91Èȱ¬

Explore the 91Èȱ¬
This page has been archived and is no longer updated. Find out more about page archiving.

24 September 2014
Press Office
Search the 91Èȱ¬ and Web
Search 91Èȱ¬ Press Office

91Èȱ¬ 91Èȱ¬page

Contact Us


Press Releases & Press Packs

Ìý


15.12.03


TV DRAMA PRESS PACKS
91Èȱ¬ FOUR


John Hurt stars in The Alan Clark Diaries for 91Èȱ¬ FOUR


Starts Thursday 15 January 2004, 10.00pm, 91Èȱ¬ FOUR


John Hurt stars as Alan ClarkJohn Hurt stars as Alan Clark, the flamboyant, outspoken and controversial Conservative MP, in the 91Èȱ¬ FOUR six-part drama of The Alan Clark Diaries.


The series focuses on the infamous diaries during Clark's political career from 1983 to his death in 1999.


Hurt, the multi-award winning actor whose numerous definitive roles have included Quentin Crisp in The Naked Civil Servant and John Merrick in The Elephant Man, says:



"My reason for doing The Alan Clark Diaries is that I've always enjoyed playing individuals and you can't get more individual than Alan Clark, who was larger than life. That was exactly the appeal of the role."


Alan Clark, with his irreverent wit, aristocratic good looks and predilection for gaffes and scandal, was one of the most colourful figures in modern politics.


Love him - or love to hate him - his vibrant, unconventional style sent a blast of fresh air through the stuffy corridors of power, adding a dazzling touch of glamour to politics.


Forever manoeuvring his way to the top, he never fulfilled his ambitions to be in the Cabinet.


Yet he was an influential figure on the political landscape and a man who, more often to the Government's despair than delight, was never long out of the public eye.


Hailed as a modern-day Pepys, Clark wormed his way into the public's affection through his diaries and their withering, often hilarious observations of high Tories, low morals, political back-biting and cabinet inertia.


Set in a pre-New Labour world of rural castles and Albany Chambers, the diaries are part swan-song for a time when Conservatives ruled Britannia and Etonians ran the country, and part insight into the psychology of a man born with the whole silver canteen in his mouth.


A strong supporting cast includes Jenny Agutter (Spooks) as Clark's wife Jane; Victoria Smurfit (Trial and Retribution, About A Boy) is Clark's secret mistress 'X' and Julia Davis (Human Remains) is Jenny Easterbrook, Clark's frosty Secretary.


Producer Kate Lewis took on the challenge of bringing Clark to the screen.


She says: "I thought the diaries were absolutely fantastic when I read them. He's such a colourful character and Clark wrote very well indeed.


"He was really very articulate, very funny, had great comic timing and he was a great observer as well. His irreverent tone, coming from the inside of politics, is a fantastic formula for diaries."


Lewis brought on board writer/director Jon Jones, whose previous credits include The Debt and Cold Feet.


She says: "We concentrate largely on In Power, the second volume of the diaries. Jon and I established that we wanted to take Clark from the time he got his first job in politics, when he actually became a player within the Government, through to his death.


"That makes a perfect dramatic arc because it's the rise and fall and rise again of a fascinating man.


"We really wanted to bring out the wit and the fun and the intrigue of the diaries. Jon also saw the very compassionate heart of the books: he really had a very clear sense of their emotional core."


Clark's wife Jane was an integral part of the project and was a consultant on the series.


Lewis continues: "Jane was rightly concerned that we were truthful to the diaries and that we got all the balances and complexities of them.


"I think that Clark has often been portrayed in the press as being a philandering toff and she wanted to be sure we were going to present him as more of a three-dimensional character and not just as a philandering rogue.


"He's much more complicated than that, and that's one of the appeals of the entire project. You very rarely get such rich characterisation.


"She was remarkably open about his affairs. We talked to her about the way we were going to do X, Clark's unnamed mistress, and about other philandering incidents.


"What made it easy in our relations with Jane is that we never wanted to just play into people's expectations of Clark. What's great about the diaries is that there is so much more than that."


Casting the lead role of Alan Clark was crucial to the success of the project.


"We were very aware that we had a part here that could attract a very high profile actor and we set our sights very high. We knew exactly who we wanted," says Kate Lewis.


"John Hurt is a character actor who can absorb himself into a role, a chameleon.


"We needed an actor with a considerable range who could not only catch all the complexities of Clark's character but also somebody who had the experience and professionalism to carry off what was an incredibly hard shoot.


"John just fitted the bill absolutely perfectly. It was like he was born to play it.


"What was particularly alluring about John was his great vulnerability and that was really important for us because we wanted people to like Clark, for all his faults. I think John Hurt brings a real humanity to Alan Clark in the piece.


"When we arrived at Saltwood Castle, the Clarks' home, the crew's face lit up as we came through those amazing gates, with the moat and peacocks strutting around.


"Jane was very welcoming to us and it was actually quite moving to be reconstructing some of these scenes with her around because Jon Jones and I had become really fond of Alan Clark as a character.


"It was rather special to be starting the shoot off in the house where he lived, that he loved so much. Saltwood and Jane were really the centre of Clark's life.


"We talked to Jane about the casting of John Hurt as Alan Clark and she was delighted. She thought he was absolutely perfect because she wanted somebody who was a serious actor of great stature to play Clark.


"John cares very much about the parts he does. I think if Jane had not wanted him to play Clark he would have found it quite difficult. One of the first questions he asked me was, 'What does Jane Clark think about this, is she on board for this series?'"


Jane Clark was indeed on board, as the 91Èȱ¬ needed her permission to make the series.


When Alan was alive the Clarks had been approached for their permission to adapt the diaries for the stage, but he and Jane were unhappy with the adaptation and didn't allow it to continue.


Four years after Alan's death, Jane was ready to have her forthright husband's views immortalised on screen:


"The 91Èȱ¬ approached me through Alan's agent and I said I was interested. I saw a page of ideas and I said, 'Yes, let's go for it'.


"I was a bit worried when they said they needed a writer. I remember saying, 'It's been written!' I thought they were
going to change everything.


"When the scripts arrived I looked at them rather balefully on the kitchen table. I did read one and my initial reaction was, 'Oh my God, I'm in it!' It hadn't occurred to me that I was going to be part of it! I was thinking, 'I'm not remotely interesting. Why am I going to be in it?'


"I gave episode one to Lynne, who's my wonderful Yorkshire housekeeper and who is extremely sensible. She was very sound, she said, 'No no, it's fine'. I then read them all and was very happy with them."


For the woman who was married to Alan Clark for an astonishing 41 years, it must have been difficult to picture who would be the right actor to take the lead role.


Jane explains: "I thought the casting of John Hurt was brilliant. When he smiles he's just got that wonderful mischievous smile, he smiles with his eyes as well. I thought yes, he'd see the point of Al."


It was strange for Jane to see herself immortalised on screen.


"It's a great honour for me to be played by Jenny Agutter, I am absolutely delighted. During filming I found Jenny more difficult to watch than John because I could see myself in her and watch her look across the lawn, with the same sort of haircut and wearing a Barbour and jeans. It was quite uncanny."


Since seeing the completed series, Jane is impressed:


"I found a mixture of how suddenly I became quite emotional at odd bits, especially in the first episode when he talks about starting again, but he couldn't because of me. Moments when I felt a tinge of emotion.


"But at other times I was just laughing so much it was brilliant. Al was a great character and there was very much more to him than I think some people thought."


Roly Keating, Controller of 91Èȱ¬ FOUR, concludes: "John Hurt is one of the most compelling of British screen actors and we're delighted to have lured him back to television for this project.


"Alan Clark's Diaries may not be the most balanced of political journals, but they are indisputably the funniest, and John is the perfect person to capture Clark's outrageous, roguish wit."


The Alan Clark Diaries is adapted for the screen by Jon Jones who also directs, with Andrew Davies as script consultant.


Kate Lewis is producing and executive producers are Laura Mackie, Philippa Giles and Richard Fell.


Other forthcoming dramas on 91Èȱ¬ FOUR this winter, complementing The Alan Clark Diaries, include:


Éù The Tricycle Theatre production of Justifying War – Scenes from the Hutton Inquiry, edited by Richard Norton-Taylor and Nicholas Kent and directed by Nicholas Kent and Charlotte Westenra.


The cast include David Michaels as Alastair Campbell, David Fleeshman as Gavyn Davies, William Chubb as Andrew Gilligan and James Woolley as Lord Hutton.


Éù Kwame Kwei-Armah's acclaimed award-winning play Elmina's Kitchen, directed by Angus Jackson, with the original National Theatre cast of Paterson Joseph, Shaun Parkes, George Harris, Oscar James, Dona Croll and Emmanuel Idowu.


Éù The Three Sisters, starring Kristin Scott Thomas, Robert Bathurst, James Fleet and Douglas Hodge, directed by award-winner Michael Blakemore.


Éù Hotel In Amsterdam, the John Osborne play that premiered in 1968 and recently enjoyed a critically acclaimed run at London's Donmar Warehouse.


Starring Tom Hollander and Olivia Williams, the play is directed for the screen by Julian Jarrold.


John Hurt is Alan Clark


Alan Clark's roguish recollections


Jenny Agutter is Jane Clark


Notes to Editors


Enter the danger zone of politics with 91Èȱ¬ FOUR this Winter (10.12.03)



All the 91Èȱ¬'s digital services are now available on , the new free-to-view digital terrestrial television service, as well as on satellite and cable.

Freeview offers the 91Èȱ¬'s eight television channels, interactive services from 91Èȱ¬i, as well as 11 national 91Èȱ¬ radio networks.


BACK TO THE TOP

PRINTABLE VERSION




About the 91Èȱ¬ | Help | Terms of Use | Privacy & Cookies Policy
Ìý