Showing posts with label The Thick of It. Show all posts
Showing posts with label The Thick of It. Show all posts

Sunday, 31 March 2013

Peter Capaldi: interview

Peter Capaldi on life after The Thick of It
Peter Capaldi as Leonardo Da Vinci in Sky Arts' new show. Picture: Ellis O'Brien/ Contributed Peter Capaldi as Leonardo Da Vinci in Sky Arts' new show. Picture: Ellis O'Brien/ Contributed
He found a new level of fame as foul-mouthed Malcolm Tucker in The Thick of It, but Peter Capaldi is happy to see the back of it as he focuses on a more enigmatic character - Leonardo Da Vinci.
Peter Capaldi has a solemn announcement to make: Malcolm is no more. The 54-year-old Scottish actor reveals that he will no longer be playing Malcolm Tucker in BBC2’s much garlanded politi-com The Thick of It. Whisper it, the sweary-est, angriest, most charismatic character in television comedy has uttered his final baroque curse.
The character is so widely adored he has won the actor a mantelpiece-endangering number of awards. To underline Tucker’s popularity, total strangers often stop Capaldi in the street and ask him to abuse them. However, the actor says that, after the fictional spin doctor was seen being arrested at the end of the last series, he will not re-emerge on our screens. “Of course I love Malcolm,” says the Glasgow-born actor. “He is great. And I’m very grateful that he is so popular.
“Why do people like him so much? Is it because bad guys get all the best lines? Maybe he just has really good material. You can always rely on him to come up with great gags.”
But, he adds, “You can’t go on yelling and shouting forever. It was time for me to stop because it was difficult for me to know where to go with Malcolm next. I felt I would rather end it now than see him wind up as a diminished character. It’s best to go out at the top.
“It’s always difficult. It was a wonderful experience playing Malcolm, and I was very happy on the set of The Think of It. I really liked working with everyone. But in the end, things have a natural life to them.”

Read more at Scotsman

Tuesday, 18 December 2012

Peter Capaldi Interview - Comedy Awards and British Independent Film Awards


Peter Capaldi in Thick Of It at comedy awards
Peter Capaldi and Rebecca Front shared the glory at the British Comedy Awards.
Scots-born Capaldi was named Best TV Comedy Actor for his role as Malcolm Tucker in The Thick Of It, while Front won the Best TV Comedy Actress award for her portrayal of Nicola Murray in the political satire.
Her success meant there was no win for Olivia Colman, who was nominated in the category for two different roles - in Olympic satire Twenty Twelve and the sitcom Rev.
Capaldi saw off competition from Downton Abbey star Hugh Bonneville, who got a nod for his Twenty Twelve role, along with Tom Hollander for Rev and Steve Coogan.

The full list of winners:
Best Comedy Entertainment Personality - Charlie Brooker
Best Sitcom - Hunderby
Best Male TV Comic - Lee Mack
Best Comedy Entertainment Programme - Harry Hill's TV Burp
Best Comedy Breakthrough Artist - Morgana Robinson
Best TV Comedy Actress - Rebecca Front
The Writers Guild of Great Britain - Vic Reeves and Bob Mortimer
Best TV Comedy Actor - Peter Capaldi
Best Female TV Comic - Jo Brand
Best Sketch Show - Cardinal Burns
Best New Comedy Programme - Hunderby
Outstanding Achievement - Sacha Baron Cohen.
Read more at Herald Scotland


Peter Capaldi interview - 2012 British Independent Film Awards


Published on Dec 9, 2012
Stefan Pape from HeyUGuys interviews actor Peter Capaldi who presented Olivia Coleman with her award at the 2012 British Independent Film Awards.
Source: YouTube

Sunday, 28 October 2012

Peter Capaldi: 'The Thick Of It' finale

The Thick of It: good news, minister, the show is over
The stars, writers and producers tell the story of the award-winning political satire which made a household name of spin doctor Malcolm Tucker and ends on Saturday 
The Thick Of It
Malcolm Tucker (Peter Capaldi), Olly Reeder (Chris Addison), Helen Hawkins (Rebecca Gethings), Nicola Murray (Rebecca Front) in a scene from The Thick of It.
Photograph: Des Willie/BBC/Des Willie

Award-winning political satire The Thick Of It comes to an end on BBC2 on Saturday. The show, which made foul-mouthed spin doctor Malcolm Tucker a household name first appeared on BBC4 seven years ago. Here we look back on the origins of the show, its big-screen spin-off, and how it became part of the political lexicon.
Armando Iannucci had already made The Day Today and I'm Alan Partridge, with Steve Coogan, when he was inspired to create The Thick Of It after arguing the case for Yes Minister in a 2004 Best British Sitcom poll for BBC2. It was commissioned for an initial three-part run by BBC4.
Armando Iannucci Armando Iannucci "One of the lucky offshoots [of the BBC2 show] was that I could sit down and watch every episode of Yes Minister and it made me think we need something like this now. The terrain was very different – it was not about the civil service but about advisers and the whole Campbell-Mandelson communications thing. I spoke to [Yes Minister co-creator] Antony Jay and he said 'go for it'."
Adam Tandy (producer) "When Peter Capaldi [who went on to star as Malcolm Tucker] came to the casting session he had already been for an audition that day. I don't think he had been working an awful lot and was in a slightly off-colour mood. We did an improvisation session and he channelled all his frustration into it. That could be what got him the part. He was born to play the role."
Iannucci "I knew within the BBC there was a buzz about it and I felt it myself shooting it. In the very first scene Malcolm Tucker comes in and fires the incumbent minister; Malcolm looks at him and whatever light there was leaves his eyes. I remember looking at the monitors thinking, we've got something here."
Critics said the show could "scarcely be more topical", with Andrew Marr describing it as the "angry, rampaging bastard child of Yes Minister". It was commissioned for another three-part run, but the faux-documentary filming style was not to every viewer's taste.
Chris Addison Chris Addison (special adviser Ollie Reader) "It's calmed down a bit now but if you look back one of the biggest complaints wasn't the swearing but the camerawork. It used to make people feel sick."
Tandy "We shot it in the old Guinness brewery in Park Royal, west London. We were literally the last people to leave before the bulldozers moved in and if you listen to the soundtrack on the second group of three episodes you can hear the lorries."
Days after beating Ricky Gervais to win best TV comedy actor at the British Comedy Awards in 2005, it was revealed star Chris Langham (who played the bumbling minister Hugh Abbot) had been arrested by police as part of an investigation into child pornography on the internet. A planned series was replaced by two specials, with Langham's character absent "in Australia", while the case came to court. He was subsequently jailed in 2007 for downloading images of child abuse and did not return.
Iannucci "We chose not to leap to judgment, something we are still seeing to this day in terms of government by newspaper headline, mob rule and so on, and said we would wait."
Tandy "The hiatus was not great because we lost momentum but we knew the show was good and knew there was still enthusiasm to make it. We managed to keep the show in production even though we were not officially making a series."
The show's writing team, including Jesse Armstrong, Simon Blackwell, Tony Roche and Sean Gray, included Ian Martin in the unusual role of "swearing consultant".
Ian Martin "I hadn't seen a script when the first ones came over and Armando, who I had worked with on a couple of things, said just shit all over them, do whatever you like. I still wasn't sure what he wanted but I remember changing a line, when Malcolm was on the phone, from 'he's fucking useless' to 'he's as useless as a fucking marzipan dildo'. I sent them back and said is this the sort of thing you're after. He said, yeah, yeah, brilliant."
Sean Gray "The first draft of the script will go to Armando and he will feed in notes – 'less shits', 'too fucky' or just 'funnier' written in the margin. It motivates you. It then goes to the other writers. By the time of shooting you are on draft 20 or more."
The Thick of It transferred to the big screen with film spin-off, In The Loop, in 2009, starring James Gandolfini.
Iannucci "I had been thinking about the fallout from the war in Iraq and thought it would make an interesting film. I already had a repertory company in place in terms of people who could do it."
Tandy "We were very lucky BBC Films came to us. We thought about it for about 12 seconds before saying yes. We heard James Gandolfini was a fan so he was very pleased to come on board."
Joanna Scanlan Joanna Scanlan (press chief Terri Coverley) "I know Tony Soprano was in it so it should have felt like a huge deal but whatever Armando does is very grounded, you never have a sense of not being safe or things being out of control. It brought a new audience to the TV show and made a huge character out of Malcolm Tucker."
Addison "On the third day of shooting one of the assistant directors turned to me and said 'is it always this nice on the telly show?' Because it isn't always this nice in film."
When The Thick Of It returned to the small screen in 2009, it switched from BBC4 to BBC2, and Hugh Abbot had been replaced as minister by the hapless Nicola Murray, played by Rebecca Front, who had worked with Iannucci on shows such as The Day Today.
Rebecca Front Rebecca Front "I sat down at a writers' meeting with some of the cast members and at that time they had no character, no name, no script. Armando said 'Do you want to start improvising?' It was terrifying – that was the first time I was Tuckered. Peter transformed into Malcolm Tucker, pinned me against the wall and started shouting at me."
Roger Allam Roger Allam (Peter Mannion MP) "My character just emerged really as someone who is behind the new Tory party – although of course we never say it is the Tory party – behind the whole Cameroon thing, get down with the kids and hug a hoodie, all that shite."
Front "I sincerely hope my character doesn't put women going off into politics. I would hope women would want to go into politics because they think they can do better than Nicola Murray. Nicola screws up not because she's a woman but because she's a human being."
Life imitated art when Ed Miliband described George Osborne's latest budget as an "omnishambles". It was a word coined on The Thick Of It by Tucker.
Martin "That was Tony Roche's elegant phrase, it was utterly astonishing. I remember someone sending me a screengrab from Newsnight and there was #omnishambles against the back wall of the studio. It looked like a scene from The Day Today. I suppose it's part of politicians wanting to appropriate the satire, as a way of making it less harmful to them."
Iannucci "When people in real life politics start quoting elements of it to attack opponents, that line between reality and stupidity has been crossed. You kind of think they really ought to be getting on with their own lives. It's not the reason I decided to stop doing it, it's just an interesting point we've arrived at."
This year's fourth series played out against the backdrop of a Leveson-style inquiry. Incidents on the show began to eerily pre-empt similar real-life events, such as a storyline about a government proposal to cut school breakfast clubs, followed the next day by reports of a real-life equivalent. A select committee report this month warned the government against Thick Of It-style special adviser appointments. The public administration select committee warned that the BBC series had "more than a grain of truth".
Gray "We have a consultant [BBC political reporter Kate Conway] who helps us get the more mundane, important details right, like the layout of Ed Miliband's office, but we don't have moles per se. We spend the majority of our time working on jokes and funny lines, not policies."
Front "Every single episode has presaged something that was coming. I sat on a panel with David Cameron the other day and he was forced to acknowledge that, yes, it is basically exactly like what is happening to his government."
A former coalition special adviser "Certainly among the special adviser community it is seen as spookily close to real life. Not quite a fly on the wall documentary but each and every situation that they depict is experienced by special advisers and other people in government on a pretty much daily basis. What it has done so brilliantly is demonstrate that behind the scenes of what might appear an impressive government machine (although not recently) are a bunch of people just like in any other office, with all the clashing egos, fights over territory and pitfalls that go with it."
Ben Bradshaw Labour MP and former culture secretary, Ben Bradshaw "The macho laddish aggression and anger is nothing I ever experienced in government with special advisers or anyone. Tempers frayed very rarely, if at all; maybe I was moving in the wrong circles. That doesn't mean to say that some of the storylines haven't been pretty prescient and prophetic. One of the problems is the reality is much more interesting and extraordinary than the fiction."
Iannucci has said Saturday's episode of The Thick Of It will be the last. He is working on a big-screen adaptation of Alan Partridge and the second series of his West Wing satire Veep, starring Julia Louis-Dreyfus, for HBO.
Iannucci "It's definitely the last series. I've known from past experience to never say never. I don't think it's going to change politics. In terms of comedy hopefully it will inspire someone in the same way that I remember listening to Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy or watching Not the Nine O'Clock News and thinking, I want to do something like that. You end up making something not like that, but it gives you the impetus to set out on that road."
Gray "It's a shame to stop but it also makes sense because hopefully we haven't outstayed our welcome. It's great to leave at a point where people are hopefully wanting more. That's the best way."
Tandy "Has it changed anything? I think it has. It's brought the way politics functions in this country out into the open. Its shows the government needs a bit more transparency, but it also helps you feel for the politicians sometimes. They are just ordinary people trying to do a job."
The Thick Of It, BBC2, Saturday, 9.30pm

Source: The Guardian



Sunday, 16 September 2012

Peter Capaldi - 'The Thick Of It' review and charity swear-a-thon gaff

The Thick of It, BBC Two, review
Michael Deacon reviews the return of Armando Iannucci's satirical political comedy The Thick of It (BBC Two).
To the list of problems for which we blame the Coalition we can now add the undermining of the funniest comedy on British TV. In the past, The Thick of It (BBC Two) – the last series of which aired in 2009 – was loosely a satire of New Labour: the bug-eyed belligerence of its spin doctors, its fixation on how it was presented by the media.
But times have changed, and the men behind The Thick of It – led by Armando Iannucci – have changed the show to match. Peter Capaldi’s Malcolm Tucker, the splenetic spin doctor, and Rebecca Front’s Nicola Murray, the previous Secretary of State, are now in Opposition (we’ll see how they’re getting on in episode two); Murray’s department is instead in the hands of a coalition. The new Secretary of State is Roger Allam’s Peter Mannion, a drawling middle-aged Tory who forever looks as if he’s just awoken fully clothed on the living room sofa. His junior minister is Geoffrey Streatfeild’s Fergus Williams, a charmless Lib Dem.
But it isn’t only the government that’s different. The show’s dynamic is different too. Previously, Tucker was the key character: he drove the plot, he got the best lines. On Saturday, to compensate for his absence, the remaining characters appeared to be taking turns to do his job.
Everyone had Tucker’s sense of humour: cruel, quick, blackly cynical. Everyone had his knack for nicknames (the Lib Dems were “The Inbetweeners”, Mannion was “Raffles the gentleman MP”). Everyone had his gift for inventive swearing (“Seven years of ear-p---,” muttered Phil, Mannion’s aide).
More significantly, there no longer seemed to be a hierarchy of mockery. In earlier series, this was fairly strict. Tucker did more put-downs than anyone else, and his were the nastiest. Other characters hardly dared insult him back, or at least not to his face. Chris Addison’s Ollie, the gawky ideas man, was good at put-downs but reserved them largely for those equal to or below him. 
Source: The Telegraph




Alistair Campbell and Malcolm Tucker's 'swear-athon' accidentally broadcast in crèche
Alistair Campbell and Peter Capaldi were left red-faced after their sponsored swear-athon was accidentally broadcast into a crèche. 

Tony Blair's former spin doctor was at City trader BGC’s charity day with actor Capaldi who plays foul-mouthed communications director Malcom Tucker in The Thick of It
The pair initially got involved on the trading floor to raise money for the Leukaemia and Lymphoma Research team but were then urged to take part in a "swearathon," which was broadcast to the whole building. 
But the microphone was cut out when organisers realised they had inadvertently played the potty-mouthed tirade throughout the building, including a crèche downstairs.
Mr Campbell apologised to "the kids and their mums and dads, and anyone else who took offence". 

"Our only defence is that the traders looked in need of a laugh after a day spent trying to humour celebs, and we were raising money for our respective charities," he added.
The real spin doctor claimed victory in the competition by managing eleven swear-words in his time limit, compared to Mr Tucker's nine. 

On his blog, Mr Campbell wrote: "Someone had the bright idea of Peter aka Malcolm and I having a sponsored swear-off, which went down very well with the testosterone-charged trading floor, some of whom stopped shouting to listen to the twin torrents of f words." 

He rose to the challenge by telling Malcolm Tucker that his "f—-ing programme and its f—-ing anti politics so-called f—-ing jokes were pretty well f—-ed by the coalition and quite frankly the whole f—-ing show is f—-ed to f—-ing f—-ery and he and his f—-ing scriptwriters might as well just f— off." 

Mr Tucker hit back by saying he was "f—-ing offended that a f—-ing unemployed has been like me dared to f—-ing suggest he had f—-ing writers to write his f—-ing sweary bits and …. and then the microphone went dead, and so the traders couldn’t hear him, and so I was declared the winner." 

Mr Campbell got into hot water for using four-letter words during his time in Number 10. He once accidentally sent an email containing profanities meant for party officials to a Newsnight journalist. 



Source: The Telegraph

Sunday, 2 September 2012

'The Thick Of It: Coalition' new trailer video



A video trailer has been unveiled for the new series of The Thick Of It.

The fourth series of Armando Iannucci's political satire returns this autumn on BBC Two.

Set to 'Mind Heist' from Hans Zimmer's Inception score, the trailer sees Peter Mannion (Roger Allam) struggling with the coalition government while Malcolm Tucker (Peter Capaldi) and Nicola Murray (Rebecca Front) start life in the wasteland of opposition.
The first episode of the run will focus on the new coalition partners, while the second will centre on Murray's party outside government.

Allam has claimed that his coalition government is "less imaginatively sweary" than Tucker's was in previous years.

The fourth series of the show begins its seven-episode run on September 8.
Source: Digital Spy 

Also reported by New Statesman 


Monday, 23 July 2012

Hulu to stream UK comedy 'Thick of It,' un-bleeped

The cult favourite The Thick of It is coming to Hulu in its full, expletive-ridden glory

The video website Hulu will have sole U.S. broadcasting rights for the fourth season of the series. Along with debuting the new series on July 29, 2012, Hulu and its pay subscription off-shoot Hulu Plus will also feature all three previous seasons of the sitcom.
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The video website will stream the upcoming fourth season of the British political comedy, offering American viewers their first uncensored look at Armando Iannucci's show, a critical hit in the U.K.

Iannucci's brand of caustic, foul-mouthed satire has increasingly found U.S. interest thanks to his HBO series "Veep," starring Julia Louis-Dreyfus as an ineffectual vice president, and the 2009 film "In the Loop," which parodied the "special relationship" between U.S. and U.K. governments.

Hulu and its pay subscription offshoot Hulu Plus will begin carrying the three previous seasons of The Thick of It beginning July 29. The fourth season will première this fall when it débuts in the U.K. on BBC2.

Along with debuting the new series of The Thick of It on July 29, Hulu and its pay subscription offshoot Hulu Plus will also feature all three previous seasons of the sitcom.

While earlier seasons of The Thick of It aired on BBC America, they were bleeped, which for an Iannucci comedy, is akin to cutting the violence out of a Quentin Tarantino film. (The fourth season will also later run on BBC America.)

"That's a difference I'm very enthusiastic about," says Iannucci. "It's not that I want to bring swearing to the masses, but just the rhythm of certain speech I think requires you to hear the full vocal effect."

For Hulu, The Thick of It represents the latest bid by the TV network-owned site to expose American audiences to British television. Hulu, having seen cult U.K. shows like Spaced excel on their platform, has previously made exclusive deals for the BBC's Rev., Channel 4's Misfits and the BBC's Whites.

While forays into original content have drawn headlines for Hulu and Netflix, they have also increasingly looked abroad. Hulu also recently acquired the Canadian mini-series "The Yard," and Neflix's most anticipated original series, "House of Cards," is a remake of a British classic.

With The Thick of It, which will simultaneously air on BBC2 in the U.K., Hulu is going one step further than it has previously in co-producing the series.

"We want to help make the connection between a viewer and something they might not have found," says Andy Forssell, senior vice president of content at Hulu. "Far fewer people in the U.S. are familiar with the show than should be because it's just so good and so well done."

Forssell said the move is part of Hulu's "treasure hunting" that supplements its library of American TV shows. Hulu also recently began distributing "Larry King Now," a new online show from the former CNN anchor that's being produced by Ora TV.

"There's a lot to love about television in the U.K.," says Forssell. "They have some of the best TV in the world and some of the worst TV in the world, and I think that's great because it all comes from the fact that they take chances."

Iannucci said the fourth season of The Thick of It, which is seven episodes of 30-minutes, portrays the formation of Britain's coalition government and finds Malcolm Tucker's fiery character on the outside of power, desperately trying to regain it.

Though some of the allusions to current British politics will certainly go over the heads of many U.S. viewers, Iannucci believes it plays well internationally.

"We don't name actual politicians. We keep it as general as general," he says. "It's about office politics as much as national politics."

Source: SF Gate



Monday, 16 July 2012

Peter Capaldi: The Thick Of It returns to BBC Two

It has been described as the 21st century's answer to Yes Minister and won several Baftas. Now Armando Iannucci's political satire is back.

The BBC has announced that a fourth series will be aired on BBC Two this autumn.

The series is made up of seven 30 minute episodes and will see Roger Allam returning in his role as Peter Mannion MP alonside Peter Capaldi as the foul mouthed press secretary Malcolm Tucker and Rebecca Front as Nicola Murray MP.

Chris Addison, Joana Scanlan and Olivia Poulet all also return as part of the ensemble cast.

BBC Two controller Janice Hadlow said of the announcement: "I am delighted to welcome The Thick Of It back to BBC Two. It is an essential part of the BBC Two comedy offering this year. A new Coalition government, what better time for a new series of The Thick Of It."

This series will cover 'unchartered territory' according to Iannucci: "a new Coalition Government, and Malcolm and Nicola fretting in the wings. For the first time too a storyline takes us all the way through the series right to the bitter, bitter end, with Government and Opposition convulsed in an incident that questions every political convention imaginable, but in a funny way."

Source: The Telegraph




Monday, 4 June 2012

Peter Capaldi: 'The Thick Of It' update, and 'The Suspicions of Mr Whicher' review


  • The Thick Of It series four “should be ready for Autumn”
Armando Iannucci has confirmed that series four of BBC political satire The Thick of It is in the can and ready to be edited in time for an autumn air date

Finally, some news to celebrate from the BBC drama and comedy section. Cameras have been rolling (do camera still roll? Whirring perhaps?) on the new series of The Thick of It since March, and this morning creator Armando Iannucci confirmed on Twitter that they’ve just wrapped.

Eight brand new Coalition-themed episodes of the political satire are now waiting to be edited, starring the returning cast of Peter Capaldi, Chris Addison, James Smith, Joanna Scanlan and Rebecca Front. A broadcast date is yet to be confirmed, though Iannucci sent the following tweet, intimating that we should expect to see the new series on the BBC later this year:

“In answer to all your queries, though Thick of It filming is over, editing will take a few months. But all should be ready for Autumn x”

Chris Addison has also been updating his Twitter followers on the new show’s progress, though went about it in with his tongue firmly positioned in his cheek, spilling news on the new, explosive 3D CGI direction the series has taken, and announcing a Brian Eno cover of Bring Me Sunshine performed by Trent Reznor to be the show’s new theme tune. Sounds pretty good, if you ask us…
Source: Den Of Geek 
Also reported by Radio Times 



  • Review: The Suspicions of Mr Whicher (2011)
"This review of The Suspicions of Mr Whicher (2011) contains a discussion of the relevant historical events. If you prefer to watch this television film by Hat Trick Productions without preconceptions, do not read this review"

Source: Opionator

Sunday, 20 May 2012

Peter Capaldi - 'Driven' and 'The Thick Of It'



Driven
Peter Capaldi, Damian Lewis, Jessica Brown-Findlay, and Iwan Rheon will star in actor/writer/director David Leon’s debut feature Driven.

Production on the crime thriller is set to start in and around Newcastle and Northumberland in early 2013. Driven will be produced by Daisy Allsop with the photographer Rankin attached as executive producer alongside Gareth Wiley. German production company GFF will co-produce. The film will be made through Leon’s production company Zeitgeist Films.

Driven is a loosely autobiographical film, a crime thriller based around Leon’s own childhood experiences growing up in Newcastle in the late ’80s and early ’90s.

Read more at Screen Daily 



‘Thick Of It’ to return to BBC Two in 2012
It has been revealed by Armando Lannucci that seven new The Thick Of It episodes have been written, which will be aired later this year.

Confiming the news on Twitter, he Tweeted: “Oh, and we’ve finished writing 7 eps of The Thick of It, to be shown on BBC Two later this year.”

Yesterday, Catherham F1 team’s Head of Communications, Tom Webb claimed to have spotted Peter Capaldi filming in character in London.

He Tweeted: “In London for meetings & just passed MASSIVE news – Malcolm Tucker filming new scened for The Thick Of It outside Portcullis House. YES!! (sic)”

Read more (and see a clip) at iMediaMonkey 

Also reported by Digital Spy
 
 
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