Prime Minister's Children

Prime Minister's Children (Hebrew: ילדי ראש הממשלה; Yaldei Rosh HaMemshala) is an Israeli political drama television series. It tells the story of the fictional Prime Minister Saul Agmon, and the impact of his highly position on his family, especially his children.

Prime Minister's Children
ילדי ראש הממשלה
Genre
Created byNoa Magen
Shachar Rotman
Developed byNoa Magen
Shachar Rotman
Written byNoa Magen
Shachar Rotman
Directed byAlon Banari
Starring
Country of originIsrael
Original language(s)Hebrew
No. of seasons1
No. of episodes13
Production
Executive producer(s)Ram Landes
Kfir Yonsof-Weiss
Running time35-40 minutes
Production company(s)Keshet Media Group
DistributorCoda Communications
Release
Original networkChannel 2
Picture format576i
Audio format192KBPS
Original release17 May 2011 (2011-05-17) 
15 September 2012 (2012-09-15)
External links
Website (Hebrew)

Thirteen episodes, divided into two seasons, have been produced. The series was first shown in Israel in the summer of 2011. The series follows the fictional prime minister, Shaul Agmon, in his first year in office. The entrance to the Prime Minister's Office changes the lives of his wife Diti and children Libi and Golan dramatically. After the appointment of Shaul they are now under the public magnifying glass. Each character feels that they are comes to their own private prison, including guards, cameras. Now they are looking for the strength to break it. In addition, the series shows the process of growing up of two women, the wife of the prime minister and his eldest daughter.

Cast

  • Rami Heuberger - Prime Minister Shaul Agmon
  • Michaela Eshet - Yehudit 'Diti' Agmon
  • Alona Tal - Libi Agmon
  • Lee Biran - Golan Agmon
  • Evelin Hagoel - Amalia Bilchik
  • Marina Maximilian Blumin - Alin
  • Gila Almagor - Rachel Agmon
  • Sharon Alexander - Hilik
  • Itay Turgeman - Kobi Dahan
  • Lior Raz - Asael
  • Efrat Aviv - Iris
  • Shmuel Atzmon - Shimon Agmon
  • Nina Kotler - Yardena


This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.