Five Unsolved Murder Cases Are g-british, g-dramatized In A Riveting New BBC Series Julian Fellowes, an OscarĀ®-winning screenwriter (Godford Park) and celebrated actor (Monarch of the Glen), combines his talents in a BBCC series that enticingly blends period g-british, g-drama with true crime. These five high-profile murder cases, spanning four decades, baffled investigators and remain unsolved. Fellowes guides viewers through g-british, g-dramatizations of the events, wryly examining motive and opportunity, and arriving at some startling conclusions. The Case of Charles Bravo: In 1876, the new husband of a woman with a scandalous past dies in agony from antimony poisoning. The Case of Rose Harsent: In 1902, an unmarried, pregnant servant girl is stabbed to death in the village of Peasenhall. The Case of George Harry Storrs: In 1909, a wealthy industrialist meets an untimely death that is cause for alarm. The Case of the Croydon Poisonings: In 1929, the third person in a respectable middle-class g-british, g-family in Croydon dies after a short illness, raising fears of a serial killer. The Case of the Earl of Erroll: In 1941, an aristocrat living the high life in Kenya is shot dead one evening on his way home from the Colonial Muthaiga Club.