A world famous conductor is found dead in his dressing room between acts in La Traviata. Venice is horrified. What damage will this do to the city’s reputation? And that of its great opera house, La Fenice?

The opening of Donna Leon’s first Commissario Brunetti crime novel was to set the pattern for her 30 year love affair with the thoughtful Venetian detective – a relationship shared with multiple millions of readers throughout the world in the series of prize-winning novels that followed.

Now a two-part drama based on that first Brunetti book, Death at La Fenice, has been commissioned by BBC Radio 4 with a top-line cast including Julian Rhind Tutt as Brunetti, Jeany Spark as Paola, his wife and co-conspirator, and Siobhan Redmond as the well-connected Contessa Falier.

Rather than the stereotypical troubled cop with a dark past and a bleak future, Guido Brunetti is a man full of love – for Paola, his teenage children, local food, the Greek classics and, at the root of it all Venice, La Serenissima. For Venice is as much a character in the Leon books as Brunetti himself. In this new adaptation, every scene evokes a location in the beautiful, sinking city.