#Interview with Comedian, Director, Actor Stuart Laws on new tv series, directing comedy specials and more… #StuartLaws #Comedian #Actor #Director #TVDrama #Stage #Patience #Channel4 #ComediansTakingPenaltiesWithChloePetts #StandUp

Interview with Comedian, Director, Actor Stuart Laws
conducted by Louise Cannon

Stuart Laws is known for his stand-up comedy, directing well-known comedians James Acaster, Rosie Jones and Nish Kumar and is highly respected amongst many other comedians too. I was given the opportunity to interview him on Bookmarks and Stages where we covered what it was like to direct the aforementioned comedians, his latest projects, including acting in channel 4 drama, Patience, Comedians Taking Penalties with Chloe Petts, a new web game show, Is It A Bone?, his inspiration to do these many jobs and being neurodivergent in the tv world, for him it’s autism. After the interview you can also discover his latest live shows for February and March 2026.
Welcome Stuart Laws to Bookmarks and Stages and thanks to PR, Julian Hall for creating this opportunity. Now, let’s begin our interview…

  1. You’ve done stand-up comedy, appeared in dramas, directed, it’s a great achievement. What spurs you on?

A desperate desire to prove my enemies wrong. Also, I do find it funny to not see a friend for 3-4 months and then when they ask – “oh what have you been up to?” to be able to provide a list of genuinely surprising new developments. I love watching TV, comedy, film and so to be any part of it fills me with excitement. As long as I can I will keep doing as many different, fun things until it’s very clear I’m not good at those things. VERY CLEAR. It’ll have to be VERY CLEAR.

  1. Who or what inspired you to act, direct and do comedy?

When I was a kid it was films like Jurassic Park and Back to The Future or stand up comedy like Lee Evans or Harry Hill’s Channel 4 show, then I got older and it was things like Twin Peaks and Arrested Development. Once I had started doing stand up comedy and was making short films I was really inspired by new acts that I met on the circuit and loved watching perform and made me want to be better. Chuck in enough arrogance to believe that I could help them be even better and bam, it all started to coalesce.

  1. You’re appearing in Channel 4 drama, ‘Patience’, can you tell us a little bit about the character you play?

Alex is a member of the adult autistic support group that Patience Evans, the lead character played by the brilliant Ella Maisy Purvis, attends and so I get to stretch my acting muscles by playing an autistic adult. When the audition came in I remember being excited because I don’t get a huge amount of scripted and definitely very little drama auditions so I knew I wanted to nail it. Because the show has a strong sense of humour running through it I knew I wanted to lean into that, especially knowing the character was across multiple episodes – it’s a good chance to have a think about the wider context and life of your character. Saying that, it’s not a huge part but a delight to play and the production team so good and the first series of the show so compelling and fun to work that I knew I wanted to be involved and to be able to add whatever details and experience I could.

  1. You’re a go to director for comedians, James Acaster, Rosie Jones and Nish Kumar, what is your process to direct other comedians and have you got any favourite moments when directing these comedians in-particular?

Directing a comedy special is a lot about just getting the cameras in and making sure the lights look nice and the comedian is as good a mental space as possible to do their show as well as they can. I’m there to put out fires, be a sounding-board and to ensure the crew all are supported and can do what they do best. The next level up is a chance for me to work with the comedian, watch the show in advance, suggest structural tweaks or new lines, to eventually know it inside out, know the vibe of the comedian and talk about themes, tone and style they’re looking to achieve and what of my ideas are interesting to them – it could be to do with the style of how the cameras move, where they’re positioned, what the lighting is like and how we want the audience to feel while watching. Then I get to have conversations with heads of department about the best tools for those ideas and prep the crew as best as possible about how they can make the plan a reality. We recently shot Nish Kumar’s new one and we discussed dutch angles, 70s directors and Stop Making Sense, for James Acaster we talked about wrestling, 3:2 open gate aspect ratio and creating a sense of perpetual motion so that the cameras all cut together smoothly in the full 360 degree audience set up. That’s the fun of it for me, knowing that there’s certain things a stand up special needs to have but to also know that there’s wiggle room to express what makes the comedian brilliant, to make the jokes and the themes land even harder.

  1. You have a new SO TV series of ‘Comedians Taking Penalties with Chloe Petts.’ What are your football skills like and is there a particular football team you support?

I’m a Spurs fan and a Gotham fan and played for Goldhill FC for 23 years. I’m not a good footballer but I’m pretty solid and I think I’m happy with that, let’s put it this way – there is one cup final that my team played in that’s called The Stuart Laws Final – and I’m pretty happy with that. When I met Chloe on the circuit we immediately bonded over football and both being absolute lads so getting to write on and be in this series is a real dream come true. What is less exciting is the physical toll of playing football for 10 hours straight, two days in a row on the hottest days of the year. I think it took a couple of weeks for my body to recover and I can absolutely tell in some of the penalties that I haven’t dived because my brain refused further injury.

  1. What was your favourite moment of ‘Comedians Taking Penalties with Chloe Petts?’

Harriet Kemsley being on any TV is a promise of a good time and in her episode I suggested that she do a run-up from the halfway line for her last penalty. She of course immediately ran to the halfway line to do it and after a 15 second run-up she kicked the ball and it went so far wide that science still doesn’t really understand it. It was so funny and such a perfect denouement. Aside from that, it really was the team – they were so welcoming and supportive and that was all from Chloe and Andy at the top. They had brilliant ideas and worked so hard to turn the concept from a fun summer kick about into a genuinely funny and charming series that I HOPE HOPE HOPE gets a second series.

  1. You’ve created new web game show series ‘Is It A Bone?’ It sounds intriguing, with it involving a different sense: sight, sound, touch, smell, and taste.. How did you come up with the idea?

I was at dinner with comedian Chloe Radcliffe and she asked for her bone marrow dish to be boxed up to take with, it was served on a bone and they put that into the box and dropped it down on our table. Chloe said “IS IT A BONE???”. I laughed and then said that it was a game show and then immediately started laying out what I saw as the format. I then mentioned it to Rhys James and he said yeah of course that’s a show and we riffed more, then I took it to Al & Nick at my production company and they both had their own great ideas. Then we got Ben Mumford on board as a producer and he brought even more ideas. That got us to shoot day where Sam Lake the host and all the brilliant guests brought even more of their own ideas to it – that’s what I liked the most, creating a set up for the comedians to be funny and do what they like, knowing we could get them back onto the format when appropriate.

  1. . For ‘Is It A Bone?’ How did you choose your contestants?

I texted a bunch of people “Would you like to be a contestant on a game show I’ve developed, it’s filming at my office studio, you’d be in two episodes and it’ll take a couple of hours?” And they just all said yes. Like, didn’t even ask for more details about the show or what they’d have to do. Which means that each of them is genuinely reacting in the moment to what’s happening. How did I choose who to text? I went through my phone and thought who is damn funny and would team up well with others? I’d say that’s 35% of my address book to be fair, so more people will be getting texted for series 2 in 2026.

    12.You’re autistic, what advice would you give to other people who want to enter showbiz who also autistic?

It’s becoming more welcome and accepting of neurodivergence, which is handy considering the percentage of people in the entertainment industry who are neurodivergent is probably higher than the average population. It can be tough, it isn’t necessarily guaranteed that every project, location, team will be open or aware or able to make adjustments but it is becoming more common. Hopefully through my increasing awareness of it and trying to be vocal and supportive where I can I can play a part in it becoming more normalised in conversation. I’m aware that I’m privileged in being white, straight, able-bodied, low needs and therefore that makes my path smoother in disclosing. I know of a good number of people who are reluctant to disclose because they feel the discrimination is palpable or it makes them feel less secure. Hopefully that is changing.

   14. Where can people follow you and your work on social media?

You gotta get on instagram, though I am now trying to crack on with building my mailing list – I send out semi-regular updates with exclusive stuff and links to tickets and other cool things before they go public. Sign up at www.stuartlaws.com

Latest Live Shows

10th February @ Pleasance London
Comedians Beer Mat Flipping Championship 
6th March @ Pleasance London
Stuart Laws as Michael Caine Saying Never for One Hour

#Interview By Lou with Award Winning Actor, Author, Director, Comedian, Michael Obiora on new @ITV @ITVX drama, #OutThere and more… #TVDrama #Thriller #Comedy #Books #MichaelObiora @Tom_Brumpton_PR

Today I welcome the award winning actor, author, director and comedian, Michael Obiora to Bookmarks and Stages. In the interview as you scroll down, you’ll discover his latest role of being Scott Foley in upcoming 6 part ITV/ITVX drama, Out There, which also stars award winning actor, Martin Clunes. We also cover a new book, comedy and so much more in what is a fascinating, deeply insightful interview.
At the end you’ll also find some useful links, including the trailer to Out There and where you can pre-order his new book.

Michael Obiora started acting in Grange Hill. From there, he is now known for tv roles like Lloyd Asike in Casualty, Ben Trueman in Hotel Babylon as well as having parts in Midsomer Murders, Death in Paradise and more… His latest being Scott Foley in the upcoming ITV drama, Out There.
Thank you for joining me and my blog, Bookmarks and Stages to be interviewed.

1. You started your tv acting career when you were a child on favourite teen school programme Grange Hill, how did this give you grounding for building the successful acting career you have now as an adult and were there different or similar challenges you faced in transitioning from being a child actor to coming of an age of seeking out and auditioning for more adult roles?

Most of my appreciation of the foundation Grange Hill gave me as an actor has come from hindsight. Notwithstanding that, even at such a young age I was aware how lucky I was. The things I took in my stride were things like the jargon used on set to describe certain processes.
By the time I was twelve, set lingo like “turning over,’ “sound speed,” etc were second nature to me. In my early twenties I remember being on set with actors of a similar age – or even older – who had just graduated from drama school, and I could see how daunting some of them found the whole process.
There’s a fearlessness and naivety one has when they’re so young. So actually, working from such a young age was incredible for my confidence.

In terms of making the transition from child star to adult actor, again I was lucky. I worked solidly from the age of nine until about twenty-two. I had heard about how difficult it can be to make that transition, but it was not my experience at all. The hardest part for me was dealing with my first bout of unemployment as an actor. Again, that was something I’d always heard of; “ninety-nine percent of actors are out of work,” etc. But it happened the other way around for me – instead of going to drama school, then coming out and struggling to find work as most actors do, I had built up years of professional experience. Which ironically made it very difficult for me to process having no work lined up.

2. Very excitedly, you are about to star in new drama, “Out There” with the wonderful Martin Clunes, which tells the story of county lines, community, rural life, modern farming and grief & loss.

What attracted you to these themes and how important do you feel it is that this story is told?

I’d describe Out There as a UK version of Breaking Bad, and Ozark. I think Ozark is one of the greatest TV series ever made, so that was enough for me.
All good stories have universal themes – so that in itself is enough to make a particular story important.

3. You play Scott who is ex-army and embodies intellectual charming charisma, yet evasive when it comes to questions about himself. He seems quite complex in personality.

How did you get into character and did you do any research for this role?

Coincidentally, not long before filming there was a particular individual – who Scott reminded me of – that was causing myself and my family a lot of stress. I felt an enormous amount of anger towards this person. But the more I got into character, the less anger I felt. I still dislike that individual, but playing Scott made me feel a lot more empathy. Similar to that person, Scott finds himself in a desperate situation. People aren’t necessarily able to show the best side of themselves when they’re operating from a place of desperation. Being an actor has definitely made me a more empathetic person in general.

4. You’re a parent, has the themes had any impact on your parenting in any way and what does it make you think differently of the dangers some people encounter?

Being a parent has changed the way I think about almost everything.
Sometimes it gets to the point where I have to actively compartmentalise my sense of danger, or any anxieties I have.
I have very little judgement towards how people parent their children. It is incredibly difficult being a parent, and I genuinely believe most people are trying their best.

In Out There we see the road it appears Martin Clunes’ son is going down, and we also see that he is a good kid, with a good father. When a young boy or girl ends up in a particular situation one often comes to stereotypical conclusions – bad parenting, etc. But like many things in life, things aren’t always as black and white as that.

5. There are times when you aren’t acting, but writing novels, which happen to be critically acclaimed such as “Black Shoes” and “Vivian’s Couch”, what or who inspired you to write books?

Quite Simply; Necessity Is The Mother Of Invention.
Even though I have now written three books it was never my intention to become an author. I started writing because as my profile increased with Hotel Babylon, it became more and more apparent that I had a platform. I’ve always been aware how lucky I was to occupy any of the spaces I earned, so I just wanted to maximise it. I started by writing the parts I wanted to play.

6. You will have your first children’s book, published in March 2025 called “Zee Zee The Humble Bee”, teaching balancing celebrating her talents and being humble in a rhyming story, can you tell a bit more of the plot and what age group it’s aimed for?

Zee Zee The Humble Bee is about a confident young bee that is the fastest in her hive. From a young age I learned that often people don’t want to see other people happy, or win in any way. So I wanted to write a fun rhyming story about the joys of learning, teaching, and being humble. It’s aimed at kids up to age seven, maybe even older because I also consider it a book for adults.

7. When you were 11 and on Grange Hill, your teacher commented rather harshly about you smiling, telling you about how you weren’t on camera in the school corridor.

How did that make you feel and inform you of your choices now as a parent to encourage your children to follow their dreams?

Her comments to me completely informed this book. Zee Zee The Humble Bee is a love letter to my younger self, and more importantly a love letter to my daughter.

When my teacher made that comment I was devastated. I became an incredibly angry, and paranoid child after that. The idea of my daughter’s confidence or personality being altered in a similar way, at such a young age is unacceptable to me. I wish I had somebody to speak to about the way the teacher made me feel at the time. This book is me addressing that, and it’s also a book for adults who, whilst navigating the messiness of life may pick up bitterness. This is not a judgement call but rather me highlighting something that I think is somewhat inevitable.
Maybe life gets less fun as we get older, maybe we get more weighed down by our baggage. But children are so beautiful, and free, we can teach them humility – or anything else – in a loving way.

Our childhood years are our formative years, and adults have a responsibility to be mindful about the way we speak to children.

8. This January you are starring in your own written and directed stand-up
comedy “Joe Kerr: Laughter is Therapy.”

What inspired the title and how therapeutic do you feel it is for people to laugh

and what do you gain out of making audiences laugh?

I have a stack of scripts and stories I have written over the past few years.
When I sat down and read them they all left me with a feeling of sadness. It was a clear illustration of how my creative mind tends to work; dark/moody.
So Joe Kerr came out of me wanting to write something upbeat, funny, and positive. That still didn’t end up being the end product! So I now realise that the gift of it all is that performing is therapy for me. It doesn’t necessarily have to be funny, but expressing myself makes me feel better.
I’ve never had a problem showing my emotions – that’s what makes me a good actor. My emotions are so readily available. But I think it’s a gift and curse. It’s a pathology.

In Joe Kerr, the comic – Joe – performs his stand up routine on stage, despite the fact that hours before his set his father dies. This actually happened to me in real life. When I was sixteen years old I was the lead in a play at the Royal Court theatre. It was an enormous deal, and to this day remains one of my proudest moments. Hours after my dad died I went on stage despite the protestations of my fellow cast members, and the play’s director. But cancelling the show wasn’t an option for me. Being on stage felt like the safest place for me. I actually felt fortunate that it was an option. Obviously that experience will remain with me forever, and the more I ruminated over it, the more the Joe Kerr film took shape.

9. You joke about many stereotypes, the British accent, the way some language is used, how did you develop the punchlines to make it funny?

The jokes about the British accent came from the amount of time I’ve spent in America over the past fifteen or twenty years. Obviously race relations are famously polarising in America, it never seems to recede. But one thing that has always given me a feeling of safety is the way a lot of people react when I open my mouth over there. Who knows what goes through people’s heads but I’m sure on sight at the very least it’s “that’s an African American male.” And then when I speak, “Oh… he’s…British..? Black… British?” Suddenly people are less suspicious of me. They seem to perceive me as less of a threat. I think that’s funny.

10. Your comedy is topical and edgy about sexuality, how people view you when you’ve had a taste of fame.

What makes you choose what material to keep and how do you choose your boundaries as in how far you want to push the topic in the comedy?

Writer’s tend to advise, “write what you know,” and I think in general that’s good advice.
Most of the stories in Joe Kerr are anecdotal. I guess writing them through a character gives one more of a pass. So in terms of choosing topics I feel I can get away with more when speaking as a different person. But comedy is a lot of truth said in jest, therefore comedians have to be brave by virtue of what they do.

11. Humble is a theme in your children’s book and in your comedy in very different ways, how do you ensure you stay humble?

To be honest up until writing Zee Zee The Humble Bee I’ve never really liked the word humble. In my experience people use that term to put others down, or to disguise their jealousy.
I’m not particularly interested in humility because I think it’s hard to quantify. Somebody can literally call somebody humble because they like that person. Some people label others arrogant simply because they don’t like that person. And people have prejudices towards different people for all sorts of reasons. And once somebody has an idea in their head, they can easily find a way to justify that idea.

What I would say is that the older I get, the less competitive I am. And now that I’m a dad my life is easier than before. It’s harder in that there are more tangible pressures. But at the end of the day – and I mean literally when we’re putting our daughter to sleep – as long as her stomach is full, and she feels safe, I just don’t care about anything else. To care about somebody else’s wellbeing in every sense of the word, is humbling.

12. Does the different strands of your careers of actor, author, comedian aid each
other in any form and if so, in what way?

Absolutely! These all keep my creative juices flowing. And the more that
happens, the more chance I have of getting into the state of “Flow.” It’s a
difficult state to describe, but when I find myself in that space, I feel euphoric.

13. What’s next for you in your careers?

Alongside the film I’ll be putting out a comedy album version of Joe Kerr:
Laughter Is Therapy very soon. I’ve written another Joe Kerr comedy special.
I’ve written two more short films that I’ll act in and direct. I’ll be releasing a
book of poetry soon, and another children’s book. And I’ve completed two
other short films that I’ll be releasing over the next year.

Out There will air on ITV1/ITVX from Sunday 19th January, 9pm
Watch the Official Trailer here: Out There

Zee Zee The Humble Bee can be purchased from many bookshops, here are a few

Troubador Publishing      Waterstones   WH Smith     Coles Books     Amazon

5 Intriguing, Wide Ranging #Autobiographies #Memoirs for #Christmas #BookReviews By Lou @FernBritton @paulybengali @johnsuchet1 @LaPlanteLynda #SuzieFletcher #ReadingCommunity

Christmas is just around the corner and there’s been some cracking Autobiographies/Memoirs published in 2024. Here are my top 5 for Christmas present ideas or for your own personal reading time. They range from the self-development, music, travelogue, tv and more in their topics.

The Older I Get – How I Repowered My Life By Fern Britton

wp-17321018728017041820539549532268
Part Memoir, part almost self-help, Fern Britton, wisely
imparts her lived experience and knowledge with tips everyone can use to start a new year repowering their lives. It’s thought-provoking, inspiring and practical whatever your age and stage of life is.

Check out my full review in the link here: The Older I Get

 

Once Sinha Lifetime By Paul Sinha

One Sinha Lifetime

 

One for The Chase and stand-up comedy fans, Once Sinha       Lifetime takes readers into the life of a doctor who changed   his life forever by taking up stand-up comedy, showcasing     his material at The Edinburgh Fringe Festival and how he   became a quizzer.
Check out my full review here:  Once Sinha Lifetime 
See my review of Paul Sinha at the Edinburgh Fringe Festival: Paul Sinha in Edinburgh

 

In Search of Beethoven – A Personal Journey By John Suchet

John SuchetPart memoir, part travelogue, discover John Suchet’s almost lifelong love of Beethoven. It’s a heart warming and informative read. The opportunity to delve into how Beethoven’s and John Suchet’s lives have intertwined, even years apart, with one dead, one alive. Join him from your comfiest chair on his travels to Vienna with his wife Nula as they explore deeper than they have before in this profound relationship.
Check out my review here: In Search of Beethoven

 

Getting Away With Murder, My Unexpected Life on Page, Stage and Screen
By Lynda La Plante

Getting Away With MurderLynda La Plante has written critically acclaimed books that have made it onto tv, perhaps the best known one is Prime Suspect starring Helen Mirren, which she has now got a book series charting Jane Tennison’s career in the police force in Tennsion. There’s much more to Lynda La Plante that meets the eye and this emotional, fascinating memoir reveals a lot of them women behind the writing as she charts her career and let’s readers into some of her personal life.
See my review here: Getting Away With Murder

 

The Sun Over The Mountains, A Story of Hope, Healing and Restoration
By Suzie Fletcher

SUN Cover

 

Suzie Fletcher is famed for The Repair Shop, but life wasn’t always on a tv programme. It’s a deep look into her talent with crafting with leather and how her life changed. Suzie Fletcher has been through incredibly challenging times in her life, including  a certain relationship.
Discover my review here: The Sun Over The Mountains

#Review of #ConfessionsOfATeletubby edfringe #EdFringe #WhatsonEdinburgh #WhatsonEdi @nikkismedley @thespaceuk #SurgeonsHall #Edinburgh

Confessions of A Teletubby

Nikki Smedley who played Laa Laa

Review by Louise Cannon

⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️

Confessions of A Teletubby with Nikki Smedley is fabulous in glowy Laa Laa yellow.

It’s interactive in a way I hadn’t expected. If you’re in the audience, get your “uh-oh’s” ready. All will be revealed if you attend.

Nikki Smedley is a powerhouse of energy and enthusiasm as well as engaging.

What is very interesting is what it takes to make it onto tv and what, specifically she had to do to try and get the part. She candidly peels back the costume to reveal what it was really like to wear and what it did to her skin.

This isn’t a show about revealing anything totally explosive, although there is a startling moment of something incredibly tragic.

What is surprising in the current climate is the sheer love that still pours from her all these years later.

This is an entertaining talk with each confession that’s revealed. There’s lots to be learnt about the inner world and making of Teletubbys. Like when the Teletubbys say “bye bye”, there’s a heartwarming glow at the end of this show.

She also has a book, first published in 2022 called “Over The Hills and Far Away.” I rated it 5 stars.

#Review by Lou of #Memoir – Over The Hills And Far Away – by Nikky Smedley @StoryNikky @sandstonepress #Autobiography #NonFiction #Teletubbies

Reece’s Pieces – Actor Reece Dinsdale – A Write-up From an Online Event @reece_dinsdale #VirtualEvent #OnlineEvent #Actor

A Write up of Reece’s Pieces
Hosted by Actor Reece Dinsdale

So, I take a look to see what Reece Dinsdale is tweeting about from time to time. He seems to come with a good reputation for being a nice guy. He recently decided to do some online chats on Thursdays around 3:30pm via Twitter. So, I thought I would write up some of his chats from the past couple of events. They are really interesting. You will seen an insight into Reece’s acting and directing, as well as moments he was starstruck, what he is doing now and a little more.

Who is Reece Alan Dinsdale and Where You May Have Seen Him Before?

I attended an online chat that was with successful actor and director Reece Dinsdale. He is from Yorkshire, moved to London and now is back in Yorkshire. 

Some may more notably know him from playing opposite John Thaw in Home to Roost, others may remember him from Coronation Street and is currently in Emmerdale. He has a fruitful career that seems to be ever changing with having opportunities he has grasped from theatre, films, dramas, soaps and directing. 

He has directed a couple of episodes of Emmerdale, which he currently stars in. He is, it turns out talented and and most notably for very successfully directing the Moving On series (currently can be seen on the BBC Iplayer) as it won Best Day Time Drama. I must say, it is an excellent series with great storylines and casts. I catch it on the Iplayer. Each story is complete within each episode and all are under the theme, Moving On. He’s also played guest leads in Life on Mars, Spooks, Silent Witness and more… It sounds like an amazing career, that still continues to this day.

Stage

He loves stage work and has done loads in the last decade. He sounds so enthused by it. He’s not a fan of the audition process though. When he is directing he tries hard to look after his actors.

Opportunities into Acting and Directing

Reece was press ganged at 12 into a school play. He realised he was good at it and acting was going to be his thing. He sounded like he had determination and had parents who backed him to the hilt. They were not in the business themselves. He got into drama school and was very driven. It wasn’t something people did in his town at the time (around 1977).

When and how he became a tv director. He didn’t aspire to, but got an opportunity on Moving On to do this. He started off acting in one and the producer reckoned he should direct some episodes. He was nervous during the first one and created story-boards and he got great advice from someone in the business himself. He then kept getting asked back.

The 3 key things he looks for in an actor is they have to fit the image for the role. He takes a script somewhere quiet and reads them with a blank mind and pictures his version of the story. The writing is everything, but it is a blueprint that becomes the director’s film and he starts to think of actors and how to bring the characters to life. He works by instinct. If the actor isn’t free who is his first choice, he can be flexible. He looks for someone who can really lift the words off the page and makes the characters feel fresh and alive. He looks for a certain nouse.

Home to Roost

He played in Home to Roost – a sitcom in the 1970s. They were looking for someone who was 17 to match John Thaw. At the time, Reece Dinsdale was in a play called Red Saturday that was funny and poignant and basically he was noticed. Reece Dinsdale almost didn’t do it, but it was a two-hander with John Thaw, who he did a screen test with and hit it off together. He was 25 when he started rehearsals and John Thaw was 43 playing a bit older. By 29 Reece was still playing a teenager. He talked of working with John Thaw, being an education and a joy working with him. This, I thought was amazing and great that there was only ever 1 cross word in 4 and half years of working with each other and it sounds like it got resolved pretty quickly. Reece thinks he was a shy/private man and you had to get his trust, but he was his own man. They didn’t stay in contact much after, but did a little while.
He would love to return to Home to Roost as being the dad and perhaps with a daughter, but isn’t a big enough tv hitter anymore to turn the heads of executives. He is however in Emmerdale, so his profile is heightening.

The Soaps/Continuing Drama

Reece Dinsdale, as mentioned previously, can be seen in Emmerdale. If I remember correctly, he did a bit of directing and is now acting in it. The episodes were of course filmed before Covid 19 struck. He sounds like he has been enjoying it. Prior to this, he had been in Coronation Street.

Coronation Street is something he watched religiously from a kid. He bumped into the exec producer of the time. It used to be that “serious actors” didn’t do soaps, but then trends started to change and he relented. He did at least 18 months. He says it’s different from doing a play because you know the arc of the story, start to finish, but in a soap you don’t know this. He found that and the speed of the work strange at that time. He still enjoys the show, but watches it less and he was fine about leaving as the timing felt right. He played Joe, one of Gail’s husbands who was killed off. He interestingly talked about his last scenes. In minus 4 temperatures, in the dead of night, he had to go into water to swim to a yacht. It sounded quite a precarious situation. He said it was a glorious time though.

Building a Character

He was in ID and says building a character is interesting. He had to do the most method acting for the role in this. It was about one man’s journey and psychological journey. He wrote a booklet on his character and picked a house where he may live at and worked with Phil Davis to get the character together and build him up. He had to really immerse himself in the character, so had to stay in character, including accent, wherever he went. He writes everything that’s said in a character, what the opinion is that comes from the text. He almost didn’t get the role however as big names were asked and Reece was seen as a “lightweight actor”. He hadn’t got a name for making hardhitting roles. Finally he got a chance to show people what he had got.

Starstruck

He has been starstruck with Kenneth Brannagh when he was in Hamlet. Everybody was in it and he was starstruck as there were great stalwarts like Richard Briers, Charleton Heston and suddenly he is talking to them. He was in a film with David Bowie too and you may be pleased to know that it seemed like he was a good guy.

Life After CoronaVirus

He is looking forward to meeting up with his friends for a pint and perhaps a pub quiz.

Reece Dinsdale is thankful for all the keyworkers.

He loves Florence and Venice. Just like everyone else, he has had to change his plans.

If he could change anything, he would give everybody an empathy pill if he could change anything at all.

He is hoping one day to return to the theatre.

“Always come from different places, keep coming from different corners”
is what John Thaw says that Reece Dinsdale stands by. I personally think this is a great quote and great advice.

 

Who? What? When? Why? A review of a panel at @MorecambeVice Festival with @william1shaw @thegyth and others #review #crimefiction #bookish

Who? What? When? Why?
A Review of a Panel at Morecambe and Vice Festival

This panel was created by best selling crime novelist William Shaw. What can crime fiction tell us about the way works? With 3 Academics who are avid crime readers – Mary Evans, Hazel Johnstone and Sarah Moore. Crime writers – William Shaw and Gytha Lodge. William Shaw kept a certain pace for the panel and skillfully eased everyone from topic to topic and the others answered and also  created discussions that were intelligent, informative and thought-provoking.

William Shaw’s latest book is Deadland. The book tells the story of 2 teenage who are so disengaged with the world they live in, but have a strong sense of wanting to help each other in all their complexities. It is up to DS Alexandra Cupidi to solve the case. William Shaw is praised by Val McDermid, Peter James and Peter May.

Deadland by William Shaw 2019 book
Gytha Lodge’s latest book is She Lies in Wait. It is about six friends, a dark past and one killer. It is up to DCI Sheen to crack the case when 30 years later a body is discovered and to work out who is lying as everyone becomes a suspect. Gytha Lodge is praised by Val McDermid who says it makes hold your breath and gasp out loud.

gytha lodge 2019 book

Quick Facts
60-70% of readers read crime.

There’s a new respectability to reading and writing it.
More women read crime than men.
Men win the most prizes

This was such an intriguing panel, especially with the title that was given to it. This wasn’t your usual panel. The festival certainly seems to like to bring something different onto the stage.

Crime books were discussed in different ways. This was about what crime books have to say and the sociology and coverage of the genre. Although there were academics, this was not at all heavy going. It felt more like an informative and relaxed talk rather than a lecture. It was entertaining, fascinating and well-formed and relaxed for the festival audience.

There were interesting points that were made. One of the first ones being about the National Press and intriguingly, since crime is now such a hugely popular genre, doesn’t seem to feature as much as other fiction, especially those in the light entertainment segment of fiction, with lighter plots.

The discussion began to move in a different direction as they decided they were all fans of the golden age and talked about Agatha Christie’s subversive character – Miss Marple, whom I sensed they had a soft spot for. The academics wanted to chart a shift from the golden age to the 70s, when noir began to emerge. They discussed how writing moved on and how their began, as there is now, more of a political and social consciousness about the causes of crime being written about. Writing also changed in how the police were seen, no longer were they as nicely well behaved as they were in what is dubbed as the “golden era”. This made for an engaging talk about the change in style and the approach within the crime fiction genre.

There was much interesting talk in the sociology of crime and how it shows the internalisation of positive and negative values. The panelists pondered over sociology as a subject has missed the powerlessness and unrest, which is added into crime fiction.

The panel moved on when William Shaw asked about the narrative in storytelling. It seeemed to be concluded that the narrative was very important and that conventionally everyone wanted to know how a story ends. This is true, for me anyway.

The why and how also really kept my attention and it seemed the rest of the audience’s too, when they talked about the fabric of people’s worlds and how it isn’t always the “who” in the stories that keep readers reading.

They covered gender in crime books and also how there seems to be an appetite for true crime, especially on tv, as they reflected on The Confession, which is on tv.

They concluded by talking about how crime is now colonising other genres. It got me thinking, there is a lot going on in crime books, there isn’t just the crime, but there’s the psychology and also sometimes some romance and other genres feature too. They also talked of the trend to feature women detectives as well as male detectives and to show just how, for both sexes, the job can be incompatible with domestic life. I liked that they included both genders in this and they weren’t stereotyping anyone, they were just saying how it can be for everyone with the hours put in etc.

They rounded off by going back to the golden age and addressing the question about whether it is possible to write crime as a period piece and to take a book as a thing within its time? This was an yet another excellent question. They pondered this and decided that it can be difficult to keep to a certain line, with modern thoughts, but to not have a period piece become so ridiculous that piece of writing becomes too modern. This was a point so well made, I reckoned as the writing would then lose the fact it is historical and no one could learn anything from the past or get any sense of different times. They discussed how it can be difficult as times have changed and it has to be so worked out what would be acceptable and also about how in the past there are things that are spoken about much more freely now than they were in earlier years.

This was another fascinating panel and to hear about crime fiction from such a broad and different angle brought new and different insight.

I thank William Shaw for allowing me to take a photo of him and also for him reckoning him and I should have a selfie. I also thank him for the nice chat.

Me and William Shaw            William Shaw
              Me with William Shaw                          Gytha Lodge and William Shaw

Both authors also have more books to come in 2020.