Issue 10

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Words: Claire Spencer
Photography: Jannica Honey

Described as ‘a real sleuth’ by veteran journalist and newsreader Jon Snow, the future looks bright for Natalie, 22.

“Jon Snow is amazing. He lures you in with his jazzy ties, and then you realise how much of a pro he is,” remarks Natalie Whelan on one of her key inspirational figures. “You can tell he still enjoys it.”

The much-loved Channel 4 anchor was impressed after seeing one of her reports on a student house party that ended in chaos after the police sent in the heavy squad. “I wasn’t actually at the house party,” she admits. “I had been out, and lots of the roads were closed around where we lived.”

“The next day, there was a lot of talk on Facebook about the party and what had happened with the police. I managed to track down footage of police violence and photographs of injuries sustained by students, as well as comments from the police and the boys who organised the party. It was all a bit of a rush to get the story to air [on student station LSTV], but it was worth it. It was the story everyone was talking about.”

Natalie never had a moment of realisation that pushed her into journalism. But her love of writing and inherent fascination with the news made it a natural progression. “When the rolling news channels broke news of disasters I would watch transfixed for hours,” she recalls. “Journalism was a great way to combine the two.”

She studied Broadcast Journalism at the University of Leeds, followed by placements with the BBC, MediaGuardian and Sky News, which she describes as “a nice way of knowing what you’re letting yourself in for.” Luckily her time at Sky News led to paid work.

The reel she submitted to the 4Talent Awards included various reports from Essential, her news programme on Leeds Student Television. “I feel they represented me not only as a reporter, but as a producer,” she asserts. “I also submitted some blogs I’ve written for MediaGuardian online. It’s always important to move with technology.”

natalie.whelan@hotmail.co.uk

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Words: Anna Lord
Photography: John Stewardson

The term multi-talented is bandied about a lot, but after creating weird and wonderful theatre, appearing in EastEnders and teaming up with Peep Show’s Super Hans, 27-year-old Oliver Lansley certainly qualifies.

“It’s quite amusing, but very flattering,” is Oliver’s take on being officially dubbed multi-talented. As an actor, writer and director, he certainly boasts the necessary credentials. He started out performing on stage before setting up his own theatre company, Les Enfants Terribles.

“I always thought one of the great things about theatre was the fact that anyone could create it,” he explains. “Essentially, you just need a space to perform and an audience – unlike TV or film, which is pretty hard to create on your own.” The formation of the company inadvertently led him into playwriting: “Primarily because I couldn’t afford the rights to put on other people’s plays,” he shrugs.

The theatre of Les Enfants Terribles is at once magical, whimsical, sinister and grotesque. It has garnered comparisons to Tim Burton, Roald Dahl and Lewis Carroll. With their most recent production, The Terrible Infants, Oliver wanted to create “a show that makes adults feel like children.”

“The stories I remember from being a kid are the ones that scared, thrilled and excited me. I think storytelling – and to a certain extent, theatre – is about eliciting an emotional response. When creating something for children, you’re trying to work with bold emotions that they can relate to: fear and wonder. The combination of magical and sinister is a natural one, plus I think the things that tend to excite us the most also scare us a bit.”

As well as writing, directing and performing in his own creations, Oliver has substantial experience of acting on stage and screen elsewhere. He has appeared in Holby City, Doctors and EastEnders. “The thing about working on those shows,” he admits, “is that no matter what other work you do, your friends and family will never be quite as excited as they are by you being on EastEnders.”

A career highlight for Oliver was playing the lead role in Greek, a play written by his hero Steven Berkoff. “Steven’s always pushed his own creative vision,” reflects Oliver admiringly. “He has a bold voice, writes, directs, acts and is very accomplished at all of them.” He could just as easily be describing himself with that statement: Oliver Lansley feels like a young Berkoff in the making, with recently published play Immaculate no-doubt the first of many.

For the time being, Oliver is concentrating on his TV work. He’s busy developing Whites, a comedy for the BBC with Matt King [Super Hans from Peep Show], based on King’s experiences as a chef in a Michelin starred restaurant. And after filming a pilot back in 2006 for Channel 4, ITV2 picked up his comedy series about DJs, FM, co-written with actor and director Ian Curtis.

Being pitched as The Office meets Peep Show, the series stars Chris O’Dowd [The IT Crowd] and Kevin Bishop [Star Stories]. “We’re just finishing off the final scripts at the moment, and start shooting towards the end of November,” he can reveal. “It’ll go out in February: it’s a very exciting time at the moment.”

www.lesenfantsterribles.co.uk

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Words: Suchandrika Chakrabarti
Photography: Jannica Honey

Inspired by the natural world, this 25-year-old designer’s beautifully intricate patterns make her textiles and wallpapers true collectors’ items.

Based in Aberdeen, Johanna Basford Designs has been producing hand-printed wallpapers, fabrics and ceramics since 2006. It’s a one-girl show, with 25-year-old Johanna co-ordinating both the financial and creative affairs.

There’s nothing like a little help from your nearest and dearest, though: “I have very tolerant friends and family, who over the years have been accountants, web designers, photographers, models and box packers,” she grins.

Referencing the nature that surrounded her as she grew up on a fish farm in rural Aberdeen, Johanna’s delicate, leaf-like drawings are embellished with flowers and vines that twine together to become dense, baroque-style patterns.

“As I child I scrawled on the walls; on absolutely everything,” she admits sheepishly. “I drove my parents mad. But we weren’t really allowed to watch TV, and I think that helped feed my imagination.”

Running her own business, she confides, is a challenge: “When I first set the company up, I didn’t know just how much time it would take up. Getting that balance between the two sides is a difficult thing.” She must be doing something right though, as she won the Shell Livewire Award for Young Entrepreneur of the Year in 2006, as well as securing a welcome loan from The Prince’s Trust.

Although the design side is Johanna’s passion, she’s enjoying the independence that comes from being self-employed. “You’re in charge of the direction your work is going in,” is her take on it. “The minute you start working for someone else, it can be quite restrictive.”

Just a few months after graduating with a first in Printed Textiles from Dundee of Jordanstone College of Art & Design, Johanna was already attending the glitzy opening of DKNY’s new Bond Street store – freshly kitted out in her wallpaper, after she won the New Designers showcase at London Fashion Week, fittingly in association with Wallpaper* magazine.

Apart from her products being stocked from Aberdeen to Brighton, she also takes on commissions, one recent example being a handmade set of limited-edition silk-screened labels for local brewery Brewdog.
Her one piece of advice? Don’t get chickenpox just before your Award photo-shoot: “They’re going to have to Photoshop that out,” Johanna notes wryly. “Oh, and if everyone else is jumping on a bandwagon, do the exact opposite. Carve out a niche, differentiate yourself from the crowd, and dare to be different.” We’d expect nothing less from our Wildcard winner.

www.johannabasford.com

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Words: Nick Lockey
Photography: Elizabeth Gordon

World-beaters in the brave new world of Alternate Reality Gaming, the Hon brothers’, aged 26 and 29, produce work that has re-defined cross-platform media.

“Movies are great,” begins Dan Hon ardently. “They suck you into a story and can affect you in profound ways, but it’s only ever a selfish experience. You never learn anything about the guy sitting next to you.”

His dig at the cinematic arts seems almost sacrilegious given that he’s currently tucking into scrambled eggs in the members’ bar at Bafta, but his infectious enthusiasm for his craft makes it easy to forgive. After all it’s not every day you get to share breakfast with a creator of worlds.

Together with his brother Adrian, Dan helms Six to Start, one of the leading ARG (Alternate Reality Game) design companies. Since the firm’s 2007 conception they’ve spun their complex narrative webs for an enviable client list including Penguin, Channel 4, Disney and the BBC.

But it’s their players who are the real heroes – a supporting cast of thousands that would make Cecil B DeMille weep with envy. Sucked into these experiences through fiendishly conceived ‘rabbit holes’ left in seemingly innocuous places, ARG players quickly find themselves following breadcrumb trails of mysterious clues through complex, multi-layered worlds.

But these aren’t virtual environments or video games; they are experiences that play out over extremely familiar spaces: on popular online platforms, in real-world locations, through ringing payphones, blogs and classified ads. It’s as if you’re experiencing everyday reality but through a warped fantasy filter where anything is possible. “If you want to get to know a particular character,” explains Dan, “just pick up a phone and talk to them.”

Six to Start’s own story is pure ARG narrative in itself. We join our two heroes at key moment in their story: Dan is studying law at Cambridge, Adrian working on his PhD, both happily trudging the path of high-powered inevitability when suddenly they stumble upon a tear in the fabric of reality.

Whilst watching an online trailer for the Spielberg film AI: Artificial Intelligence Dan spots a curiosity in the credits – a young woman named Jeanine Salla, billed as the film’s ‘Sentient Machine Therapist’. Googling this bizarre job title, Dan falls down a rabbit hole and finds himself in the belly of The Beast – the most celebrated ARG of all time.

“It was such an adrenalin rush,” enthuses Dan: “It was like being there at the birth of cinema, a Wild West with no rules.”

Dan and Adrian’s role in co-moderating The Cloudmakers – a community of players collaborating to unlock the secrets of The Beast – brought them to the attention of the secretive team who crafted the game. Their subsequent invite to the States to talk about their experience planted a seed in their minds that left the two brothers teetering on the brink of a real-life rabbit hole – could their futures lie in creating these things, as well as playing them?

They took the red pill and plunged headlong into a new adventure which would see them turn their backs on years of university education to become ARG puppet masters themselves, first at British games company Mind Candy and then under their own steam as Six to Start.

It’s clear, however, that Dan isn’t precious about the genre that prompted their life-changing decision. “We’ve been called an ARG design company, but it’s more of a label than a definition. We want to move beyond the novelty and just get on with telling great stories.”

So what’s the secret of their success? “We’re platform agnostic,” explains Dan between mouthfuls of buttery toast. “Great narrative and great gameplay are the key elements in everything we do, and we just choose the most appropriate media available to convey them.”

Given the fact that they’ve crafted adventures utilising everything from Twitter and Google Maps to poetry hunts in St Pancras Station and urban chases featuring sinister black helicopters, I’m not about to accuse them of narrative narrow-mindedness.

Of course, not everyone gets to follow a breadcrumb trail as fortuitous as the Hons, so is there any hope for the aspiring bedroom puppet master? “It’s really easy to make an ARG these days,” beams Dan.

“If you know how to craft a story and have a basic understanding of online platforms, you’re halfway there. Just find a bunch of like-minded people, get out there and make something.”

www.sixtostart.com

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Words: Ian Ravenscroft
Photography: Jade Sukiya

With a bold colour palette, striking graphics and a dash of playfulness, this duo, both 26, aim to change the face of hip-hop promos. And they’re not stopping there.

James Knott and James Curran didn’t just have a name in common when they met in the unlikely setting of an entrepreneurship course in Nottingham four years ago. They discovered a shared passion for music video, and have since produced promos for the likes of DJ Yoda, Toronto’s Wio-K and even trend-setting super-producer Mark Ronson.

Heavily influenced by graphic design, the duo use bold colours, playful movement and a blend of live action and animation to bring a new angle to the crowded promo scene. Main animator Curran, whose video for Californian hip-hop group Ugly Duckling scooped an RTS Student Award, points out that these style choices are no accident.

“Particularly in UK hip-hop, a lot of music videos tend to look pretty similar, so we try and make ours stand out from the rest,” he reasons. “We try to push the boundaries and produce a recognisable visual style,” adds director Knott, whose affiliation with hip-hop producer Baby J has been another reason for the duo’s relatively rapid emergence from the promo-producing pack.

“I was asked to produce a video for Baby J, and the video ended up getting played on MTV,” Knott explains. “Myself and Baby J then set up a small company called Baby-Knotted Films, bringing James C in on the post-production side of things.”

“Having Baby J helping to push the music videos from the very beginning was a great advantage,” Knott concedes. “As you begin to get noticed and your name starts to grow as a director, the phone starts ringing. We are lucky that everything fell into place at the right time.”

One of these calls was from Brit Award and three-time Grammy Award-winning producer, Mark Ronson. “He was a fan of Baby J’s production and wanted him to produce a remix for the Valerie single featuring Amy Winehouse,” says Knott. “It was through this we got the opportunity to make the video.”

However, actually producing their breakthrough promo wasn’t quite so simple: “We started work on the concept before the remix was even finished,” explains Curran. “Then from the shoot we only had a week to complete it.” Knott is clearly still exhilarated: “Seeing the video I’d edited in my bedroom on MTV was a magic moment.”

www.slimjimstudios.com
www.myspace.com/knottedfilms

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Words: Louise Thacker
Photography: Roland Lane

Brought up in a family of business-minded bistro owners and fudge-makers, it’s clear that entrepreneurship has always run through the blood of this 27-year-old MD.

It’s a cold, dark Sunday afternoon ‘up north’ in Leeds. I step into a quiet bar on the usually busy Call Lane, eagerly early for my coffee-date with the winner of the 4Talent Innovation award. I call him, and within seconds of putting down the phone, I’m face to face with the man himself.

Attempting to ignore the fact that a Wham! record is playing rather too loudly in the background, I listen intently to how Phil’s inspiring games company first came about. “It was after I’d finished university in 2004,” he begins. “It seemed like a pretty good time to have a go at a bit of a dream of mine, which was making games. A few of us got together and started Creative North, and it developed some momentum from there.”

Based in Huddersfield, Creative North started off exclusively making mobile phone games, but since branched into Nintendo DS and iPhone – an impressive achievement in a field dominated by big players. “Our expertise is really in handheld gaming. If it’s portable and you can play a game on it, the chances are we’ve developed something for it.”

Creative North’s international folio of clients includes O2 and Hasbro, but they have firm roots in the Yorkshire creative community, running an on-the-job Academy scheme for local students with their eye on the gaming industry. “We take maybe three or four students a year, and bring them in to work on a part-time basis alongside our full-time team,” he explains.

As we near the bottom of our coffee cups the topic changes to family life, and it’s clear that Phil’s close-knit family share his enthusiasm for enterprise. “My youngest sister runs a restaurant in Newcastle; my other sister was a snowboard instructor, and then started up a bistro – and then there’s my youngest brother, who makes and sells fudge at a local farmers market. It’s his little money-making scheme while he’s at college.”

True innovators always approach conventional tasks in unexpected ways, and this 27-year-old entrepreneur recalls one client that approached them for an electronic alternative to a bag of leaflets and guides at a New York event. “We devised a way to put all the information onto a Nintendo DS,” he smiles. And who would have thought of that?

www.creativenorth.co.uk

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Words: Frankie Ward
Photography: Katja Ogrin

His dauntingly dark Stanislavky EP is a huge U-Turn for former kids’ television presenter Iain Woods.

Recorded as a final project at art school, Iain Woods’ debut record is a sample-infused, soulfully performed and wonderfully produced piece of work, and yet Iain himself is effortlessly charming, despite having endured a couple of train journeys and a photo-shoot before making his way to be interviewed.

Four months after graduating, Iain discovered that he was nominated for the 4Talent Music Award whilst on work experience at London-based label Transgressive Records.

“I was saying to a guy that I’d been play-listed at BBC 6 Music, but didn’t find out until two months later. I asked him, ‘Could you give me some advice on how to stay on top of things?’ And as I said it I scrolled down the 4Talent website, saw ‘Iain Woods’ in the shortlist and thought, this is exactly what I mean!”

According to his MySpace page, Iain’s music blends grime and gospel – not exactly the genres that leap to mind when browsing his material. “I don’t really take the genre thing that seriously,” he shrugs. “It’s more to do with a sombre setting, than really syncopated Dizzee Rascal style grime beats.”

He once wrote that his work comprises pop songs about amphetamines and anal sex. So which tracks are about what? “It’s all a big web to be worked out by the listener, and not to be explained by me,” is his enigmatic reply.

“It would be really difficult and undermining to say that this song is about this, and this song is about that,” he goes on. “Some are written in ten minutes, others over a couple of months. They’re more about just general moods and feelings,” he reflects. So will enlightenment come with repeated listens?

“A lot of the people I listen to have really random lyrics, like PJ Harvey and Beth Gibbons,” he responds. They’ll often pointedly say something that’s completely nonsensical, and I really like that.”

This feels like a good time to raise the topic of his track 1994. On his blog, Iain writes in fragmented note form about the various happenings in that particular year – such as the death of Kurt Cobain, and Nelson Mandela becoming President of South Africa. “I’ve just got this thing about years, I’ve always found them really interesting,” he explains – this particular year having the significance of being the year his uncle was murdered.

“I’m quite a storyteller, but I don’t think you’d be able to tell what it’s about just by listening,” he reflects. “It’s about something generally dark: that was my first memory of something really, really serious.”

During the interview Iain says he’s not working on new material, but calls me later to apologise. “I don’t know why I said that; I’ve nearly finished a new EP,” he tells me. “I think I got carried away. You were my first interviewer.”

www.myspace.com/iainwoods

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Words: Chris Baraniuk
Photography: John Stewardson

For Andy Ward, 23, messing around on student radio was the perfect breeding-ground for his slap-dash brand of absurdist comedy.

“I’m over in the middle bit, by Burger King,” I shout down my mobile to Andy, mere metres away in Paddington station. We spot each other and, since neither of us is city savvy, slip in to a nearby Korean restaurant to avoid the bustle.

“I’ve just left Keele Uni,” he begins. “During my whole time there I was involved with student radio in some form or another. We were nonsensical. We did idiotic features every week, like a whole series based on rhymes and puns. Play your Picards Right was a gameshow that we made up as we went along – nothing to do with Star Trek,” he adds helpfully.

“We were nominated for a Student Radio Award for Best Interview after a show we did with The Hoosiers,” Andy goes on. “We didn’t want to do a conventional interview, so we brought ‘wacky’ gifts along – Vimto, champagne flutes, Space Invaders, that sort of thing. We thought they’d like it, but we ended up spilling Vimto all over them. They’ve stopped doing student radio interviews now. Who knows if that was our fault?”

It’s the irreverent style of his shows that helped garner popularity amongst fellow students, particularly his Garth Marenghi and Mighty Boosh influenced Ghost Stories series, which began as a one-off airtime filler.

“We got loads of texts and feedback from people saying we should do more,” he explains. “So we did. My Dad used to play us this tape of monologue ghost stories at Christmas, and I think the inspiration came from that – I really liked working with a single narrating voice. Not even any sound effects. With the monologue, you can really get a sense of how to drive the comedy forward.”

His sample reels don’t hide the fact that producing them was side-splittingly good fun. He hasn’t wasted time on editing out background laughter or wobbly lines. In fact, he says, that’s all part of the plan: “It was all deliberately amateurish. It helps the fun come across. We knew we couldn’t act or do voices properly, so felt it was better not to try too hard.”

But could that style be accommodated by professional radio? “Definitely. I think people really appreciate things that don’t try too hard to iron out the imperfections, like when actors in sitcoms can’t help laughing at each other’s jokes. But you do have to be careful with absurd comedy: it’s a bad idea to string random words together and hope that people will find it funny.”

As we’re finishing up I ask Andy how he would describe himself. He looks exasperated. “I have no idea. I always cringe at questions like that on job forms. I just can’t take anything that seriously. I need someone to give me a comedy job, or I won’t survive in the real world. Put that in capital letters. Save me from starvation.”

andyward16@googlemail.com

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Words: Simon Harper
Photography: Jannica Honey

A former finalist in Channel 4’s stand-up contest So You Think You’re Funny, Rose Heiney, 24, has since decided that the pen is mightier than the mic.

Published earlier in 2008, her darkly comic debut novel The Days of Judy B saw Rose – daughter of broadcasters Libby Purves and Paul Heiney – become firmly ensconced in the literary world that she was first exposed to at an early age.

“I was very lucky to grow up in a house full of books, to be taken to films, to plays, and introduced to good TV programmes,” she begins. “They’re the places that you go when the rest of the world isn’t looking so brilliant. I learned to have a lot of respect for television. A brilliant half-hour sitcom can inform your outlook as much as six miserable weeks spent trying to slog through The Brothers Karamazov.”

Fittingly, much of Rose’s humour comes from exposure to a raft of British sit-coms, name-checking the likes of Hancock’s Half Hour, Drop The Dead Donkey and People Like Us among her favourite touchstones, alongside more recent triumphs such as Peep Show.

“I’m evangelical about the programmes I find funny – if I were braver I would be running down the street thrusting box-sets of Ever Decreasing Circles into the hands of strangers, shouting, ‘Episode three is life-changing!’ and then sprinting off to spread my message.”

Describing her own working habits as “haphazard”, Rose wishes she’d prepared another draft of her novel before it went to print – but she needn’t have worried. Her first offering won over readers and critics, with Victoria Hislop [The Island] lauding it as “one of the funniest, most profound book’s I’ve ever read.”

“It actually got turned down by an awful lot of publishers,” says Oxford graduate Rose. “Looking back, I can see why. It’s obviously a very ‘young’ book, and the draft on submission was by no means ready. I dealt with the rejection through a well-moderated regime of incandescent rage, hysterical sobbing and alcohol abuse. I was very, very lucky that a publisher saw fit to take a punt on it in the end, and that relief was incredible.”

Rose is keen to dabble in other media too, and is in the early stages of developing an online comedy. “It’s a bit of a departure for me,” she confesses. “I’m the kind of person who thinks that computers have eyes and that you can scoop up broadband in a bucket. Trying to explain widgets and platforms to me is like teaching a dog to play poker, but I’m doing my best.”

“There’s so much I’d love to try,” she goes on. “I’d love to write radio comedy, contribute to other people’s shows, and ultimately help create good television. It’s very early days, but if someone opens a door, writing-wise, I will happily peep through it.”

rose.heiney@googlemail.com

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Words: Chris Baraniuk
Photography: Ben Collins

Delusions of immortality, a shoestring budget and a lonely robot helped nab the Directing Award for this duo, aged 29 and 30.

“Humanity’s delusions of immortality and a robot’s loneliness,” is how Timo and Robert sum up their retro black-and-white sci-fi feature, The Big Forever. The narrative follows our lonesome bot as he visits a vast library of human memories following the race’s extinction. The robot is there in order to hear what their last messages to the universe were, and the effect the experience has on him, and the audience, is profound.

After The Big Forever was nominated for a Scottish Bafta, the duo got in touch with composer Clint Mansell [Requiem For A Dream, The Fountain, Pi] and asked him to have a look at their film. “He liked it so much,” they report, “that he wrote and scored an entire new soundtrack for the film. That was a very exciting moment for us.”

The visuals in the piece are a combination of live-action recording, Photoshop compositing and sprinkles of CGI, and the pair managed to put the whole lot together for an impressive £200 while finishing their degrees. In order to pull off such feats they’ve developed a strong work ethic, and when asked if working together so closely can ever become a problem, Timo insists their system is foolproof.

“For us, it’s a very good way to work. Any problems that could arise in production with two directors can easily be managed in pre-production, and so long as both of us know the answers to the questions, then everything runs smoothly. Directing can be a lonely place, so it’s nice to have company. It’s very easy for us to tune into what the other person is thinking, and a huge part of the enjoyment for us comes from finding that common ground.”

And there’s no sign of the partnership coming to an end anytime soon, as Timo and Robert already have plenty of other projects on the assembly line, including music videos, animations and another short film that looks set to continue their fascination with the dilemmas of human behaviour.

“It’s an homage to the sci-fi films of the ‘50s and ‘60s,” they explain, “but set around a bullied 11-year-old on a contemporary working-class estate. It’s like This Is England meets The Day Of The Triffids.”

Working closely together with creative zeal, they seem determined to express their natural enthusiasm for telling stories. “For me,” reflects Timo, “telling stories is about wanting to communicate something, which is inherent in all of us. I decided that film was my medium, and I wanted to tell stories from behind the lens.”

“My Dad always thought I would become a storyteller – or a political spin-doctor,” smiles Robert. “When I was younger I was always getting myself into trouble, so I would have to tell stories to get out of it. I got pretty good at it.”
Read the rest of this entry »

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Words: Catherine Bray
Photography: Kate Beatty

Having won a British Soap Award for her portrayal of Hannah in Hollyoaks, 19-year-old actress Emma Rigby explains why it’s time to bow out of soap and look to new acting challenges.

Too many interviews with actresses start with a description of their flawless skin and doll-like stature. But meeting Emma Rigby in a greasy spoon cafe in Birmingham, the contrast between the petite, impossibly glamorous girl and her workaday surroundings is difficult to ignore.

With her bright blonde hair swept up in a striking Sixties beehive, lethal heels and a gleaming white smile, I can’t help but think I’m probably about to interview someone who sets a lot of stock by their appearance. In fact, Emma is interested in being known for more than the way she looks.

“Nowadays there’s so much focus on the way you look, and the idea that you have to be a certain way to succeed. We should be concentrating on people that do great things, rather than people who are hailed as a celebrity because they have a lot of money to spend on clothes and are a size zero. I try to stay out of all that, because I want to act, not be in every single magazine. It’s fine if that’s what you want, but I don’t. I don’t read those types of magazine because I don’t have any interest in seeing those types of shots of people I don’t know.”

She also eschews the Heat magazine culture of candid interviews which many soap actresses find to their cost, then seem to give license to paparazzi to stalk their targets 24/7. “I work with some people who have fantastic success with the lads’ mags, they do gorgeous photos and it’s fun for them, but it’s not for me. For me, the money to be made is not worth it. I’d rather wait and try to find a good role I’d like to do.”

It seems Emma is intent on being known for the skills that bagged her this 4Talent award, announcing that she’s leaving Hollyoaks after three-and-a-half years because she doesn’t want to be pigeonholed.

Hollyoaks has been a brilliant learning curve, but I’d like to move on and try something completely different. It’s so difficult, but it’s just about going to the auditions and putting the work in.”

Will it be tricky to find more serious work though, given the attitude much of the industry has towards soap actresses? “There is still this stigma attached to Hollyoaks. When it started it was known as a place without many serious actors; a place that wasn’t focussed on the acting as such. I can imagine there’s still that old reputation: ‘Oh it’s only Hollyoaks.’ But if you go into an audition and you’re right for the part, hopefully casting directors will see beyond that.”

It may help that Emma’s most famous storyline, and the one that scooped her a British Soap Award, was a serious story applauded for its sensitive handling of a potentially explosive issue. Emma’s character Hannah suffered from anorexia, triggered by a dieting pact she made with a close friend, who eventually dies of the disease. She was a huge success in the role, but reveals that her casting on Hollyoaks was a case of second time lucky, having unsuccessfully attempted once already: “I’d been for an audition the year before. I walked in and they took one look at me and said, ‘I don’t know why you’ve come, you look far too young,’ so I went away without even auditioning. But I came back the next year.”

If Emma’s hoping to moving away from soaps, what are the types of film and work that in an ideal world, she would like to be part of? “Well, I really love Jodie Foster, Hilary Swank, and Cate Blanchett; people like that. They’re the kind of people I look up to – they keep themselves to themselves a bit, they’re not constantly in the tabloids.”

Veronica Guerin starring Cate Blanchett is a really hard role, but she was fantastic in it. I love serious drama, crime, thrillers.” Sounds she’d be quite a serious cinema date. “Oh, you’d never want to sit down and watch a film with me, because I’ll always pick a really depressing film.”

channel4.com/hollyoaks

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Words: Michael Leader
Photography: Hamish Jordan

With a mod mother and a beatnik father, Ben, 30 has a knowledge of music and passion for the culture that surrounds it that shines through on screen.

When I meet Ben in a Central London pub, he greets me with a bear hug, and indicates his ‘hair of the dog’ bottle of beer with a wink. I admit that I couldn’t find much about him online, apart from his showreel on YouTube, so where did he come from?

He takes a sip and replies: “I was the front man in a band until about a year ago, called Dirty Cuffs. But I got really bad tinnitus in the long run. I’ve been doing stand-up for the last eight months, but my first love has always been music and culture: talking about it, and communicating it.”

“I studied performing arts,” he continues. “But I could never see myself leaping into a pair of tights and going, ‘Alas, poor Yorick.’ I wanted to either be myself, or to play larger-than-life characters. For me, presenting and jerking around being comical was always natural.”

It shows. His video, a mash-up of an interview, a gig report and a stand-up routine, is anchored by his personable nature and an evident passion for and knowledge of music. “I come from this very liberal, hippy, background,” he explains. “Well, my Mum was a mod and my Dad was a beatnik. Because of that, they had a hell of a lot of music, and I was flicking through old copies of Melody Maker and NME when I was knee-high.”

Ben’s obviously an educated fellow: he peppers his speech with references, and within our short chat manages to quote Confucius, going on to relate an anecdote about David Bowie’s PR stunts in the 1970s. Does he feel the need to tone himself down for presenting gigs?

“I don’t want to come across like a snob,” he admits. “I dig a lot of commercial stuff that’s out there. Everyone has tastes, but when you go to work, you go to work. If you’ve got a love of music, you’ve got to embrace it and know it all. You could be an art dealer and particularly like Jackson Pollock and Picasso, but you’ve got to know all your masters as well, even though they may not be to your taste.”

Personality will only get you so far: Ben describes his jokes as “good… for a working men’s club in Bolton,” and is quick to insist that knowledge of your field is just as crucial. “If you don’t know that particular genre or interviewee, you come well-equipped, so you’re not just a pretty face. You take the facts, then imprint your personality on it.”

benjohnchancellor@hotmail.com

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Words: Claire Spencer

As influenced by film as he is by photography, 24-year-old Hal has made an art out of his obsession, using still images to put a cinematic spin on the everyday world.

“I’m not sure obsession is a technique, but if it is, that’s how I’d define my process,” reflects Hal Sear. “I get wrapped up in the photographs, trying to re-stage a sensation over and over. Making the images is like day-dreaming; I go through the motions but my mind is somewhere else.” Hal’s photos tend to focus on domestic interiors, but with a theatrical edge that moves them out of the ordinary.

Hal won the South Square Trust Award earlier this year, and can now add the 4Talent Award for Photography to the tally. But it’s more than just an accolade to the young photographer.

“I’m just starting to develop a new project, so it means a lot that to me that the work I completed earlier in the year has been recognised,” explains Hal. “It’s important to me that a new audience gets to see my work.” His old audience was connected with his work at the Royal College of Art, where he’s just completed an MA. At the time, he feared that the course would limit his individuality as an artist, but as it happens, it embraced those qualities.

This is just as well, as Hal’s influences range beyond the confines of other photographers. “Film is a strong influence: screen beauty, or the screen enigma, interests me,” he expands. “Also contemporary French directors like Christophe Honore and Francois Ozon, and independent American film-makers such as Gus Van Sant and Gregg Araki.”

There is a certain disjointed narrative in his work: ‘Two Shadows’, for example, sees a strange juxtaposition between light and shade, memory and reality, warm and cold. Hal agrees: “I think my images are more like broken stories. Every picture is seductive, suggesting more than it reveals.”

Part of that storytelling process if reflected in the colour palette he uses; a faded brightness associated with dreams and memories. Hal acknowledges that he’s particularly interested in themes such as longing, and chooses the colours to intensify the audience’s reaction.

“The camera always lies,” he declares. “There’s a strong personal element to what I do, but it’s ultimately lost in the pictures. They are fantasy.” Arguably, our fantasies do as much to define our reality as the world around us, another theme integral to his work and illustrated with a recurrent isolated figure.

“He’s so different from me, yet at the same time familiar,” says Hal. “Within the image this kind of ‘dual’ persona is created, similar to a self-portrait, but with a barrier between us.” Finding the artist in the art can be difficult, and Hal claims that this has been important to viewers of his work to-date. “But then,” he concludes, “autobiography is the biggest fiction of all.”

hal.sear@network.rca.ac.uk

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Words: Catherine Bray
Photography: Neil Parker

‘Thai brides’ are a sensitive issue: even more so when your father’s marrying a Thai woman 33 years his junior. Lorne Kramer, himself 25 decided to document this surprise partnership with touching results.

Mee And My Dad, the film that secured Lorne his 4Talent Award, is about as personal as it gets. But it also captures a truly international story. It’s a film about his family, specifically his father and his new wife: a Thai woman named Mee, of about Lorne’s age.

Having access to a story so sensitive and compelling is in many ways the documentary-maker’s dream. But when it’s this close to home, that must bring its own set of complications?

“It was hard in many ways,” Lorne admits. “Having your Dad tell you on camera that he feels like he’s ‘done with the role of being a Dad’ and just wants to be your mate was emotionally quite distressing. At the same time, being there with a camera gave me the power to ask questions I would never have been able to ask him if I wasn’t making a film.”

The original idea was to make a film about relations between Thailand and the West, but his tutor at UWE in Bristol helped him realise what the film really ought to be about. “He said, ‘What’s your USP? And I realised that my Dad and his relationship was the real story.”

Pioneering doc-makers like Broomfield and Theroux have successfully made themselves part of the story, but could turning the magnifying glass on your own father be seen as making career capital out of private issues?

“You have to be prepared to be challenged and criticized,” Lorne admits. “I’ve tried to be completely open about myself in the film, and hopefully people will see I’m trying to tell an honest story and react well.”

“Mee was upset with how she was portrayed, though,” he confesses. “I like her a lot, but she can be very difficult. She’s intelligent, but also manipulative, and we weren’t going to make a film that just showed everything in their relationship as positive.”

When we speak, Lorne is at Sheffield Doc/Fest, frantically handing out the thousands of business cards he’s at printed ahead of a screening of his film. From 1,500 submissions, just 140 are being shown, he tells me proudly – he’s nervous, but with justifiably high hopes.

“There are 1300 delegates here, and 150 buyers, so hopefully we might find someone who wants to distribute it, or even turn it into a different kind of film,” he asserts. “It’s 27 minutes long at the moment, but we shot 36 hours of footage, so it could be re-cut into a feature-length film.” More fool the buyers who pass over this early gem from a film-maker destined to go far.

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Words: Etan Smallman
Photography: Anastasia Taylor-Lind

From the slums of Sao Paulo to the bright lights of London, a commitment to documenting untold stories has reaped rewards for 26-year-old Maria.

Awards can be a bit like buses. You tire away for years, honing your craft, creating masterpieces and yearning for a bit of recognition – and then three come along at once.

At least, that’s what happened to Maria Eduarda Andrade, a London-based Brazilian film-maker, who can add her 4Talent gong to a Royal Television Society Award, and the scholarship to study Screen Documentary at Goldsmiths that brought her to Britain in the first place.

The 26-year-old hails from a town called Recife in North East Brazil. “A city by the sea,” she tells me wistfully: “28 degrees in the winter; nice and warm.” It’s a world away from the setting of the work she describes as her “baby” – her touching directorial debut, Just Like Mom.

By chance, Maria heard of a Brazilian woman, Ana, imprisoned in Britain for trying to smuggle drugs into the country. She visited her in her Lincoln jail, but after the Prison Service refused permission to film, she decided that the only way to tell this desperate woman’s story would be to go to Brazil herself to meet her mother and two daughters.

In the process she would become the bearer of the worst of news, as her family knew nothing of Ana’s plight. The result is a stirring and heart-rending portrayal of three generations of single mothers and their struggle through poverty and destitution.

“It was a difficult situation,” Maria explains. “They come from a very poor background, but the characters were really, really amazing. It has a lot to do with the way I relate to my subjects: I have to be really in love with them.”

It’s clear that a burning sense of what’s fair powers Maria’s work. “What really drives me is injustice,” she confirms. “And of course I’m not happy with poverty; I come from a country with huge social inequality.”

It can’t be a coincidence that the time Maria came face to face with this social inequality – in the poorest parts of Sao Paulo – was also the moment that she decided to pursue her love of film-making.

“Before coming to London I was in Sao Paulo, where we curated film festivals with free entrance in very poor areas,” she recalls. “We made some documentaries to be used in schools, and that’s where I really decided that I wanted to do documentary film.”

It’s the “intense human experience” of documenting real life that is still the draw for Maria: “I want to keep making films that make you laugh and cry about real people,” she concludes simply. “And I think that real life is really more interesting than any fiction you can create.”

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Words: Etan Smallman
Photography: Elizabeth Gordon

On the crest of a radio wave, 21-year-old Veena V is out to banish boring radio with her fiery brand of presenting.

Veena V is a busy bee. Tracking down the budding – but seemingly elusive – radio presenter for this interview was no easy task, with call after call being met by the dead-end of her chirpy voicemail message.

A renowned broadcaster (whose name escapes me) once said that all it takes to be a good presenter is the ability to record a half-decent answerphone message. If that were the case, Veena has it in the bag. She also has the alliterative name and mega-watt smile that make her look as if she’s pre-packaged, primed, and ready to hit the radio big-time.

When I finally get to speak to the 21-year-old East Londoner, she tells me her ideal job would be on Radio 1. Chatting away to her, I almost feel like I’m phoning into her show, with her bubbly tones and cheery demeanour. But she’s no Fearne or Edith copycat.

“I don’t think there are many female presenters like me,” Veena proclaims: “I’m kind of quite out-there.” She rejects what she calls “the same boring old ideas” in favour of a highly energetic interviewing style.

In an industry driven by contacts, she knows how to play the game, and is sufficiently linked-up to secure interviews with the likes of the Pussycat Dolls (twice), Jay Sean and Gym Class Heroes.

But her proudest achievement came when she dramatically increased the listenership on one of her old stations – garnering a peak of over 100,000 listeners – and beating the station’s breakfast show, an almost unprecedented feat in the industry. It can’t have gone down well with the breakfast hosts. “No!” she giggles. “I didn’t really say anything; I just quietly smiled to myself.”

Live radio, though, has its pitfalls – and pre-recorded shows aren’t much better, as Brand and Ross recently reminded the nation. Broadcasting since the age of 16, Veena must have had her fair share of embarrassing on-air moments. “Nothing really; I don’t really get embarrassed,” she insists.

I persist with my line of questioning. “Well, on one of my old radio shows, I used to get guys literally calling up all the time for my number, which got quite annoying, but made for quite a good radio show. I’d take the mickey out of them and give them fake numbers.” And apart from inadvertently swearing live on-air back when she was 16, it’s been pretty slip-up free so far.

Veena’s known for using her former Club Asia radio show, Exposure, to discover the freshest unsigned talent. But the tables have now turned, and she’s the unsigned act getting a slice of recognition.

“I’ve got so many ambitions,” she enthuses. “Yes, I want to be a really good radio presenter, but I want to build the ‘Veena V brand’ and maybe one day have my own production company, or an agency to help new artists.”

www.veenav.com

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Words: Louise Thacker
Photography: Elizabeth Gordon

A research economist who’s actually funny? We kid you not: meet Ali Muriel, the 28-year-old playwright who’s breaking all the rules.

I wasn’t prepared to let 200 miles get in the way of me catching up with the winner of the 4Talent Dramatic Writing Award, so I invite Ali for a live web chat. The inherently witty playwright soon has me ‘LOLing’ at his accounts of the success he has already achieved through his work.

“As part of the Future Perfect scheme, which I’ve been on this year, they locked us – seven of us – in the Paines Plough offices for a weekend,” he recalls. “We had to write a ten-minute monologue to perform on the Monday. Terrifying. Not least because I wrote a monologue about a guy who cloned himself, in order to have sex with himself. I mimed intercourse with myself in front of my mother.”

It isn’t just Ali and his Mum that are drawn into his bizarre situations: his audiences are thrown into the fantastical and humorously funny dramas alongside the characters. An event at the Oval House Theatre saw Ali write a five-minute play that would be performed in a random space within the building.

“I’m rubbish at writing what I know, so I asked for the space I know less about than almost anywhere in the universe.” The Ladies toilets it was.

The play, suitably titled Ladies and Gentlemen, is the story of a young couple that first ‘got together’ in a Youth Centre basement lavatory. It’s now their third anniversary, and the fella has an idea for a romantic ‘where it all began’ gesture, as Ali explains with relish: “She hates the fact that they got together in a lavatory – she wants to forget all about it. And so he has to win her back by being unbelievably romantic. In a lavatory. It was fun.”

Far from the whiff of public toilets, the sweet smell of success was in the air as Ali won Soho Theatre’s Westminster Prize in 2006 for his play Furnace Four, which the Dancing Shadows Theatre company are planning on touring.

Writing may be Ali’s biggest passion, but his nerdy alter ego is also something he’s proud of. “I studied Econometrics and Mathematical Economics,” he admits. “It’s basically the course where even the economists think you’re a geek. Now I work as a research economist, studying education, poverty and inequality. Best. Job. Ever.”

He actually believes the two careers complement each other rather well. “In economic research you’re trying to figure out what’s really happening in the world. In writing, you’re free to make it up,” he points out. “One keeps you grounded, the other cuts you loose. What’s not to love?”

Of course, there are only so many hours in the day. “I have to spend most evenings and more-or-less every weekend writing,” he confesses. “Sleep suffers, and my Facebook wall degenerates into my long-suffering friends writing, ‘Are you dead?’ I call it my Wall of Death.”

alimuriel@gmail.com

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Words: Simon Harper
Photography: Sanna Charles

Perhaps best known as the eponymous tank commander in More4 satire Gary’s War, this Edinburgh-born, 28-year-old actor has a true gift for character comedy.

“It’s interesting what tiny things in life you just pick up on that can work,” begins Greg McHugh, on the issue of writing material: “I try not to sit down and go, ‘Right, I want to write about the credit crunch.’”

Topical gags about financial hardship and global economic meltdown might be near the top of the to-do list for several comedians, but Greg draws from a much more personal well of inspiration. “I’ll just sit down and think about small things that have happened, or people that I’ve met. I must admit, I think of people more than situations; I’m character-driven in that way.”

Greg studied at the Royal Scottish Academy of Music and Drama before appearing on the stand-up circuit. He’s already garnered widespread acclaim for his army officer character, Gary: Tank Commander, with More4 commission Gary’s War picking up a Scottish Bafta.

His earliest forays into comedy were behind a microphone stand, but Greg considers himself primarily an actor, not a stand-up. “I think you’re a good actor if you can do comedy,” he explains. “A lot of actors say, ‘Oh, I do straight stuff,’ and I’ve worked with a few that are good straight actors, but they can’t really get a grasp of comedic roles that well.”

“I see myself as an actor who’s done stand-up, but then even in stand-up you’re acting,” he points out. “If you have to do the same material each night, but still make people laugh, you have to act your way through that.”

It’s no surprise, then, that Greg has since found a fruitful outlet in sketch comedy – particularly with regular collaborator Will Andrews in The Incredible Will and Greg, and the award-winning Blowout – as well as a well-received run of short, sharp and delightfully silly sketches at the Edinburgh Festival.

Citing Coogan, Connolly and Whitehouse as inspirations, Greg has been commissioned by The Comedy Unit to write Gary: The Sitcom and increasingly finds himself being sent scripts to peruse as well as writing his own material.

“It’s worth trying new jokes even if they don’t work, because it’s the only way you get better,” is his advice. “Often it’s useful to think, ‘What is it that makes me laugh?’ Doing pilots is an essential way of getting people to see you, to meet commissioners and to understand the process of how things are made.”

Greg’s quick to point out that the daytime isolation of being a writer-performer can sometimes get too much, but there’s always room for distractions. “I’ve got one of these cinema cards where you pay a monthly amount,” he confides. “If I can’t concentrate, I go and watch three films in an afternoon with the other lonely, unemployed men that tend to do that. That’s my hangout.”

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Words: Claire Spencer
Photography: Sanna Charles

Littlenobody animation

The 28-year-old animation duo who go by the name Littlenobody share their passion for fabled worlds filled with magical creatures.

“I was actually on my first holiday in a decade when the announcement was made,” begins Liam Brazier, one half of the Littlenobody duo. “I spent the next twenty minutes excitedly calculating time difference and negotiating a Turkish keyboard to email a smile back to Karen.”

Over the past year their animations have made it onto big screens at film festivals worldwide, and this recognition is one step closer to making a long-term career out of their craft. “What Cassandra Saw being BBFC certified and put onto 35mm for cinema screening was insane, and a real privilege,” enthuses Karen. “It’s our first short, and I’m so glad it got the life and the audience I dreamt it could have.”

Their stunning films are a product of everything to pair grew up loving and absorbing, and have several common threads running through them. “We both love the charm of children’s storytelling and fables,” asserts Karen. “We want to make a world for our characters to inhabit. I very much like the idea of an unseen world, magic, and creatures.”

Both are passionate about the ongoing learning curve of the animation process. “Every venture seems a departure from the last,” believes Liam. “I’m terrified that I’d become eternally bored of what I love if we just repeated ourselves, as well as wanting to try something new.”

As such, the media that they use tend to vary, as do their methods. Karen explains: “Sometimes when we’re coming up with a story, one of us will say, ‘Ooh, cookie-cutters stop-motion,’ and the medium will lead the story. Other times, we go full-steam-ahead and worry about the practicalities later. I think I have a more holistic approach than Liam. He loves to get lost in the details.”

Both halves of the Littlenobody partnership find their inspiration from similar places – directors Gondry, Burton and Gilliam to name but a few – which helps cement their working relationship. But it’s their differences that really complement each other.

“Karen helps me actually get stuff done,” laughs Liam. “When I met her, I was up at six and back at eight every day, getting sunburnt by the monitor glare – and I hadn’t picked up a pencil in over a year. That’s truly shameful thing for someone who at one point wouldn’t have minded if his hands were replaced by a giant 2B pencil.”

He adds that his creative partner inspired him to get back into creativity as no-one else had. For her part, Karen believes that the animation process would be much lonelier without Liam. “I’m more certain that an idea will work when we both agree, and we push and drive each other to complete projects,” she says. “We are each other’s audience.”

www.littlenobody.com

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Words: Anna Lord
Photography: Sanna Charles

Turning his back on a life of rock-and-roll, Richard Mead, 29, embraced electronica, set up his own studio and composed the soundtrack for the car in front.

Music can do so much to fuel our emotional connection with the moving image. Sometimes it’s barely perceptible, quietly doing its thing in the background, but occasionally production music becomes iconic. Take the menacing notes that signal the shark’s approach in Jaws, or the high-pitched strings accompanying Janet Leigh’s grisly demise in the shower at Bates Motel. Music can make or break the atmosphere of a scene, and yet the talent behind the composition is all-too-often unsung.

One such production music hero is 29-year-old Richard Mead. Starting out playing in a band, he soon developed an interest in electronica and music production, setting up a small studio in his house, recording and occasionally playing live. After composing a piece for a short animation, commissions started rolling in and Richard promptly quit his day job.

Beyond the staples of film and TV, advertising and increasingly new media have a growing need for composing talent. Working under the moniker Cranium Sound, he has crafted the music for numerous short films, and recently, along with his writing partner, had an album published by EMI’s production music library KPM Music House.

His versatile creations blend styles from industrial electronic beats to serene piano compositions. “It’s really important to get the tempo and pace of the track right in the first place,” he explains. “After that, it’s a matter of picking up instruments, plugging in synths and playing around with melodies – trying to create something that is memorable, but that won’t detract from spoken words on screen.”

Working into the night to meet a deadline can numb your sense of perspective, and Richard advises anybody hoping to break into the field to find a trusted mentor: “After hours of listening to the same track, your ears get tired,” he points out. “It’s really important to get another perspective, especially from someone who knows their stuff.”

He draws inspiration from a broad range of material, but name-checks Michael Andrews and Thomas Newman. “I love a lot of things on the Warp label, like Chris Clark and Jackson and his Computer Band,” he adds. “Philip Glass and Max Richter are great, and so’s Mr Oizo – he wrote Flat Beat for that Levi’s ad, but also does some amazing progressive electronic music.”

Currently working on music for a computer game ad and adding the finishing touches to a joint album of production music album with another composer, his career ambition are simple: “It’d be great to be at the stage where I have an established reputation as a ‘go-to’ guy,” he reflects. “It’d also be nice to find time to write an album just for me.”

www.craniumsound.com

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Words: Ije Ndukwe
Illustration: Chris Dickason
Buy Issue 10 here

It’s the spectre that hangs over programme-making; the veiled process that turns endless footage into coherent narrative. But how authoritative is the edit suite? Meet three editors who between them have cut some of the industry’s most challenging genres.

 

Documentary Case Study: Louis Theroux

Stuart Cabb has directed and produced a range of films fronted by Louis Theroux, including Louis And The Nazis and Louis Theroux: Behind Bars, which attracted nearly 6 million viewers. He explains how he uses the edit suite to “create a heightened version of the story.”

 

 

For me, the edit suite tells you what your film is really about. When working on Louis Theroux, we tend to follow experiences through Louis’ eyes. This means that during the edit, you have to find the narrative when there really isn’t one. It’s rather like a puzzle. If you don’t crack it, it’s completely demoralising.

The prison [Louis Theroux: Behind Bars] was hard because people are always coming and going. So if anyone perks your interest, you hope the next time you see them something new would emerge and then the edit hones in on that story.

One funny thing I noticed in the edit is that every time I walked through the lower ground floor of San Quentin prison, the prisoners would call me everything from ‘English ponce’ to ‘Gimp boy’. ‘Camera wimp’ was the favourite. After several weeks of hearing that in the edit, you somehow feel less of a man for not being able to turn around with the confidence to express your masculinity to them, knowing that they’re locked behind a cell door.

We did a casino film [Louis Theroux: Gambling In Las Vegas]. There was this woman, Martha, who was 80 years old and had lost $4m. Every time Louis met her, you got to know her a bit better, so the audience felt they were on a bit of a journey. The edit brought that together, like there was a continuing narrative.

In all the edits I’ve ever done, we have always played with structure more than anything else. We know the characters are good, we know the story is there, but we play with how to structure it so it’s fascinating and unpredictable. We start the story in a place you don’t expect.

The very first thing we do is a synch pool in the first week. Everything that we think is any good, we quickly cut together. That usually runs at around five to six hours. We watch that through all in one go, and straight away the characters that are really interesting leap out.

It’s great to cut all the best stuff out of your film, see it and say, ‘The life of my film is here.’ The worst thing to do is to walk in with a paper edit. Generally you lose the life of the story that way, because you’re trying to predict it before you edit it.

You have to remember what the story feels like the first time you edit it, and log it purposefully in your brain: I’m horrified by that quote; I’m shocked by that experience; that makes me feel emotional. You have to remember these things, because in about five weeks time you’re going to completely distrust it. You can’t over-think it. It’s like romance. If you have to give yourself reasons to stay with someone, as opposed to really wanting to, it doesn’t work. It’s the same in an edit. Your gut tells you when you’ve got a great moment.

 

Comedy Case Study:
Tonightly and The Sunday Night Project

Spencer Doane has nearly twenty years’ experience editing live TV shows. His most recent projects include Tonightly, The Sunday Night Project and 8 Out Of 10 Cats.

 

 

You edit the show in the way you think is funny. Then everyone comes in and puts their tuppence in. You hope that it’s still funny, but I don’t think anyone knows in the end. Each stage is hopefully enhancing it. You have to believe the process will achieve the results.

As the editor, you become really close to the show because you’ve watched it a hundred times over the past few days. How the hell do you know if it’s funny? You don’t. The people on The Sunday Night Project think I only like knob jokes.

It’s important to have someone make a decision who’s not caught up in the day-to-day process. It’s easy to get swept away with an idea, and because you’ve just seen it so many times you can’t be objective about it.

You have to do the best you can, but you can’t be precious about your work. I’ve been thrown out of an edit-suite before. The truth is, if you don’t do what the Series Producer wants, you won’t last very long.

There’s so much more to being an editor than just cutting things together. With Tonightly, I watch the first part of the show and have a system of marking footage. That stuff goes straight into the edit. Jason [Mansford] sometimes says, “Hang on, I’ve just thought of a new joke.” They’re literally coming up with jokes as they’re recording it. So to make the edit faster, I have an assistant marking points where anything was taken out or where they stopped and started again.

Tonightly is quite good because you could always save a joke and put it in the next day. This will happen less on a weekly show, because obviously the material isn’t new anymore. All these things get marked, so you can find it later.

One of the hardest things to do is make live and as-live shows seem and look live. The last thing you want to see is an edit and go, ‘Urgh, that was weird,’ which I see all the time. It’s something you can only learn by doing it. Three years ago, I didn’t have those skills at all. I didn’t know I didn’t have them; I thought I could edit anything. Three years on, I realise it’s a difficult thing to master.

 

Advertising Case Study: KFC, Vodafone and Pantene

Jonathan Pearson is an award-winning director who’s shot commercials for the likes of KFC, Pantene and Vodafone. He’s currently working on an online drama project.

 

 

You make a film three times. Once when you write it, once when you shoot it and once when you edit it.

With commercial editing, you’re working with an agency with their own agenda. There was one brand who, after we shot their advert, came to us with a completely different script and said, “Now make this film.” We had to use a lot of voiceover and pictures and edit around the person speaking, so you couldn’t see them speaking. Fortunately I’d covered it with a lot of cameras, so had a lot of footage.

One of the things you learn when you work for a production company is to pick your battles. The nature of our work is that someone is paying for it. There are always going to be people putting in their ten-pence worth. You have to get used to that. There’s no point getting into deadlock over it.

With editing, some things are so fine that either of two options can work. But then conversely, one little cut can make all the difference. There’s no rule of thumb when judging whether something is funny or looks great. You just need to know what it’s in your head and think, ‘Is that what I was aiming for?’

So many times I’ve shot a film in one way, but gone a different route in the edit. In the edit you can explore other avenues, but you need to know what you’re aiming for because every frame counts. Every second is like gold. You’ve got something like 60 seconds to get the message across.

Sometimes you get attached to one tiny little shot that you’re so proud of, and you have to discipline yourself to let go. Sometimes full scenes need to be chopped out. You have to be ruthless. It goes back to the idea of making a film for the third time. You have to approach it with fresh eyes.

The best adverts are great films. So you need to have a good sense of story-telling, and understand how narrative works. Also a good sense of pace and rhythm is important. You can completely muck up an edit by jarring it at the wrong time. Sometimes I’ve watched a rough-cut and it’s like, ‘Oh God, that’s horrible. Why did they cut there?’ It’s like a needle screeching across a record.

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Words: Simon Jablonski
Brooker portraits: John Stewardson
Buy Issue 10 here

Charlie Brooker – celebrated Guardian columnist, creator of E4’s Dead Set and all-round misanthropic griper – chats about zombies, twats and sliding moral standards.

 

Charlie Brooker, shot by John Stewardson


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After reading or watching anything penned by Charlie Brooker, you’d be excused for expecting him in the flesh to be an overbearing figure with a machinegun wit, mercilessly shooting down all around him who dare to exhibit a mere suggestion of stupidity or imperfection.

So it’s hard to know whether to react with relief or disappointment when confronted with a polite bundle of buoyant charm who carries himself with the kind of humility that would make Gandhi gaze at his sandals in shame. This contrast in personality between the scathing critic and the chatty fellow sat next to me is not just puzzling for those that encounter him, but also, it appears, for Charlie himself.

“I’ve never thought of myself as a TV critic: I was working in TV along time before I started doing stuff for The Guardian,” he begins. “I wanted to be a comedy writer, and when The Guardian gave me the Screen Burn column I thought, ‘Oh good: I get to be funny each week; my subject matter is TV; off you go.’ As a person I’m quite wishy-washy and say things like, ‘Oh, I suppose you could see it like that.’ I never set out to write a treatise on what’s right and wrong as I think that would be extremely dull. It turned out that I’m quite opinionated though, and I didn’t really realise it. But put me in front of a television and give me a deadline and I get really angry about anything.”

As he reminds us, Screen Burn was by no means the beginning of his foray into TV wonderland. Even before the ‘well Jackson’ Nathan Barley was conceived, or its precursor, the TV Go Home website uploaded, Charlie Brooker was busying himself with a variety of on-screen and behind-the-scenes roles.

“It’s weird because I’ve been working in TV for longer than I’ve been writing about it, and I think that gets lost sometimes,” he reflects. “I was working as a computer games reviewer, and then I got a job presenting a radio show, and then started presenting a technology show in about 1998. Then I started doing the TV Go Home website, which led to a job on The 11 O’Clock Show. I was working on that when The Guardian approached me.”

So, was this television writing stuff always the ultimate ambition? Were these other projects merely craftily trod stepping stones that would always lead to the happy shores of script writing?
“I always wanted to write things, but originally I wanted to be a cartoonist,” he says with a shimmer of nostalgia. “From the age of about eight, I used to do comics to amuse myself. I started out by sending some comic strips to the letters page of a kids’ magazine called Oink. It was kind of like a kids’ version of Viz, and had some of the Viz artists working on it.”

Understandably, he was a bit taken aback when they asked him to bypass the letters page and do some proper comics. “It was my first proper job, which is great when you’re 15: it meant I suddenly had an income. So at the time I thought I’d become a cartoonist.”

Even from this early age there’s evidence of a slightly twisted sense of humour, as well as a penchant for darker subject matter. Two characters he particularly beams over whilst reminiscing are Freddy Flop, a kid with some form of leprosy causing various parts of him to fall off, and the Adventures Of Death, a cartoon whose punch-line would always be that someone gets decapitated with a scythe.

It’s not surprising that a kid sketching about flaking skin and gory beheadings would go on to spawn a show like Dead Set, which had its first airing on E4 in October. The basic premise is simple and well-trodden: an outbreak causes people to die and return as zombies, in order to eat other people. But the twist is that it’s set against the backdrop of modern cultural landmark the Big Brother house, which sits well with the writer’s anti-fame-seeking sensibility when besieged and spattered with guts and gore.

When speaking about the inspiration behind the show, in place of lightning bolts and profound visions there’s the image of a somewhat apathetic god nonchalantly slapping the sleeping writer round the face.

“I’ve always loved the Romero zombie films,” he admits. “I wanted to see zombies on TV, and was surprised that it had never been done. In terms of monsters, they’re quite cheap really. A vampire’s got prosthetic teeth, and has to turn into a bat. Werewolves are expensive: you’ve got to get a full body suit for everybody. But a zombie is basically like a pissed person, so they’re relatively cheap; certainly cheaper than Daleks must be.”

“I was convinced that the Americans were about to unveil a series like 24 but with the living dead in it,” Charlie goes on. “I kept waiting for that to happen, and it didn’t, so I sort of felt compelled. I thought, ‘Now I have to do it.’ It was a bit like being commanded to do a chore.”

When talking about writing he speaks with an endearing modesty that’s completely unexpected from someone with such a self-assured writing style. “The thing that gets me going is a deadline,” he declares. “I’m an absolute Olympian procrastinator. I’m incapable of doing anything until right at the last minute when the voice in my head that’s screaming, ‘You’re rubbish, stop writing, this is shit…’ is drowned out by another voice that just says, ‘Write it, you’ve got to fucking do it, you’ve got to get it done.’”

“I approached Dead Set like an exercise. Can I write a zombie 24? Can I do it? And in a way that I’d want to watch it, with enough unexpected things, florid dialogue, and things that make you go, ‘Jesus Christ, I can’t believe that happened’? Hopefully we’ve pulled that off.”

Even when having his photo taken for these pages he doesn’t pose like a man brimming with confidence or smug self-satisfaction. His awkward posturing and puzzled expression are more like that of a tribesman untouched by the modern world who at any moment expects a fanged demon to fly out of the camera.

“Most of the viewers who watch it won’t know or care who I am,” he shrugs when asked about the public anticipation of Dead Set. But given the tone of Screen Burn and his other work, he admits that people were always going to expect something particular from a Brooker-penned zom-com-drama based around the daddy of all fame-hunting reality shows.

“They expected half-an-hour of ‘I hate Big Brother.’ I also think people expected me to write something where they’re all total shit-bags and fuckers,” he says, aureately articulating the general consensus.

“If people expect to hear my voice in it, they’ll hear it coming out of Patrick’s mouth,” he reveals. “As the series goes on, he gets more florid speeches.” Patrick is the callous producer of Big Brother on Dead Set, played by Andy Nyman. “There’s bits when you’ll be thinking he’s just read a Screen Burn column aloud. He’s a panto villain in a lot of ways. It’s not a nuanced portrayal of a modern TV producer: he’s a fucker, and all the better for that I think.”

Of course, it’s somewhat simple-minded to expect that on the grounds of his involvement with Nathan Barley and the mordacious tone that characterises his Screen Burn column, that Dead Set would serve only as a scathing analytic on social licentiousness and obsession with celebrity culture.

“Primarily we wanted this to be nasty; a horror thriller. It’s a populist show, in no way was I thinking that I’d tell it how it is. It’s straightforward enough, it’s obviously comic, but we were always going for something like the original Dawn Of The Dead. Everyone bangs on now about that film being a great satire about consumerism, but ultimately it’s a romp. You don’t have to be sitting there thinking, ‘I know what he’s saying about capitalist society.’ You can just go, ‘Oh, here come the zombies. Brilliant!’”

This obvious enthusiasm for guts and gore was another motivation to write the show in the first place: “It was an opportunity to do a series that has popular appeal, and also is unpleasant,” as Charlie puts it. “It’s fantastical and I like the idea of doing something populist and stupid. One thing I liked about shows like The Twilight Zone is that they’re unbearably cruel.”

If nothing else this talk of cruelty fills me with the warming glow of familiarity as the Charlie Brooker next to me, at least for a minute or two, flickers with a resemblance to the caricature Charlie Brooker that’s grown out of Screen Burn, and currently resides in my head.

I push him on why anyone would intentionally create cruel television. “Most programmes are inherently reassuring,” he reasons. “24 is a really hardnosed show in that they sometimes kill off a well-loved character in a gruesome and unpleasant way. But they have to throw in all the scenes where people say, ‘I love you Dad.’ I wanted all those bits jettisoned, leaving just the hardnosed nasty bits and people running around frightened.”

Does this emphasis on gut-wrenching, spleen-chewing savagery mean there’s no moral to Dead Set? “Well, primarily it’s a romp, but there were things in my head that I was thinking about. We live in times where we’re constantly aware of some sort of looming threat – terrorism, bird flu, global warming, the economy – but at the same time we’re completely obsessed with trivia and celebrity. I get sucked into I’m A Celebrity more than what’s going on in my street. I thought it’d be great to clash the two: invent some terror, and have it colliding headlong with TV fluff.”

Even when speaking about reality TV ‘stars’, there’s a subtle whiff of compassion masked under the sharp tone. “There’s a lot of hatred that gets thrown at Big Brother contestants, deservingly if they’re nasty people, but they often seem to be nasty people because it’s a giant twat amplifier. It makes someone who’s a bit of a wanker seem like the biggest wanker you’ve ever seen.”

“There’s also a lot of hatred thrown at them for seeking fame, but I think why not? If you’re 22 and working at McDonalds, and the Big Brother or X-Factor auditions come along, who’s to say you shouldn’t try out? I’d say do it. It’s a catch-22: you’re a twat if you do, and a twat if you don’t.”

Though there are smatterings of humour throughout Dead Set, it obviously signals a broadening of his writing repertoire. “The original scripts were very straight, there were no jokes in them at all. And we wanted to differentiate it from things like Shaun Of The Dead. I thought that was fantastic, but it’s a different type of humour in that they’re aware they’re in a fiction. There’s that very funny scene where the zombies are coming and they’re throwing their record collection; our characters would never do that, because they’re too scared.”

However, whereas films like Shaun Of The Dead and Day Of The Dead can draw audiences into a bubble and build tension over an hour-and-a-half, were considerations given as to how to maintain that same tension over five episodes? “Yes, and hopefully we’ve pulled it off. Because of the nature of it, it’s fast-paced and there are a lot of characters. 24 was the model in my head. It’s a plate-spinning exercise; it’s constant egg timers. It was like solving a puzzle all the time, working out what could go wrong next.”

“It’s also been ruthlessly structured around commercial breaks. 24 is laid out like a series of pistachio nuts: you’ve got to have one, then you see another one. The idea was to make it like that. Hopefully the first episode builds to a climax every eleven minutes or so: the other episodes were 22 minutes, which is really quite short, but hopefully there’s enough variety to keep you going.”

Having applied his pen to various forms of writing, including a recent dabble in travel journalism for The Guardian, what unique challenge does screenwriting present? “The trickiest thing was working out what the next bit of peril is,” he reveals. “It’s like solving a Sudoku, and it really is that dry in a lot of ways. But Dead Set was easier in that, unlike something like The Wire, everyone’s motivations are pretty basic: ‘Help, we’ve got to survive!’”

Charlie’s first major screenwriting project was cult classic Nathan Barley, which follows the antics of an affluent media type living off his parents’ wealth, whose cringing naivety and absolute commitment to all things ‘street’ managed to create both a monster and a legend out of the same character.

The series originally spawned from his TV Go Home website, which displayed spoof listings for fictional programmes. “When we came to do the series we looked at the listings and realised that Nathan Barley himself wasn’t a character, but an object of scorn. We had no real description of what he thought, so that was our first problem. I think people who read TV Go Home were used to seeing him as a Patrick Bateman American Psycho character who was very cold and aloof, which we actually thought about. We used to say that in the listings he was a cunt, whereas in the series he was a cock.”

Though going from TV Go Home to Nathan Barley may not always have been quite as simple as switching the genitalial form of the main character, were there any lessons to be learnt that made penning Dead Set a little easier?

“Well the process of working out a plot is very similar, in that it’s a nightmare,” says Charlie. “The hardest bit was working out things like why does Dan get a haircut? Why is Nathan rapping when he’s going down on Claire? One of the lessons I learnt from Nathan Barley is that you don’t have to explain. If you watch Friends, it’ll open with Joey or someone walking in and announcing, ‘I’ve just been giving a part in a Polish soap opera, so I’ve got 24 hours to learn Polish.’ That sets up the story for the rest of the show. You don’t ask, ‘But why is it Polish?’ You just think, ‘Oh, this’ll be fun,’ and go with it.”

When it was first aired neither critics nor viewers seemed to know what to make of it, but the gradual rise in popularity of Nathan Barley since its release on DVD surely justifies calls for a second series. “We were planning one in quite some detail about two years ago, but then Dead Set got started.”

The planning process was in quite an advanced stage, with workshops being held in 2007 with various cast members including Julian Barratt (of Mighty Boosh fame) and Nicholas Burns (who played Nathan in the first series). Episode structures had been worked out, and even bits of scripts written.

Whereas most of us might be happy with more of the same hedonistic japes and floral swearing that coloured the original series, Shoreditch is a very different world from the one of 2005 – the sacking of Spitalfields for one will not be forgotten. So what are we to expect from a future series?

“The second series would be slightly different in that everything would have moved on a few years. Nathan’s approaching 30, he’s put on a bit of weight, his hair’s thinning a bit, and his parents have cut off his limitless supply of cash. He’s facing the fact that he’s basically never achieved anything. He has to move out of his flat and in with his brother, who’s currently going through a bitter breakup. His brother’s comparatively square – a GP who before his bitter breakup was painfully ‘Observer Lifestyle magazine’. He’s very conventional, tucks his shirt in every morning and has nice things in his kitchen. Nathan finds himself in an un-cool part of town and doesn’t know what’s going on.”

The fish-out-of-water shtick is always a safe comedy bed, although for many part of the satisfaction of chuckling at Nathan Barley derived from sneering despisingly at that whole Shoreditch ‘new meeja’ element. So why take it out? “We haven’t entirely taken it out, but we wanted to flip everything around so that Nathan was not master of his little kingdom,” Charlie explains.

“We always thought that cocks like Nathan Barley have existed from the dawn of time. If you work in a lighthouse, chances are there are Nathans in the lighthouse community. We never thought of this as a satire on Shoreditch, but as a comedy about a dickhead, a complete cock. Shoreditch was just the backdrop; it could ostensibly have been set in 1925 with different costumes. It’s about a successful twat and a bitter onlooker. In his new setting he’s completely awash in what he perceives as Squaresville, where he thinks everyone is a fucking granddad conformist idiot. So he becomes a bit more Dan Ashcrofty in that respect, whereas actually he’s acting like a fucking child.”

Is there room in this new setting for any of the other original characters? “Dan is working as a minicab driver because he’s quit his freelance job and has decided to write a novel, but actually he’s just driving a minicab and not really writing anything. Also, Nathan’s ex-lackey, Pingu, has become massively successful in some other field. That was basically the setup.”

Charlie talks excitedly about script ideas that are in various stages of plotting. “There was this whole episode that revolved around an incident in which Dan walks across the road and somebody calls him fat, so he decides to go and join a gym. But I was particularly pleased with one in which Nathan finds a gun and he ends up accidentally firing it out of the window.”

“All that happens is that it goes across the road, straight through the window of a house that Nathan’s brother promised a painfully middle-class couple that he’d look after. It’s gone slap-bang in the middle of a giant plasma screen TV. The rest of the episode revolves around their attempts to rectify the problem. They can’t work out whether to replace the TV or smash the place up and make it look like it was a burglary.”

And his writing partnership with Chris Morris appears to have a future, even if Nathan Barley doesn’t. “We’ve actually been discussing something else – not the Jihad comedy that he’s going ahead with,” he clarifies, referring to the fabled suicide-bomb-com that his controversy-courting colleague is working on. “We’ve been discussing something so amorphous that I don’t know how to describe it. It’s about television, basically.”

Theirs is surely an ideal, albeit slightly concerning, pairing. Some of the concepts he reels off for future shows could sit comfortably within an episode of Brass Eye. “I wanted to do a game show in which contestants are shown the faces of young children, and have to guess whether they are being shown hardcore pornography or uncensored war footage,” he chuckles.

British television might not be quite ready for that, but as the media ceaselessly contort our notions of acceptability, this is certainly one man who’ll be catching a ride on the back of sliding moral standards. And all the better our televisions will be for it.

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Words: Martin Anderson
Graham Linehan photography: Adam Mattison-Ward
Buy Issue 10 here

If the British studio sit-com is as dead as Victoria Wood suggested in 2005, no-one’s told Graham Linehan or the legions of fans awaiting the third series of award-winning geek comedy The IT Crowd. Declared in 2007 to be amongst the top 100 living geniuses, this Irish writer loves to ignore good advice in his relentless pursuit of the perfect mainstream comedy show.

 


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“I’ve always been a contrary person. Roy’s based on me to that extent, with that whole ‘music snob’ thing – the idea that if more than ten people like something, it isn’t any good anymore,” says IT Crowd creator Graham Linehan.

Graham enjoys resistance: the ‘Ted and Ralph’ sketches that he wrote with long-time collaborator Arthur Matthews were the slowest entries in The Fast Show - and the most popular; Father Ted turned the deadest concept in British sit-com - the ‘clerical’ - into the most revered comedy show since Fawlty Towers; and Victoria Wood’s 2005 declaration that the studio-based sitcom had been killed by The Royle Family and The Office only served to fire Linehan’s efforts on the first series of The IT Crowd, which went on to garner praise, ratings and awards.

“It’s good business practice that if everyone is going in one direction, you should go in the other,” he declares. “I believe that audiences get bored with things before they know they’re bored with them.”

No-one’s bored with The IT Crowd yet. As we talk, only a couple of days remain before the beginning of exterior shoots for the third series, and many fans fear that in his creative thrift Linehan will afterwards abandon the neglected and neurotic denizens of Reynholm Industries for pastures new; predecessors Father Ted and Black Books both bowed out at series three, though it’s not a decision Graham has yet made for The IT Crowd.

“If you look at something like Friends, series nine or ten, I think people are saying to themselves, ‘I’ve had too much of this delicious food, and I’m really getting sick of it,’” is his diplomatic way of putting it. Even the increasing number of exterior shoots for the series hallmark Graham’s determination to follow his own path. “I kind of know when something does or doesn’t work myself, and I tend to go my own way.”

“For instance, a lot of people were saying really early on that I shouldn’t take the characters out of the office; then I did The Work Outing – and that’s been the most popular episode. So you can’t really pay attention to what people say, because they might be wrong. Really I’ve just got to follow my own instincts, and in the end I just go with what’s funny.”

Graham gets to hear more of other people’s opinions than most writers who reach his level of success, as he maintains a very popular blog where fans of his work can interact with him when he opens a comments thread every Friday. It was at this venue that the self-professed computer nerd appealed for authentically ‘geek’ items to adorn the basement set of the third series.

“I’m hoping it will look just a little bit more super-charged this year,” he reveals. “I always wanted the kind of people the show was written about to look at the set and go, ‘Oh my God, they’ve got a Sinclair Spectrum!’ or, ‘There’s an old Amiga in the background.’ I wanted them to constantly find things.”

Though praising the production design team on The IT Crowd, Linehan admits that only authentic nerds could possibly have the right knowledge to dress the set. “Up until this point, I had to be the one suggesting items. This year I thought that even I don’t know everything about nerd culture, so it’d be better to turn it over to the public, and that’s worked out great.”

Like the reclusive techies in The IT Crowd, geeks are very protective of their territory, and the show has had to walk a careful tightrope between accessibility and geek credibility. “I don’t want my comedy to be enjoyed by just the people that it’s about,” laughs Graham. “I want to reach as wide an audience as possible, but without losing any intelligence.”

“Some people complained that there weren’t enough ‘geek’ jokes in the show, but that’s never what I wanted the show to be. I didn’t want it to have loads of jokes about Linux. I wanted the show to feature these characters but not be aimed at them, but rather at everybody. I don’t like TV shows that polarise audiences and atomise society even further. I want to try and create TV that a large group of people can sit and watch in a room and laugh at.”

The IT department at Reynholm Industries are the typically idle or insane residents of a Linehan show. Graham often posits that grumpy central figure Roy [Chris O’Dowd] is his alter-ego, whereas social-reject savant Moss [Richard Ayoade] is him at age twelve, and their frustrated and computer-illiterate boss Jen [Katherine Parkinson] was inspired by the effect that meeting his wife had on his own life.

“No, Jen’s not based on my wife’s character,” Graham chuckles as I suggest it. “She’s just based on the effect of a woman in a male environment. Jen is much more into the idea of being a businesswoman than my wife is. Also, my wife knows a lot more about computers than Jen does.”

Part of the hope fans retain for a fourth series is that Linehan won’t feel he has quite perfected the show in series three. He retains that the first series was overly confrontational, and despite my suggestion that Jen is one of the few genuinely funny female sitcom characters output by a male writer in recent years, that there’s work to be done there as well.

“I think that it’s only now that I’ve even started doing an OK job with Katherine’s character,” Graham confesses. “I’m very embarrassed about the first series, and that episode to do with shoes - what a bloody tier-one idea that was for writing about women! I think the reason a lot of male writers aren’t very good at writing women is that they’re nervous: a funny character often has negative characteristics, and men are worried about being accused of sexism.”

A total absence of respect - though not of affection - for his entire cast of characters in The IT Crowd helps Linehan sideswipe the comedy-killing influence of political correctness without becoming overly mean.

“Often you’ll find that if there’s a so-called ‘minority’ character in a TV show, they’re not allowed to be funny, because you can’t say anything negative about them,” he proposes. “That’s why men write so many male characters - they can just slag them off ’til the cows come home. But if it came to a woman, or a guy in a wheelchair - not to say that the two are remotely similar - they pull back a little bit, scared of being attacked.”

Graham decided some time ago to disregard these considerations. “I said to myself that if I had a disabled character, or any kind of a minority character, I’m going to make them as negative as any of the other characters. I don’t really have any admirable people in my show - they’re all foolish, and they’ve all got their problems in one way or another. You just have to bite the bullet, and not worry about people being insulted.”

On the surface, it seems that Graham now has to make such judgement calls by himself. Since he and Arthur Matthews went their own ways after the first series of the surreal sketch show Big Train in 2001, the writer has experimented with new collaborations, but writes all of The IT Crowd solo. Does he now prowl parties looking for the funniest person to forge a new writing partnership?

“That makes me sound like some kind of comedy rapist,” Graham grins. “It’s a very precious, magical thing, and it doesn’t really happen if you deliberately try to make it happen. Comedy partnerships are born, not made. What happens more is that you’re sitting in a pub, someone starts speaking, and everything they say is funny. Well, that’s someone you should possibly think about getting to collaborate with you. But if you have a funny writer and you say, ‘Hey, do you want to do something?’ – I think that’s probably a recipe for disaster.”

These days Graham gets creative feedback from Robert Popper, once Commissioning Editor for Entertainment and Comedy at Channel 4, but perhaps best-known for co-creating the Tomorrow’s World take-off Look Around You.

In his new capacity in his own sub-company within Talkback Productions, Graham is himself looking forward to the chance to nurture and encourage new talent. “At the moment I’m trying to do some work with Steve Delaney, who does Count Arthur Strong,” he can reveal. “I would be so proud and happy if I helped him make a sit-com out of that.”

Since there seem to be more funny people in pubs than there are first-rate comedy shows on TV, I ask Graham to explain the difference between being funny and writing funny. “This is something I’ve only found out through doing it,” he explains. “But writing is something that’s often misunderstood. You can be as funny as you like, but sitting down and creating characters from scratch is difficult, and putting them into storylines is difficult. It’s much harder than it seems to be. I worked with someone who thought like that. While we were collaborating, I asked him how he structured his shows. He went whaa–?”

“Like a lot of people, he thought to write a show you sit down and write, ‘INTERIOR… blah blah blah’, and then start writing dialogue. He didn’t realise that you actually need to have a plan. You have to think about it, make sure that you’re on the right track, and that all the characters will bounce off each other. You write scenes to test that out, you experiment a bit, and then finally you come up with what might be the best plot to show the characters off. Then you structure it.”

“Then at the end, there’s this long process of looking at tiny scraps of paper and notes you’ve written on your computer… all sorts of different things. And at the end of that process, you start to write ‘INT. PAROCHIAL HOUSE. DAY.’ Or whatever.”

According to Graham – dismissive of his well-publicised 2007 ranking among the world’s top 100 living geniuses – the most common mistake the tyro comedy writer makes is to go straight from concept to script. “A funny person will sit down with a couple of vague ideas, and they’ll start writing dialogue,” he suggests. “You can only get to about two pages with that type of planning before you start thinking, ‘Oh, I don’t really know how to get this character into the room.’”

Despite his strong association with the ‘Golden age’ of Brit comedy in the Nineties, Graham remains enthusiastic for the quality of current and recent comedy output, such as Peep Show and The Thick Of It, although less enamoured of another staple comedy format: “I hate the way the definition of ‘sketch-show’ seems to have changed recently, so that a sketch-show is now about four characters who are repeated every week until you want to smash their heads against a wall. It used to be that a sketch-show was about variety: different sketches and different ideas.”

If Graham were to return to the format he last dabbled with in Big Train, he’d choose a more classical approach. “It certainly wouldn’t be a character sketch-show – it would be one where every single sketch is different. More along the lines of The Two Ronnies or even Smith And Jones.”

Coming from him, you believe it would work. With only the relative failure of 1994’s Alexei Sayle comedy Paris to de-emphasise in an otherwise glittering CV, one wonders if Graham Linehan could have an idea too risky or off-beat to get commissioned these days.

“No,” he refutes. “The opposite happens; people commission me to do things, and I find that it’s actually beyond my talents. I tried to write a film based on Radio 1 disc-jockeys in the Seventies, and everyone was very enthusiastic about it. We did a good pitch. Then I sat down and found that I didn’t really know how to write it.”

Graham believes that despite appearing to be a creative powerhouse, he often comes up against the brick wall of his own inexperience. “Writing’s a very mysterious thing. Now, when I pitch, I tend to say to people, ‘This might not work, but we can give it a shot,’ rather than, ‘This is going to be the best thing you’ve ever seen in your life.’”

“But I guess the only advantage of being in my position is that I can say that, and people will still employ me,” he admits. For the outsider, the route into television writing remains as mysterious as it ever was. Despite new initiatives and schemes from Channel 4, the BBC and other broadcasters, the de-centralisation of production leaves potential talent not necessarily knowing where to begin. Whilst waiting for the annual contests to roll round and scrounging contact details and meeting-time with the ‘right’ producers, many end up hoping that a ‘high-concept’ comedy pitch might be more fruitful than a conventional one.

“Here’s the thing,” Graham contends. “The ‘high-concept’ script has a better chance in treatment form, but the low-concept one will have a better chance in script-form. I would always suggest to people that they don’t do treatments. Treatments are just cheating. Anyone can say, ‘The Heroic Five is a brilliant new comedy show’ – well, it’s not – it’s nothing yet, just a title. But if you actually sit down and write the script, and it’s flowing out, and there’s jokes and situations and the characters are alive…”

“Look at Seinfeld, the lowest concept you can imagine. Even Friends called itself Friends, whereas Seinfeld was basically the same concept - a bunch of friends hanging out, but they didn’t even go for that angle. Write the funny script; let someone else worry about how saleable it is.”

“Being funny is a surprise in itself, so innovation really isn’t that important. I think Metrosexuality - if you remember that show - would prove that. You shouldn’t write the script until you’re absolutely sure of what you’re doing. That should come at the end of the process, not at the beginning, which is a time for collecting all your ideas and notes and writing things on little pieces of card. If you hold off on writing till you can’t bear it anymore, you’ll write much faster.”

As someone who confesses to nudging a deadline in order to reach maximum creativity, Graham has particular disdain for the power that a poor first draft has to discourage writers. “Your worth as a writer is not measured by your first draft, which is just some notes that will help you write your final masterpiece. A first draft is something that should be changed unless, as sometimes happens, you accidentally write something perfect, which does happen every so often.”

This is the third time this year that I have spoken to Graham about series three of The IT Crowd, and I feel I know by now the painful desk-banging involved for him in getting each script ready, and working out problems during the rehearsal process. Might it not be less stressful to go the Ben Elton route and turn his comedy talent to novels?

“I used to write a lot of prose,” he recalls. “I used to be a journalist. But my prose muscles are a bit weak at the moment, because I haven’t been writing enough of it. Maybe that’s something for the future. It’s also a good thing to be older when you write novels – I don’t know why, but I just think there’s less chance that you’ll make an absolute arse of yourself.”

As we pause our chat for a production person to ask Graham about the casting of a walk-on part in The IT Crowd, I realise that I should let him get back to Reynholm Industries. The rehearsal week is over and it’s time for Roy, Moss and Jen to take their neuroses on the road again before studio recording in the early Autumn.

This year Noel Fielding has too many commitments to reprise his role as gentle goth vampire Richmond, but Matt Berry will be taking up the slack as the morally-challenged company head Douglas Reynholm, following a hugely popular insertion into series two.

The rewrites will continue until the last moment, even potentially impinging upon the studio recording with the audience. “Suddenly you notice that even if a scene has always read well, there’s too much dialogue before the first plot-point gets introduced, or there are three scenes where there should be two. Things like that, for some reason, don’t really present themselves until you’re actually rehearsing. Then there’s a lot of jiggery-pokery involved.”

“The actors help: sometimes they’ll say to me, ‘We don’t need to actually do this in dialogue – I can just look over at him and it’ll convey that information.’ In the final week, it’s like working with a writing partner made up of the four other actors, and it’s just a pleasure, really.”

Though tight-lipped about storylines in The IT Crowd 3.0, Graham admits that even if the characters and situations at Reynholm Industries play themselves out a little, the show might have further renewability as a comedic reflection of the rapidly changing pace of technology – which was his original vision for the series. “It became its own thing for a while, but I think it’s finally becoming what I always wanted it to be.”

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Words: Nick Carson
Photography: Anastasia Taylor-Lind
Buy Issue 10 here

Cult British comedy hails from a cloistered isle where subtlety, eccentricity and surrealism can thrive. US shows may surge across the Atlantic but only a select few wriggle back against the tide; established big-hitters like The Office and Little Britain that are checked in fully-formed before being re-packaged. A Brit writer pitching a fresh idea exclusive to the US market is virtually unheard of, so what happened when Green Wing creator Victoria Pile landed Stateside?

 


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“It never happened,” muses Victoria with a wry smile, when asked when she realised she was funny. Given that the four-times-Bafta-nominated creator of Green Wing and Smack the Pony started penning broadcast-worthy sketches for the Beeb while still at Uni, surely that switch must have flicked earlier than most? “I’m constantly surprised when my work is appreciated by other people,” she continues. “That sounds fake, doesn’t it? But comedy writers need a lot of stroking, and positive feedback - me more than most.”

It doesn’t sound fake. We’re sipping water in her spacious North London front room: it’s comfortable, but clearly a well-lived-in family home where this writer can squeeze in some precious keyboard time before the kids get back. She’s rented some space above a shop to use as an office, she tells me, but the decorators are still in so it’s a working-from-home job ‘til they’re done.

“I get fearful of expectation,” Victoria’s prepared to admit. “I prefer to do a low-profile project and see if it makes a ripple than go out all-guns-blazing. I’ve always abhorred publicity: I don’t like people seeing stuff until it has to be seen.”

So it was an intriguing career curveball, following Emmy and Bafta-winning hits and mounting public anticipation for the next, to plunge into a notoriously competitive overseas market and produce a pilot, set in a US police precinct, rather than risk dropping the bat in Britain.

“America lured me, partly because I didn’t have to recreate something else immediately here: I went to avoid the second-album syndrome,” she goes on. But far from burying her head in the sand, she’d buried her head in a goldfish bowl. “Over there you’re exposed so completely; you can’t just say, ‘Let me do it, and then you can have a look.’ Every step of the way, you’re naked.”

Dismantling the tight-knit Green Wing team in 2006 - cast and crew largely handpicked by Victoria herself - felt “like breaking up a family unit,” she admits: “A lot of the cast spent more time with us than with their own families, and that was the hard act to follow, not whether we’d do something funny again.”

Of course, ‘funny’ - more than perhaps any other creative goal - couldn’t be more subjective. “I struggle, because people say I have a slightly perverse view; an unusual take on things. I never understood that. I always assume I represent a large number of similarly minded people; it’s just how I see the world. You can’t choose how to approach something comedically; well I can’t, anyway,” she goes on. “Vogues change, and when I started out I was very much into the style of comedy that I’ve since developed, and other people weren’t. Now we’ve gone about-face and there’s more trend for big studio-based comedies. But I’ll always go for what I instinctively find funny.”

But protestation aside, it was for idiosyncrasy rather than conformity that Victoria’s agent and manager, who had existing positive relationships with US networks, “hoiked” her across the Atlantic. “Now, I’m not a ‘networks’ person,” she begins, settling back into her chair: “I prefer HBO and cable; they tend to be more off-centre.” It’s already clear that this will be no pleasant fiction where a saucer-eyed Brit skips through bountiful fields of cotton candy.

“I don’t want to slag America off,” she’s keen to stress. For while it’s tempting to snuggle you down with a dustbin-sized vat of popcorn and sensationalise this cautionary tale like a gravelly-voiced Hollywood trailer, the simple truth is that the studio-driven US market is an acquired taste for a British writer. Especially one whose devoted creative control at the helm of her own complex shows have attracted monikers like “visionary” and “genius” from cast-member Tamsin Grieg and fellow Green Wing writer Fay Rusling respectively.

“You have to be prepared to have a lot of top-down input,” is her delicately democratic way of putting it. The fact that American networks can pay extremely well is no secret, and Victoria draws attention to various fellow writers who have sustained a healthy trade contributing scripts to other shows. Suffice to say that getting a fresh one off the ground is somewhat different.

“There’s a certain hypocrisy in saying, ‘We want you because you do something different; we love your work; we understand your process and we want you to do it over here,’ when that’s the very thing that they cannot let happen,” she declares, frowning slightly as a shadow of that past frustration crosses her face. “They crush it, and crush it, and crush it, and crush it, and you end up with something that’s neither my choice nor their choice.”

“I was treated fantastically well, with a lot of respect, and actually given a lot of freedom according to other sources,” she reflects; perhaps proof positive that incompatible personalities and working practices were at least partly responsible. “It was a strangely enlightening experience. We did do a pilot; I’m going out there to pitch something else, and I’m trying to do co-productions at the moment. But the things you hear are absolutely jaw-dropping: until you’re immersed in it, you don’t quite believe it’s possible.”

“I spent most of the time either in hysterics with laughter, or in tears with disbelief at how they conduct themselves. Considering that it’s the epicentre of the entertainment industry, I was horrified at the outmoded, archaic, hierarchical, creative-crushing things that went on.”

By way of example, Victoria recollects a memo that was passed her way encouraging producers to perpetuate the influx of British talent, but not to sign any deals: “It recommended reinventing the format with your homegrown crew,” she explains. “Rip the idea off, in other words. It was an article in an American publication. They’re not embarrassed about it: ‘We don’t need to buy the formats; we’ll just do it ourselves.’ It makes you slightly fearful of sending things ad-hoc as a writer. As an actor there are some brilliant people there; lovely casting directors; in fact everyone’s brilliant apart from the system.”

And what a vast system it is. The same year that she was in the midst of it all, the network commissioned eighty scripts - a quarter of which were produced as pilots. Three went to series, and all three of them were pulled. “There was not one success out of the whole season’s production,” laments Victoria. “What I didn’t realise was that there’s a rush of British actors coming out every year to do the pilot season: if you get picked up, you’re made forever.”

“I fought tooth-and-nail to get Stephen Mangan out there, but we were also forced to have two ‘named’ stars from their stable - Jason Alexander [Seinfeld], who’s fantastic but wasn’t right for the part, and Orlando Jones [one of the original cast members of Mad magazine's late-night sketch series MADtv], who again is a tremendously talented comedian, playing completely the wrong part.”

Half-an-hour in, and Victoria has already demonstrated pretty transparently how involved she expects to be when getting a comedy show off the ground, and it’s similarly clear that this approach won’t transplant well to US soil. But there isn’t a flicker of a toy-throwing tantrum in her voice: frustration, yes, but she’s not precious for the sake of it. Her talent’s rooted in a more temperate climate, where tight creative control happens to be what she’s very, very good at - and taking that away can mean letting a project sway off course.

My timely reminder that, for her seminal creation Green Wing, she’s credited as creator, producer, casting director, script editor, film editor and writer - albeit one of several in many cases - is met with a mixture of a smile and a wince. “I didn’t choose those titles,” she points out, “but as a description of the job description then yes, it’s accurate. You need somebody trying to achieve what they want, or don’t know they want. Quite often all I know is what I don’t want.”

It may take a couple of seconds to unpick the sentence, but it does make sense. And for commissioners, collaborators and cast alike, it boils down to putting your trust implicitly in someone else’s creative vision.

“You have to have quite a loyal and tolerant group of people to contribute to something blindly,” she agrees. “But as a ‘tame’ writer you’re exempt from some of the difficult decisions that rack us all. You’re in a childlike state: write as freely as you like, and we’ll take the best bits. All the writers on Green Wing had careers in their own right, but as a unit we were like a different writer.”

Her confession that she once associated each member of the team with a body part - the kidney, the little finger and so-on - prompts the obvious question: which was she? “It depends who you ask,” she smiles darkly. “Probably the stick up the arse. Although the real answer, of course, is the c-word.” Whether this refers to gestating and giving birth to her precious creative baby, or something infinitely more self-deprecating, we both decide to leave hanging.

A likely byproduct of building a tried-and-trusted team of bodily organs is that you’ll want to work with them again, and shipping Green Wing stalwart Stephen Mangan across for the pilot season is a case in point. Mark Heap, too, was penciled in from the outset, but replaced at the studio’s behest by Jason Alexander. Does she often put pen to paper to shape a character with a favoured actor already in mind?

“Since Green Wing I’ve done that… three times,” she reports after a moment’s thought. “I put Steve and Mark in all of them, in my head. But Mark didn’t get the part, and Jason wanted to do slapstick, drop his trousers and show his bum. There was a line in the script where he opens a drawer and there’s a portable vagina inside, and he wanted the prop to be made. You don’t need to see it,” she emphasises, sounding slightly exasperated as the voice of understated British comedy: verbal humour that conjures vivid mental images, rather than literally and figuratively shoving a vagina in someone’s face.

Setting aside comic preferences however, Victoria is quick to praise the talents of the lead actor that was dropped into her production from above: “Jason has incredible comic planning, hilarious timing, and knows a lot of martial arts so there were some incredible visuals,” she points out. But as she’s already made clear, it was the system, not the individuals, which crushed the project.

“They cut all those bits out, including some gorgeous nonsense with putty,” she reveals, with palpable regret that said putty-play won’t be lighting up our screens anytime soon. “He could equal Mark in many ways; in terms of physicality he was great. There’s a scene where he’s almost grooming the new boy: he comes round behind him, puts his hands round his neck and gobs on his cheek. The executives cut it out; they said it was leery and unattractive.”

Another “cracking scene” where Steve attends a lesbian meeting, shot with a gay female stand-up, survived right up until the wire: “They ripped it out the night before,” reveals Victoria, as if they’d torn the still-beating heart from her already maimed project: “They were too ashamed to take it out earlier.”

It’s revealing that when asked how the show was compromised, she recalls very specific episodes; vignettes that made her chuckle, but failed to crack a smile on the execs further up the command chain. Of course, even the pioneering hour-long format of Green Wing - with its series-long plot arcs that seemed so far removed at first glance from the self-contained skits of Smack The Pony - was built around sketches, expertly woven together as part of a wider narrative. Individual episodes are the blocks that make Victoria Pile’s comedy work, and sliding them out one by one is like a high-stakes bout of Jenga.

“You can cover more material with sketches,” she affirms. “Your territory’s wider. If you’re out to make a really comedic experience, you want the freedom to go hither and thither, to cover as much material as we do in our real lives.” She landed on a police precinct as a setting for the untitled pilot we’re discussing for much the same reasons that a hospital became the setting for her last hit show: you can find all sorts of people under one roof. Green Wing was originally intended to weave the lives of car park attendants, canteen staff and everyone else alongside the medical and admin staff, but it never quite happened that way.

“This pilot followed four detectives and their lives and loves: it wasn’t really to do with policing, but there was some procedural stuff in there because that’s what they wanted,” Victoria explains. “This body within the department is there to check up on procedures, and they’re so litigious. We developed a potentially fantastic relationship between the slightly anal character trying to catch everyone out, and normal detectives with their everyday lives. But it was the lack of interest in those peripheral things that screwed it for me: I wanted to indulge in the little idiosyncrasies of the characters; they wanted the story.”

From the off there was a lot of “slipping and sliding” and top-down adjustments, which as Victoria readily admits, was “exactly what I do, but done by someone else.” With very different sensibilities pulling in opposite directions, the chances of the comedy kernel surviving intact were slim to minimal. Pressing on, her team wrote two new blind scripts that impressed another network, and they commissioned a fresh hour-long script. Then the writers strike happened, and it all ground to a halt once more.

“Ultimately, in America all your experiences often come down to one person, and everyone’s curtailing to them,” she explains. “Over here, you cast someone and say to the broadcaster, ‘I’ve found some great talent, here’s the tape, have a look.’ Over there, you have to make a deal for two series before you can pass them. You need at least two other options, then you go to the studio - not the network - and they all perform in front of 40-odd people on stage, up against each other like gladiators. It’s The X-Factor, basically. Then if the studio executive agrees with you, you go forward to the network and do it all again.”

An observation that’s hardly worth making to a British audience - that a talented small-screen comic actor won’t necessarily take well to a live stage - is the final, forceful reminder that things are untouchably different over there. Victoria shrugs. “I’ve learnt a lot, and have less belief that they want what works here,” she concludes philosophically. “If I make a decision to do something that works there, that’s another matter.”

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Words: Catherine Bray
Buy Issue 10 here

He’s among Britain’s greatest living directors, and he’s back in the city settings he loves for his latest film, charting an Indian slum kid’s progress up the ranks on Who Wants To Be A Millionaire? We catch up with Danny Boyle, director of Trainspotting, 28 Days Later, and now the film that could eclipse them all: Slumdog Millionaire.

 


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Not that many interviews begin with a globally respected film director spontaneously reassuring their interviewer regarding the current state of the economy. And not too many interviews also incorporate a debate on how and where the women of Indian slums manage to dispose of their excrement in such total secrecy compared to their unabashed menfolk, who think nothing of shitting in the street. But then Danny Boyle, comfortably placed within Britain’s top five finest living directors for the best part of a decade, isn’t someone you would ever call a predictable interviewee.

“You’ll be fine,” he assures me, having opened the conversation with small talk about the dire state of the economy. “How old are you? Oh, you’ll be fine. I remember there was a crisis the first time we brought a proper house. We bought it at the top of the property boom for £189,000, and literally the next week the market crashed and it was suddenly worth, like, £114,000, and it was negative equity. Awful.”

As ever with Danny, the world of film is never more than a sentence away, and true to form he segues swiftly into reminiscence: “I remember meeting Anthony Minghella at the time - late ‘80s, early ‘90s, just after this crash - and he said, ‘Don’t worry about it; you’ll be fine.’ He was right.”

Economy dealt with, time to tackle the really big issues. Time to talk crap, literally. The reason Danny has shite firmly on the brain when we meet for an hour’s chat at the Hospital Club in Covent Garden is that his latest film, Slumdog Millionaire, is partly set precisely where the name might suggest: the slums of Mumbai.

Where, Danny is keen to convey: “You do get shit all over you. There’s nowhere to shit; people shit everywhere. Although you never see the women shitting. I was there a year, on and off, and for eight months full-time. You see men doing it all the time. Men and boys. All the time - and you have to get your head around that. But you never see women.”

He pauses to allow the mystery to fully sink in. “There were all these rumours: ‘Oh, they get up in the night’ - but I was up in the night, and I never saw them. There are these little plastic bags everywhere, tied up very neatly. It must be that; that’s the only logical explanation.”

You’ll hear many directors pontificate about getting their hands dirty and bonding as a team, but most of them don’t have contending with the open toilets of Mumbai in mind. Yet without sounding pretentious, Danny manages to turn talk of the most ignoble of circumstances into a subtle point about a working system in which, despite the inherently hierarchical nature of feature film production, basic equalities are acknowledged.

“You can’t get all squeamish about it. We all do it; we’ve just got a very elaborate way of disposing of it over here. It happened to most of us there - it didn’t happen to me, I was very lucky - but it happened that most of us were caught short at some point.”

“Your British crew are mortified that they’ve just had to go in front of you, but there’s nowhere to go. Your Indian crew just look at you and shrug. I remember Thomas the gaffer being caught short; we were on this little island, nothing there. But it was kind of liberating, because we’re so guarded, so private, about that sort of thing in the West, and yet we all do it.”

Whether down to the defecatory egalitarianism of its crew or not, one of the great things about Slumdog Millionaire is that although it successfully holds a magnifying glass to the underbelly of India’s slums, it doesn’t patronise its subject, or seek to suggest that just because your street is your toilet that your life must likewise be a pile of crap.

Like Charles Dickens did well over a century before, writer Simon Beaufoy [The Full Monty] captures in his script for Slumdog Millionaire something of the haphazard, teeming reality of an enormous hive of a city in flux, changing faster than it has at probably any other point in its history. Within that setting, our good-hearted hero, Jamal [Dev Patel, Skins], suffers the slings and arrows that come with a truly outrageous fortune, as he tries to win the woman he loves - if that means going on Who Wants To Be A Millionaire, so be it. Danny concurs wholeheartedly with the idea that despite the modern trappings, there’s a Dickensian vibe at work here.

“It’s classic storytelling, isn’t it? The first thing Simon said to me after I read the script and we met was, ‘It’s Dickens. It’s classic Dickens.’ You can’t avoid the shadow of Dickens. It’s absolute fable. Highs and lows, slight hysteria, convenience, coincidence, good brother, bad brother, impossibly beautiful and unattainable girl taken away whenever you get close.”

Perhaps slightly wired on the strong coffee we’re drinking, Danny talks fast and fluently on this topic; clearly a subject that’s dear to him. “We’ve lost that in the West; we’ve exiled the extreme stuff to fantasy and superhero movies. The stuff that’s left is very cerebral, quite dry, serious drama. Maybe a bit of child abuse thrown in, to pep things up. But for this film, Simon embraced this rich, architectured style of Dickensian writing.”

Although the fate-led storytelling itself presents an enjoyably vivid, heightened reality in which plausibility is left by the wayside, the backdrop against which Simon and Danny’s narrative plays out - and the cities they capture so strongly - feel one-hundred-percent true to life.

That’s probably because unlike, say, Wes Anderson (whose 2008 film The Darjeeling Limited features some of the most nauseatingly glib, depressingly crass, and fundamentally dishonest depictions of India ever committed to film), Danny Boyle headed east aiming to capture something of what was really out there, and not simply to depict what was in his head before he went.

Coming with a pre-packaged notion of an entire continent, as some directors do, is rarely the best approach in film-making, and it’s not something local crews warm to either, Danny found.

“They’re funny: the Indian crews say to you, ‘Ah, there’ll be cows in your movie, yeah?’ and they’re taking the piss, because they expect a Westerner to turn up and make it all about shots of sacred cows and all that stuff. So we tried to avoid that,” Danny laughs. “There are a couple of cows in it actually, but they’re incidental cows; you couldn’t avoid them. But you don’t try to crowbar them in. You can’t come with your film pre-made. Obviously you’ve got your scripts, but you’re genuinely open to change.”

A rapport with an Indian crew established, Danny credits his Indian co-director Loveleen Tandan with helping him avoid other cultural clangers. “She started out as casting director, but helped me in every way it’s possible to imagine. You need that; you need somebody who’s got the confidence to tell the director they’re wrong, which a lot of people lack. People just want a quiet life. Culturally, she would tell me if I was wrong about things.”

At this point I raise the spectre of Woody Allen’s later London films. “That’s the problem! Especially with legends. Who’s going to tell a legend, ‘Doesn’t happen like that, love?’ They just go, ‘Sure Woody, fantastic.”

Co-directing with a large local team in a fast-moving foreign country involves a degree of trust and collaboration not often associated with the archetypal lone auteur, an image that still hangs over what we feel great direction might look like. But would a perfectionist, Kubrickean style of film-making ever have worked on a film like this?

“It isn’t a controlled environment, but I think Kubrick would have responded to it. It does make you rethink the way you work straight away. If you want to control Mumbai or change it, or alter it, you might as well go home, because you’re just going to waste money.”

Lest we run away with the idea that Slumdog was filmed on the fly, guerrilla-style, Danny clarifies: “It’s not documentary-type shooting. You’re ambitious - you’re not just recording it as-is - but you don’t try to clear the street or drive it all away, you work around it. If you do try to create a controlled environment, it looks fake. We did a few scenes, and you look at it and go, ‘That’s not Mumbai.’ And you have to dump it and start again.”

As he talks about Mumbai and Eastern psychological differences, it would be easy to get the impression that Danny had undergone a Lennon-esque enlightenment in India, a circumstance that - were it true - you would be right to treat with suspicion, given the slump in quality that too often follows such apparent conversions in the creative industries.

This was certainly a concern for executives at Pathé and Warners when they found out that a third of their supposedly English-language film could now be lost in translation. Danny remembers an awkward phone-call.

“I had to ring Warners and Pathé and tell them a third of the film would now be in Hindi with subtitles. And the silence, Catherine, when I said that. The silence on the other end of the phone… I was in this hotel room very late at night, because LA had just got up, and the silence, the silence!” He laughs again, recalling what one can only imagine as the excruciating tension of that moment. “You could tell they thought, ‘He’s gone insane. He’s going to bring back a fucking yoga film about hippies and Hindi and maharishis.’ That was what they really thought.”

It would eventually become apparent even to studio execs that the change in language for the sections of the film involving young Indian children was the only way to go, and was not symptomatic of a moment of mistaken whimsy on the part of the director.

“Obviously we’d originally sold an English film to Warners and Pathé. But we got out there and started auditions, and of course the only kids that speak English at seven - and even then not very well - are the middle-class kids. Very highly educated kids. And they were so wrong.”

It wasn’t all about their speech: the childhood obesity issue is not confined to Britain. “They’ve got a fast-food problem in India, and the middle-class kids look chubby. I’d be going location scouting with Loveleen around the slums in the afternoons, and the kids look completely different. They’re skinny, they’re lithe - they’re survivors.”

Trusted advisor Loveleen stepped up to the plate at this point and convinced Danny that the portions of the script covering our hero Jamal’s childhood would have to be filmed in Hindi. “So I did it. That’s the joy of not taking too much money. You can take unilateral decisions like that and just say, ‘Translate it.’ We did it and it came alive. The film took off - whoof! - like that.”

I hazard a guess that another major factor in Slumdog Millionaire’s artistic success is that Danny is back in his element: filming in a big city. I trail off mid-sentence, searching for an agreeable way to end a thought that began: “You film cities so well, better than…”

Danny steps in to spare me the embarrassment: “Better than I do other stuff. I can certainly say that. I certainly feel at home. I like nature within the city, but I just don’t get on with the ski-slopes or the beaches or the countryside. They’re fine for a day, two days maximum, but then it’s just, ‘Where are the people?’ Give me the people!”

Indeed, in its frenetic, affectionate story of an underdog struggling against odds stacked high against him in a big city, surrounded by urban contempt for his ‘loser’ status, Slumdog summons Danny’s first major breakthrough, Trainspotting, irresistibly to mind. And of course there’s Slumdog’s soon-to-be infamous toilet-diving scene, something Danny is acutely aware will draw comparisons with the earlier film.

“I was aware of the toilet when we were doing it, and it’s one of the few times when I was really, really aware - ‘I’ve been here before’ - and normally, if you ever have an instinct like that, you change the scene so you’ve not been there before. But it was such a good scene, we had to leave it in.”

We’re back to that British obsession again: “We’re obsessed with toilets. We’re British. You see hundreds of films abroad; you won’t see a toilet in any of them.”

Slumdog Millionaire’s successful mixing of the spirit of Mumbai, of slum kids, Hindi and a country in fast-forward, with British touchstones of Dickensian storytelling, quiz-shows and toilets, anchored successfully by the performance of Skins’ Dev Patel in a breakout lead role, should strike a chord with a national and international audience. Crucially, it’s a film that it’s difficult to imagine being made in any other way, by any other director.

Balancing his healthy respect for his own instincts - and those of his trusted advisers - with a practical awareness of studios’ cash-flow fears seems to be a hallmark of Danny’s working methods. It’s something he illustrates with a story about the difficulties of marrying the ideals of a script with the realities of filming.

“You have to get permission to film everywhere,” he laments as he discusses the film’s various locations. “We ran that side of it like a parallel universe to the film. The bureaucracy, the rubber-stamping, this stuff that takes an eternity, sometimes years - that was run entirely separately as far as possible. You try not to let it affect you as you film; if it did you’d never get the film made. We’d still be there.”

“So the guys apply for what we wanted, and we’d be filming, not thinking about this whole parallel universe, and generally being quite light-hearted about the process.” But when it came to filming at the Taj Mahal, compromise was needed as the ocean of bureaucracy collided with the directorial vision, and the practicalities of interacting with a different culture.

The Taj Mahal and surrounding area is run entirely on the income generated by the tourism at the Taj, overseen by what Danny describes as a “sort of mafia really: photographers, tour-guides, you know. It’s quite sophisticated. They saw us turn up with these kids, and gradually they realised what we were up to and got annoyed. Very annoyed. They got heavy at one point, and we got chased out.”

“The parallel universe guys realised we had a problem, packed our bags and drove us out of there at high speed. We weren’t really finished, but had to cross the state border before they injuncted the film, which could trap it in the courts for five years. Five years waiting for them to release the film, imagine.”

Knowing how to pick your battles, when to persist doggedly, and whose advice to trust are clearly key skills for anyone hoping to juggle executive expectations linked to huge sums of money with, on the other hand, the subtler concerns of good storytelling that are the reason you’re filming in the first place.

It’s surely no coincidence that Danny found himself drawn to a script in which just such a juggling act is played out. The film’s hero Jamal meets an endless stream of compromises and short-term setbacks, but never backs down in the long-term pursuit of his ultimate goal. Even when interrogated by the powers that be as to just what exactly he thinks he’s playing at.

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