
Age: 63
male
Peter Julian Robin Morgan CBE (born 10 April 1963) is a British screenwriter and playwright. He has written for theatre, films and television, often about historical events or figures such as Queen Elizabeth II, which he has covered extensively in all major media. He has received several accolades, including five BAFTA Awards, two Primetime Emmy Awards, four Golden Globe Awards, and nominations for two Academy Awards, a Tony Award and a Laurence Olivier Award. In February 2017, Morgan was awarded a British Film Institute Fellowship. He is the playwright behind the plays Frost/Nixon(2005), The Audience (2013), and Patriots (2022), the former of which was nominated for the Tony Award for Best Play. As a screenwriter, Morgan received Academy Award nominations for The Queen (2006) and Frost/Nixon (2008). He also wrote the screenplays for The Last King of Scotland (2006), The Other Boleyn Girl (2008), The Damned United (2009), and Rush (2013). Morgan is also known for his work in television, writing the ITV series The Jury (2002), the Channel 4 film The Deal (2003), and the HBO films Longford (2006) and The Special Relationship (2010). He served as creator and show-runner of the Netflix series The Crown (2016–2023). Description above from the Wikipedia article Peter Morgan, licensed under CC-BY-SA, full list of contributors on Wikipedia.

In Imperial Russia, two lives collide with the crushing weight of social expectation. Anna Karenina, a poised St. Petersburg socialite, sparks a scandalous affair with the magnetic Count Vronsky. What begins as a desperate awakening into romantic intensity becomes a forbidden bond that forces her to abandon her son and her husband, the rigid official Alexei Karenin. Choosing passion over propriety, Anna and Vronsky flee into exile, but separation from society brings no freedom. Upon their return, they face cold isolation. While Vronsky resumes his public military life, Anna - trapped by social condemnation - spirals into a claustrophobic cycle of jealousy, mistrust, and psychological unraveling. Her identity fractures under the relentless judgment of a world that refuses to forgive. In contrast, Konstantin Levin, a thoughtful landowner, seeks purpose far from the urban rot. After an initial rejection by the radiant Kitty Shcherbatskaya, the two eventually find their way to a sincere, grounded union. Their narrative unfolds through the honest labor of rural life, agricultural reform, and a shared search for faith. Levin’s journey serves as the soulful counterpoint to Anna’s tragedy, exploring marriage and fatherhood as a tentative path toward existential meaning. Through the lens of prestige psychological drama, this series examines the performance of morality and the high cost of repression. It juxtaposes urban artifice with rural authenticity, revealing a society where individual desire is both a liberating force and a destructive path to ruin. Under the meticulous direction of Cary Joji Fukunaga, the search for love becomes a high-stakes struggle for survival against the suffocating tension of the Russian elite.
