BBC cooks up Nigel Slater TV drama
Nigel Slater's childhood memoirs are being turned into a BBC One drama which will show the TV chef as "the Billy Elliot of the kitchen". Ruby Film and Television, which was behind the BBC's acclaimed drama Small Island, is making a 90-minute adaptation of Toast. Ruby co-founder Paul Trijbits told Broadcast magazine: "This is the Billy Elliot of the kitchen, it's about ambition in the face of huge hindrances." He added: "Slater is iconic - he represents a lot of things we love about Britain." Billy Elliot writer Lee Hall is penning the screenplay, which will chronicle the chef's childhood, as he began to develop his passion for cooking against the backdrop of the death of his mother. Nigel is quoted on Waitrose's website recalling: "My mother died when I was nine. "My father, an engineer, who was very strict and Victorian, fell in love with our cleaner, and they ran away to the country from Wolverhampton. "We moved to a cottage on the Worcestershire-Herefordshire border, roses and honeysuckle round the door, but it was in the middle of nowhere, and I didn't see anyone from one day to the next."
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Patrick McLennan is a London-based journalist and documentary maker who has worked as a writer, sub-editor, digital editor and TV producer in the UK and New Zealand. His CV includes spells as a news producer at the BBC and TVNZ, as well as web editor for Time Inc UK. He has produced TV news and entertainment features on personalities as diverse as Nick Cave, Tom Hardy, Clive James, Jodie Marsh and Kevin Bacon and he co-produced and directed The Ponds, which has screened in UK cinemas, BBC Four and is currently available on Netflix.
An entertainment writer with a diverse taste in TV and film, he lists Seinfeld, The Sopranos, The Chase, The Thick of It and Detectorists among his favourite shows, but steers well clear of most sci-fi.