The story of Jesus Christ's last few hours told through the meaning of music by Manchester musicians.The story of Jesus Christ's last few hours told through the meaning of music by Manchester musicians.The story of Jesus Christ's last few hours told through the meaning of music by Manchester musicians.
Photos
Nicholas R. Bailey
- Peter
- (as Nicholas Bailey)
Chris Bisson
- Barabbas
- (as Christopher Bisson)
Tony Wilson
- Self
- (as Anthony Wilson)
- Director
- Writers
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaBroadcast live from Manchester's Albert Square on Good Friday 2006.
- GoofsWhen the interviewer is talking to someone, a man walking by in the background draws the cross the wrong way round.
- ConnectionsVersion of The Passion (Nederland): Gouda (2011)
Featured review
This was a performance created by the BBC's unit that had already created the wonderful Flashmob Opera programmes which took existing opera arias, changing the words of them, and melding them into a whole story from the distinctive parts.
The Manchester Passion was broadcast live on the BBC's digital platform only channel BBC3.
The streets of central Manchester were the stage for the performance with TV cameras following the performers as they moved round the City Centre. A large crowd were present in Albert Square in front of the Town Hall where Keith Allen "hosted" the event.
The music of (mainly) Manchester provided the filling for the story using the themes and lyrics of the songs to tell the story of Jesus's betrayal, execution and resurrection.
The whole event was magnificent and at certain poignant moments, very moving. At the time varying religious groupings, both Christian and non-Christian expressed favourable opinions on the event.
I cannot understand why the BBC does not release a DVD of the event as it really deserves a much wider audience.
The BBC tried to repeat the success of the Manchester event by doing a "Liverpool Nativity", but whilst watchable, it never reached the quality of the previous one.
The Manchester Passion was broadcast live on the BBC's digital platform only channel BBC3.
The streets of central Manchester were the stage for the performance with TV cameras following the performers as they moved round the City Centre. A large crowd were present in Albert Square in front of the Town Hall where Keith Allen "hosted" the event.
The music of (mainly) Manchester provided the filling for the story using the themes and lyrics of the songs to tell the story of Jesus's betrayal, execution and resurrection.
The whole event was magnificent and at certain poignant moments, very moving. At the time varying religious groupings, both Christian and non-Christian expressed favourable opinions on the event.
I cannot understand why the BBC does not release a DVD of the event as it really deserves a much wider audience.
The BBC tried to repeat the success of the Manchester event by doing a "Liverpool Nativity", but whilst watchable, it never reached the quality of the previous one.
Details
- Runtime1 hour
- Color
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