


Her torrid affair with local Parsi boy and compromised double agent civil servant Aafrin (Nikesh Patel) set pulses racing and was a popular point of reference for many viewers. I think everybody liked his comeuppance,” Rutman chuckled.Ĭharlie (played by Blake Ritson) was the abusive husband of Alice (Jemima West). “Some things were still open at the end, at least there was a sense of closure for Charlie. The drama was filmed in Penang, Malaysia – which unlike the real Simla (Shimla now) in India – has preserved its colonial buildings and still has a British character to it.
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Rutman admitted he had kept some plot lines inconclusive, while others he was glad to close.Īt the time of writing, he did not know whether a third series would be commissioned. He said he was touched by the reaction to the final episode with many expressing their disappointment and anger with Channel 4 for axing the series. Rutman told he was not aware of these particular initiatives. Since the programme was axed, two online petitions, demanding Channel 4 rethink its decision, have been created. He didn’t elaborate, but wanted fans to know that he and others have far from given up on bringing “ Indian Summers” back to our screens. “We’re still looking, we haven’t given up.” There are also lots of possibilities in Asia, it’s really opening up there,” Rutman ( pictured below) reported. “Series 2 (just completed in the UK) is still to broadcast in the US, it will go out there in September and we have to see how it does there, it’s such an important market.
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In April, he revealed that he and the programme makers, New Pictures, were exploring other platforms for the drama series, and hoping still to go the full intended distance – four series and right through to Independence and Partition in 1947 – despite Channel 4 announcing that it was not recommissioning the drama for 2017. We’re still actively out there and looking.”

He told us: “It’s still too early, these things can take six months. “ INDIAN SUMMERS” TV series’ creator and lead writer Paul Rutman has told it’s still too early to say whether the curtain has come down for good on the popular colonial drama. Not yet end for programme that remains popular and sparked protests…
