrie Houghton as Ananias
Martin Potter as Gaius Calpurnius Piso
Colin Haigh as Jakobus
Renato Scarpa as Lucius Marinus
David Sumner as Matthias
Katia Dandoulaki as Octavia
John Steiner as Simon der Magier
Philip Anthony as Jakobus der Ältere
Peter Howell as Atticus
Nicholas Ball as Römischer Offizier
David Brandon as Petronius
Chris Humphreys as Caleb
Richard Roundtree as Serpenius
Diane Venora as Corinna
James Mason as Tiberius
Fernando Rey as Seneca
Colleen Dewhurst as Antonia
Ava Gardner as Agrippina
Anthony Zerbe as Pontius Pilatus
John McEnery as Caligula
Richard Kiley as Claudius
Neil Dickson as Valerius
John Houseman as Gamaliel
Philip Sayer as Paulus
Anthony Andrews as Nero
David Hedison as Porcius Festus
Ian McShane as Sejanus
Jennifer O'Neill as Messalina
Denis Quilley as Peter
Jack Warden as Nerva
Amanda Pays as Sarah
Millie Perkins as Maria