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TV Adaptation of Classic Greek Novel Breaks Viewing Records in Greece

Andreas Konstantinou and Fotini Peluso in a scene from The Great Chimera series.
Fotini Peluso and Andreas Konstantinou star in ERT’s international co-production The Great Chimera, a TV adaptation of the eponymous Greek novel of the 1930s. Credit: Courtesy of ERT

A highly anticipated international mini series co-production of Greek public broadcaster ERT is breaking viewing records in Greece.

The eponymous TV adaptation of M. Karagatsis’s 1930 iconic novel The Great Chimera premiered on ERT’s streamer ERTFLIX on New Year’s Day with the first two episodes and reached one million views within one week.

New episodes will air on ERT’s prime time Sundays at 10pm local time, and be available on ERTFLIX the day before.

The six-part series was produced in Athens with support from the Hellenic Film and Audiovisual Center (ΕΚΚΟΜΕΔ) and co-produced with partners in Germany, while an Italian subsidiary provided production services. ERT is co-producing and releasing the series in Greece.

High standards international co-production

Produced by Stelios Kotionis and directed by Vardis Marinakis on an adapted screenplay by Panagiotis Iosifelis, The Great Chimera is advertised as one of the greatest TV productions that has been filmed in Greece.

Bilingual Greek Italian, featuring a seasoned cast from both countries, the series tells the story of a young Italian woman (French in the original novel), who falls madly in love with a Greek sea-captain, marries him, and moves with him to the thriving Aegean island of Syros, “throwing herself into a vortex of passion, emancipation and self-destruction.”

Fotini Peluso in a scene from The Great Chimera series.
A big part of The Great Chimera was shot on the Greek island of Syros and its majestic capital, Ermoupolis. Credit: Courtesy of ERT

The 6-hour period drama was shot in emblematic locations; Athens’ historical city center, Syros island’s majestic capital of Ermoupolis, the Greek islands of Mykonos, Delos, and Rineia, and Italy’s port city of Trieste.

The starring couple is played by Greek Italian actress Fotini Peluso and Greek actor Andreas Konstantinou, known for his roles in critically acclaimed Greek films and popular TV series.

Iconic Greek actress Karyofillia Karabeti co-stars as the mother-in-law unwilling to accept a “xeni” (foreign) bride.

Karyofillia Karabeti in a scene from The Great Chimera series.
Acclaimed Greek actress Karyofillia Karabeti co-stars The Great Chimera. Credit: Courtesy of ERT

The Great Chimera TV series trending topic in Greece

ERT Chairman Giannis Papadopoulos stressed at The Great Chimera avant-premiere that the series constitutes a milestone, turning a new page in Greek fiction production, as well as marking a new era for the Greek public broadcaster, which is adopting a strategic orientation towards international co-productions of the highest standards.

However, it wasn’t only the high production standards and all-star cast that made The Great Chimera the talk of the town and a trending topic as soon as it premiered; the bold intimate scenes between the starring couple -viewed by an audience that recent TV history has shown can be as easily shocked by an on-screen gay kiss- sparked controversy and debate about their purposefulness.

Defenders have maintained that the bold scenes are an integral part of the story and focal in understanding character dynamics, while critics felt they were just intended to provoke.

What remains undisputable is that the audiovisual interpretation of a novel that was published almost a century ago under a nom de plume and went on to become a great classic, with its strong feminist narrative and powerful touch of Greek tragedy, has modern-day audiences in Greece hooked – and potentially a long way of success ahead in international TV markets.

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