Political Thriller “Roadkill” Coming to ThinkTV and CET This Sunday!

Hugh Laurie (House, Veep) stars as a scheming politician in Roadkill, a tense drama scripted by two-time Academy Award® nominee David Hare (The Hours, The Reader), airing on CET and ThinkTV in four action-packed episodes, Sundays, November 1-22 at 9pm.
Laurie plays Peter Laurence, a self-made former furniture salesman who has risen to the heights of the British government thanks to a natural gift of politics, and a forceful nature, all while excelling at walking the tightrope of Machiavellian party politics.
As Roadkill opens, he has just won a libel suit against reporter Charmian Pepper (played by Sarah Greene, Normal People), who accused him of accepting payments to help privatize the National Health Service. Saved from being “roadkill” by his legal team, Peter stays in the good graces of the devious prime minister Dawn Ellison (Helen McCrory, Peaky Blinders), who fears his growing popularity but is also aware of the abundant skeletons, both public and private, in his closet.
Roadkill’s storyline involves the rattling of some of those skeletons and Peter’s desperate attempts to deal with the consequences and outrun his own secrets. In a chain of events where everyone seems to be conspiring against him, he faces a number of antagonists: Helen (Saskia Reeves, Wolf Hall), his loyal wife for three decades, has lied in court on his behalf but is starting to have second thoughts about their marriage. She is dimly aware of Madeleine (Sidse Babett Knudsen, Borgen), a manuscript librarian, who is Peter’s longtime mistress. For her part, Madeleine has grown fed up with their secret life. While Peter preaches “freedom,” Madeleine sees only a refusal to commit.
As the personal revelations spiral, Peter’s two grown daughters are no less angry with their father. Susan (Ophelia Lovibond, Elementary) has been out of touch for several years and only returns for a “family trial” arranged by her volatile younger sister, Lily (Millie Brady, The Last Kingdom).
Among Peter’s professional connections, Rochelle Madeley (Pippa Bennett-Warner, Harlots) is the barrister who got Peter off. She likes to brag that she loves the cases “you win when you suspect your client is guilty as hell.” Despite the win, she can’t escape the urge to dig deeper into Peter’s past. Coming at Peter from the other direction is Joe Lapidus (Pip Torrens, Poldark), the newspaper editor who originally unleashed Charmian on him. He hasn’t let go of the case either—even if his paper’s proprietor, Lady Roche (Patricia Hodge, A Very English Scandal), hates “unpleasantness.” No one knows Peter better than his special advisor, Duncan Knock (Iain de Caestecker, Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D.), who wants to ride his boss’s coattails to the top. Unfortunately, he starts making decisions that may not be in Peter’s best interest. Another subordinate, Dame Vanessa Pollard (Sylvestra le Touzel, The Crown), begins undermining Peter as soon as he lands in his new ministerial job. Will Peter find out to his cost that “life gets hard when you lose the staff?”
Then there is the prime minister’s eyes and ears, Julia Blythe (Olivia Vinall, The Woman in White), a control freak who seems to know Peter’s secrets almost before he does—particularly about a female prisoner who could end his political career once and for all. If nothing else, Peter is a survivor—at least so far. Untroubled by guilt or remorse, he seeks to further his own agenda even whilst others plot to bring him down. His motto: “You can get away with anything if you just brazen it out.” Even a despairing prime minister has to concede, “High wire doesn’t do it. More like Houdini.”