Archive for September, 2008

Peep Show Deja Vu strikes again again!

Tuesday, September 30th, 2008


This may seem strangely familiar. And then there was that other time

Remake Remix Rejig

From BBC News:

US producers ‘to make Peep Show’

Bafta-winning TV comedy Peep Show, starring David Mitchell and Robert Webb, is being re-made in the US, it has been reported.

Trade magazine The Hollywood Reporter said US network Spike TV had ordered a pilot of the Channel 4 series.

Peep Show focuses on socially dysfunctional flatmates Mark and Jeremy, and is viewed through a first-person perspective and voice-over.

The British series is entering its sixth season.

Dylan Kidd has been announced as the director of the pilot from a script by Sam Bain and Jesse Armstrong, writers on the UK series.

US network NBC made a success of British comedy The Office, which stars Steve Carell in the role memorably played by its co-creator Ricky Gervais in the original UK version.

That Olivia Colman return interview

Tuesday, September 30th, 2008


From The Times September 27, 2008

Olivia Colman: from Peep Show to Beautiful People
Olivia Colman moves from Peep Show to play mum in the mildly potty Beautiful People. Our correspondent gets acquainted
Colman
Bruce Dessau
It is not your average household. Mum and dad sit on the sofa drinking hooch like it is an Olympic event. Their two teenage children bicker for England. Then there is blind Aunty Hayley in the corner, all Chaka Khan hair and sludgy brown cardigan. Oh, and there are cameras all over the lounge.

No, this is not a new reality TV show, this is Shepperton Studios where the bizarre song, dance and fantasy “comic memoir” Beautiful People is being filmed. The story is based on the best-selling autobiography of Simon Doonan, who grew up in boring Reading (sorry, Reading) dreaming of glamorous city life. There are echoes of Hanif Kureishi’s Buddha of Suburbia in the yearning for escape, a flicker of The Naked Civil Servant in terms of sexuality, while the sight of happy, hoofing schoolkids hints at Billy Elliot.

For Doonan the dream came true. Another book, Confessions of a Window Dresser, has been optioned by Madonna, and he has not given up the day job he yearned for in his grey bedroom. Doonan is creative director of New York department store, Barneys, and each episode of Beautiful People – scripted by Jonathan Gimme Gimme Gimme Harvey – kicks off in modern Manhattan before flashing back to Simon’s semidetached childhood.

While Meera Syal does her share of upstaging as Aunty Hayley and Luke Ward-Wilkinson impresses as young Simon, the series is most notable for Olivia Colman’s breakthrough role as loud, proud mum Debbie. Comedy buffs who know Colman as Sophie from the C4 sitcom Peep Show should brace themselves. While Sophie was bland, brown-haired and passive, Debbie is an in-your-face blonde in 24/7 tight skirt and high heels.

“Can you make sure everyone knows that my hair extensions are supposed to be bad,” Colman explains over a catering-bus lunch. The original book was set in the late Fifties/early Sixties. Here the action is set in the late Nineties but Debbie retains a retro look. “She married young, decided what her look was and is sticking with it. Simon’s mum had a pinned-up Hollywood hairstyle throughout her life. We’ve been loyal to her memory but gone for something more Parisian Left Bank.” Well, Left Bank-meets-Berkshire-High-Street anyway.

For the down-to-earth 34-year-old, taking the role was an easy choice. Colman adores Peep Show stars David Mitchell and Robert Webb, but there was a niggle that she was becoming too closely associated with them, teaming up with them on various projects and generally becoming their go-to name whenever they wanted a funny woman.

This year she took stock and she will not be in their next BBC series: “My agent suggested I should be open to more different things. There were tears when that decision was taken.” Peep Show-philes can relax. She will return after the last run ended on a cliff-hanger, with Sophie pregnant. “I’ll always find time for Peep Show,” she smiles, as writer Jonathan Harvey says scurrilous things about Liza Minnelli behind us.

Her relationship with Mitchell and Webb dates back to Cambridge, though she wants to put the record straight. People have assumed she was a Bright Young Thing; the truth is cloudier. Her family comes from Norfolk where “granddad was a postman called Pat” and her parents “did up houses”. She went to teacher training college in Cambridge and joined Footlights, but after one term dropped out and never handed her Footlights membership card back. “I was actually working as a cleaning lady when I met David and Robert.”

Eventually she went to study drama at Bristol Old Vic before reuniting with the duo. There was never any offstage romance. “I was slightly in love with both of them, but nothing ever happened”, probably because she had met her future husband, the aspiring writer Ed, by then. They currently live in South London with their two small sons and have a very non-celeb lifestyle.

Her career is certainly taking off. Last year Colman worked with Shane Meadows and Paddy Considine on the cult film short, Le Donk, in which Considine played a hapless roadie and she was his long-suffering wife. She is now due to star in a serious spin-off written/directed by Considine. “I’m beaten and raped by my husband and finally I retaliate. It’s really exciting.” On the lighter side is an ITV comedy, Mr Eleven, due to go out in 2009, in which Colman plays Bionic Woman Michelle Ryan’s geeky sister.

There have, however, been less fulfilling projects. In 2006 she co-starred with Robert Webb in the British rom-com Confetti. They played naturists, which meant appearing nude. Colman has previously said that this was the “worst experience of her life” and does not want to talk about it, except to say that it was a “steep learning curve”. Since then she has been more cautious about scripts.

Beautiful People, by contrast, is clearly a happy shoot. The cast bonded when Colman arranged for a mobile blood donor unit to visit the set. A friend recently had leukaemia and, following a bone marrow transplant, is now recovering. Colman is a passionate proselytiser, persuading everyone to register: “It takes a minute and can save a life.”

One thing has been puzzling me all day though. How come Hayley is the family auntie and yet is clearly of Asian descent? Meera Syal pops into the catering bus for dessert and sheds some light. “Debbie was working as a barmaid and met Hayley when she was drunk and brought her home and adopted her. I relate to that because we had all sorts of aunties and uncles in our house when we were growing up.”

And that may explain the appeal of this clan that puts the Gallaghers in Shamelessin the shade. The Doonans might appear dysfunctional, but they are probably no more eccentric than any other domestic set-up. Just because you do not burst into Broadway tunes like Simon or have boxing matches in the street like Debbie does not make you any more normal. Maybe the Doonans are an average household after all.

Beautiful People, Thur, BBC Two, 9.30pm

That Olivia Colman return

Saturday, September 27th, 2008


Olivia Colman is back on the telly (apart from when her voice appears in adverts involving snack products called Jack and things to wipe your bum with that dogs find strangely attractive) on Thursday when Jonatahan Harvey’s new comedy Beautiful People begins on BBC2 at 9:30. As it’s by Harvey (although based on a book by not-Harvey) there will surely be gays and brassy women, and it’s directed by The Smoking Room director Gareth Carrivick. Her character Debbie Doonan is described as “a bottle-blonde barmaid in killer heels. Warm matriarch, forthright in her opinions to the point of foot in mouth. Would do anything for her family. Ever glamorous, Debbie likes a laugh and a drink. Allows her children to be whoever they want to be. Strong, loving, protective and funny. Doesn’t look before she leaps. Has a great right hook.” Hmm…

new!

She’s also back on the radio at 11 that very same night in a new series of Dirk Gently’s Holistic Detective Agency, which you might like if you’re a Douglas Adams fan or just want to hear the voice of Doctor Who 5.0 Peter Davison. It’s on Radio 4 as if you couldn’t work that out for yourselves…

That Dobby Interview

Saturday, September 13th, 2008


Isy Suttie isn’t just Dobby from Peep Show. She was in that thing that Laurence & Gus did at the BBC Radio Theatre where the creepy man queued a bit too close to my lady friend (not like that, merely a friend who was, and still is, a lady) and I fell asleep for a little while because I was tired and a bit ill, plus she’s done the Edinburgh thing. The Guardian had a mini interview with her and it’s polite to share:

Is this it?As Peep Show’s Dobby she was ‘The One’ and an IT crowd pin-up. But does singing stand-up Isy Suttie know who she loves? Yes! It’s Johnny Vegas

What’s going on?
I just finished The Suttie Show in Edinburgh and I’m currently resting in a cottage in Somerset, eating a lot of meat. I’ve had two portions of meat since I got here. I can’t cook so I’ve been really missing it. And I’m about to start doing the Edinburgh And Beyond tour.

When will I be famous?
I used to dream about making it as a singer. I used to do serious songs at open-mic nights but they were all a bit too weird. All the other singers used to do songs about suicide and breaking up. I used to do a song about a businessman who smeared himself with a fry-up every night just because he was lonely. So the black pudding would go in a certain place and the beans would go in his armpit. It took me a while to realise I should be doing comedy.

Are you that somebody?
People love Peep Show and one guy shouted at me, “You and Mark should get married in a wizard-themed wedding!” I don’t think there are enough fantasy role play pin-ups for the IT workers in the world, so I think I filled a gap in the market.

Do ya think I’m sexy?
When we were doing that scene in a stationery cupboard I was thinking, “Oh my god, my Dad’s going to see this!” It wasn’t sexy at all; we were just thinking about what angles the camera were at because we had to look into mirrors to film it. The first take was terrifying because I was standing two feet away from my own reflection looking at the face that I probably pull when I’m having sex.

Do you know the way to San Jose?
No, my lack of geography is terrible; I genuinely thought Wales was across the sea until I was 16. I was in Manchester Youth Theatre and they were wondering how to get to Wales. I said, “I think we have to get a ferry”, and they were like, “Oh my god!”

Who’s that girl?
I do this character called Yvonne Winehouse – Amy’s cousin. She’s prim and proper and goes to libraries and leisure centres and sings songs about avoiding fires and paedophiles. I do an impression of Amy as well because I can do this echo singing thing. I realised I could do it when I was a kid. My mum’s a bell ringer and I ended up playing along a lot in graveyards waiting for my mum to finish bell ringing.

Who do you love?
The first time I realised I wanted to do stand-up was when I saw Johnny Vegas in Edinburgh in 1997. It was like opera to me, it was incredible. That’s the best moment onstage I’ve ever seen. It’s great to see anyone who’s doing material they want to do rather than what they think they should do in order to get a telly show.

How clean is your house?
I’m messy and not that clean. When I was about 12 I discovered a bogey mountain behind my bed. It was made up of a series of bogies I’d just wiped on the wall for two years and not thought about where they had gone.

Dude, where’s my car?
Dude, I can’t drive!

Who let the dogs out?
I don’t think I could cope with a dog. I think I need to learn how to drive and cook meat first because then the dog would be really well looked after.

Is this it?
Is it? OK then, I’ve got some lamb chops waiting for me.

· Edinburgh And Beyond with Isy Suttie, Glenn Wool and Dan Atkinson begins on Sunday in Derry