Emilia di Girolamo, the lead writer on series 5 of Law & Order: UK, is promising some of the most explosive and heart-rending stories yet seen on the show.
The drama, which was spun-off from the classic US series and takes the original American storylines as the basis for each London-based episode, has now become a popular drama fixture for ITV1 (on Sundays, 9pm).
Here Emilia reveals how she has shifted the tone of this latest series, giving the lead characters, DS Ronnie Brooks (Bradley Walsh) and DS Matt Devlin (Jamie Bamber), more emotional depth, and how season five is heading for a huge cliffhanger finale. Her episodes in this series are 'Safe' (ITV1 Sunday 17 July, 9pm), 'Deal' and 'Survivor's Guilt'.
The drama, which was spun-off from the classic US series and takes the original American storylines as the basis for each London-based episode, has now become a popular drama fixture for ITV1 (on Sundays, 9pm).
Here Emilia reveals how she has shifted the tone of this latest series, giving the lead characters, DS Ronnie Brooks (Bradley Walsh) and DS Matt Devlin (Jamie Bamber), more emotional depth, and how season five is heading for a huge cliffhanger finale. Her episodes in this series are 'Safe' (ITV1 Sunday 17 July, 9pm), 'Deal' and 'Survivor's Guilt'.
Emilia, who lives in Hastings, also discusses her career in scriptwriting. Having got a PhD in the rehabilitation of offenders and worked with prisoners, she decided to become a writer and spent years struggling for a break into television. She also reveals which popular BBC1 series she would love to write for.
Now that her work on series 5 and the next series of Law & Order: UK is finished, Emilia is writing an original drama series for Clerkenwell Films/ITV, and working exclusively with prisoner Jeremy Bamber to tell the story of the White House Farm murders, for which he has so far served 25 years in prison, while maintaining he is innocent.
Now that her work on series 5 and the next series of Law & Order: UK is finished, Emilia is writing an original drama series for Clerkenwell Films/ITV, and working exclusively with prisoner Jeremy Bamber to tell the story of the White House Farm murders, for which he has so far served 25 years in prison, while maintaining he is innocent.
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| Ronnie and Matt (Bradley Walsh and Jamie Bamber). Pics: ITV |
Both Matt and
Ronnie will go on extraordinary journeys this season. For Ronnie, it all starts
in episode 2, 'Safe', when he discovers his estranged daughter is pregnant and
continues into season 6. Ronnie is faced with questioning his past and present
behaviour and the fallout of one tiny moment in time will leave
Ronnie emotionally challenged as never before. Matt also goes on his own
journey this season and finds it hard to control his anger when faced with one
particular offender – Mark Ellis, a cold blooded drug dealer played brilliantly
by Charles Mnene. In this role Charles is like something out of The Wire –
utterly convincing and very, very frightening.
In such a
tight format, is it difficult to do this – to explore the characters?
It is
challenging and the character arcs need to work seamlessly with the
storytelling, but when it becomes part of the storytelling itself, then it works
with the format. I think audiences are crying out for character-led drama
right now and bringing that element to the forefront of Law & Order: UK has
given us some explosive, emotional territory to explore.
Is it your
ambition as lead writer to inject more depth and emotion into the characters?
Yes, and also to
make sure all the stories feel relevant to a UK audience. It’s no
secret I’m a big SVU fan. I love that emotional style of storytelling and I
think it works well with our format. We’ve always been a little more emotional
than our US counterpart and digging a little deeper into our regulars’ lives doubles
the impact.
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| Prosecutors Alesha Phillips and Jake Thorne |
Why are you
concluding the series with a double bill? Will we see a different kind of story
here?
'Deal' and 'Survivor’s Guilt' explore one story over two hours of
television but in fact they won’t be airing together as a double, but instead
we end series 5 with 'Deal' and kick off series 6 with 'Survivor’s Guilt'. The two hours of storytelling mean we
can delve into the story and particularly into the emotional fallout for our
characters. In these two episodes we have the
most explosive, emotionally charged and heart-rending episodes Law &
Order: UK has ever done. We will end series 5 on an enormous cliffhanger and we
believe for our loyal audience it'll be worth the wait to find out what
happens.
As a fan of
the original Law & Order, can you sum up the series’ qualities? Why is it
special? Do you have favourite episodes or stories?
There is
something immensely satisfying about watching a case go from dead body to
offender in the dock. It’s the whole story. I think this is the real magic of
the formula – it’s a satisfying viewing experience which doesn’t leave a viewer
wondering if the whole police case will get thrown out when it comes to court!
In Law & Order we get to see the case thrown out for ourselves and usually
our heroes find a way to retrieve things so all is right with the world in the
end, if a little messy.
I have too many
favourite episodes to mention them all but I’m very glad to be tackling two of
my all time favourites in Season 5, 'Angel' and 'Slave' ('Safe' and 'Deal'). They’ve both gone on huge journeys in adaptation
and I’m immensely proud of them, but still love the original US eps too.
Your move
from working in prisoner rehabilitation to becoming a leading TV writer sounds
fascinating. Can you give some background on how this came about? When and what
did you start writing, and how did your writing progress?
I worked in
prison for eight years (1992-2000) using drama-based techniques to address
offending behaviour and the work became the basis for my PhD. I was also
writing plays during this period and wrote a novel (Freaky, 1999, Pulp Books).
Freaky was optioned by Clerkenwell Films and developed for TV. Reading the
scripts made me realise how much I wanted to write for television so I left my
prison job, did a six-month retraining programme and started trying my luck as a
TV writer.
It took a few
years to get a break and a lot of projects that never made it to the screen, but
I started out on EastEnders, then got the job writing one episode of Law & Order: UK – 'Hidden' for series 2. I was taken on to core team, then
offered the job as Lead Writer/Co-Producer and now I’m incredibly fortunate to
be in a position where I turn down more work than I can take on. Things have
come full circle too and I’m now writing my own TV series with Clerkenwell
Films for ITV1.
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| Jake and CPS director Henry Sharpe (Peter Davison) |
How did your
move to lead writer on L&O: UK come about? What is your role as lead
writer?
My episodes in seasons 2-4 were very well received and when it became clear we would need to
create new regulars for series 5 & 6, Executive Producer Andrew Woodhead
asked me to take on the Lead Writer & Co-Producer role and create the new
characters as well as shape the storytelling across series 5 and 6. I had a
real vision of where I wanted our characters to go and their arc across the 13
episodes, so I jumped at the chance.
How does
your expertise in prisoner rehabilitation influence your writing?
I spent eight
years around offenders, looking right into the eyes of people who had done some
really terrible things and trying to get to the heart of their behaviour in
order to try and change it. It would be impossible to do that job and not find
it influencing my writing now. I try and be as real as the format allows me to
be. I like to explore morally complex and challenging territory
without resorting to clichéd crime drama shorthand. I try and bring the truth
of my experience with real offenders to my work on screen.
You’ve
mentioned the ‘clichés' that TV crime writers rely on. Which clichés do you
think are prevalent these days on TV? What do you think are the best crime
dramas?
There are a
whole host of clichés that seem to surface in crime dramas – too many to
mention. I suppose there are some that particularly wind me up – murderers with
ridiculously complex motivations, most of the killers I met in prison actually had
very simple motivations or more often the killings were spur of the moment and
totally unplanned. I think you can be true to that reality and still weave a
compellingly dramatic, complex and twisty tale that will keep viewers guessing.
I think Forbrydelsen (The Killing) is the best crime drama in a long time. The
characters are fantastic and the storytelling twists and turns keeping the
audience on the edge of their seats throughout but also feels real. I love
the layers, looking at one crime story evolve over 20 episodes from those
three perspectives – the cops, the politicians and the victim’s family.
L&O: UK
tackles some hard-hitting stories. How would you sum up the series’ approach to
crime drama? Any unexplored stories/themes you’d like to get stuck into?
We try and make
drama that feels relevant to a UK audience, rooted in an element of truth but
dramatically entertaining. We like our audience to feel comfortable even when
the territory we explore is difficult and challenging. In 'Safe' this season, we tackle some very dark
territory, but Ronnie takes our audience on that journey and you can’t fail to
feel safe in Ronnie’s capable hands. I’ve written 10 episodes in total and
really think I’ve explored everything I wanted to within this format, but I’m
enjoying tackling other aspects of criminal behaviour in my new series and
other original projects.
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| Devlin in pursuit at St Pancras |
Is there any
scope or desire to do completely original stories for L&O: UK?
I guess it
depends how long the show runs! There are 20 years of great stories to draw
on from the Mothership and we take our episodes on quite a journey in
adaptation. Sometimes it’s about adapting an original a writer loves and
sometimes it’s about finding an original that could work as a vehicle to
explore a theme or world the writer wants to look at, so it feels liberating
rather than constrictive. I certainly feel that my episodes are original and
very much mine because they travel such a long way from their US counterparts.
I honestly never felt the desire to write completely original stories for the
show, but I’ve left now so who knows what future series will bring.
In your
downtime, what do you enjoy reading and watching on TV? Favourite
authors/shows?
I rarely get to
read these days unless it’s a script, research material or a book I’ve been
asked to consider adapting, though that does mean I get to read some great
crime novels! I’m adapting The Poison Tree by Erin Kelly for STV and that’s a great read. I do
watch television though and lots of it. I think Misfits is probably the best
written series on UK TV in a long time – just brilliant viewing. I found The
Crimson Petal & The White incredibly compelling so will definitely be
watching out for Lucinda Coxon’s next project – her writing’s beautiful.
All-time
favourites include The Sopranos, The Wire, Dexter, Breaking Bad, The West Wing,
Conviction, Afterlife, Funland and North Square. My light relief is 30 Rock and
Curb Your Enthusiasm – they both make me laugh and all crime writers need to
kick back now and then!
I also love
Doctor Who and Torchwood and would secretly love to write an episode of Doctor
Who and give it my spin, so if you’re reading, Mr. Moffat…





Your LOUK episodes are brilliant!
ReplyDeleteIf you kill off Matt Devlin I am not watching it anymore!
ReplyDelete