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The beat goes on... (Bafta 2000
magazine)
Tony Garnett has been making ordinary lives into extraordinary
television for 35 years. And, as Gordon Beveridge discovers,
the Cops is the best example of all
All it took was a line of
coke and the nation was hooked. It was a masterstroke
from one of British televisionÕs most successful directors,
but then thatÕs what weÕve come to expect from Tony Garnett.
Who else would have the nerve and ingenuity to kick-off
a new police drama with a WPC snorting Class A in a toilet
cubicle?
Dixon of Dock Green it
definitely isnÕt, much to the chagrin of the duty
office, not to mention the numerous members of the force
who had hoped for something a little less provocative
with The Cops. But pulling punches is not TonyÕs
style. And he isnÕt all that keen on acting either, now
you mention it.
As one who subscribes to the
Spencer Tracy theory of actingŃ"donÕt ever let them
catch you doing it"Ń the last thing this director
wants from his players is a "performance." Having
made the harrowing Co thy Come Home in the Ō60s Ń and,
in the intervening 35 years, delivered such classics
as Kes, Up the Junction, Between The Lines, Bollykisson
gel and This Life Ń there is enough evidence
to suggest he may be on to something. "I tell people
hat I want what the characters would say, not what the
writer would write," says Tony, explaining his "Trojan
Horse" approach to acting and drama.
"And, when
I watch the rushes, I remind the actors of the Spencer
Tracy theory and tell them I donÕt want any acting. Not
that there isnÕt a lot of skill and guile and acting
going on Ń which I respect. But I donÕt want to see the
wheels going round." Garnett had been mulling the
stunningly true-to-life BBC series The Cops around
in his mind for some years. As he explains, "I had
two ambitions with The Cops. One was to try to
do a show about uniformed "If I said, ŌCan I do
a series set on the Skeetsmoor Estate?Õ or even a series
about social workers, I might be shown the door" officers
in order to escape the genre Ń that straitjacket of detective
stories in which the narrative is predictable because
you start with a crime and a dead body and the story
is about who did it. ItÕs difficult to escape the narrative
rules. But I thought that, if we did a show about uniforms,
we could get away from that and try to find the human
beings behind the ranks.
"The second ambition
was to include that sector of the population who donÕt
usually feature regularly in television drama in the
UK today. Some would say thereÕs 20 per cent who donÕt
live in the Blair paradise.
"I knew that if I went
to a broadcaster and said, ŌCan I do a series set on
the Skeetsmoor Estate?Õ or even a series about social
workers, I might be shown the door. But, if I said, ŌCould
I do a cop show?Õ I might be given the money. So this
was a cop show but it was also not a cop show. It was
a way of exploring experiences in this country."
And, notes Garnett, The
Cops is in the same mould as all his other work. "You
could look back at a show I produced in the mid Ō60s
and look at this one and say that it was part of the
same tradition. For me, life is too short to make referential
shows. Postmodern irony is an excuse for not having
beliefs."
All the regular cast returned
to Stanton Police Station in Christie Road for the second
series, including Natalie and Mel (Glare McGlinn and
Katy Cavanagh), Roy (John Henshaw), Wishaw (Danny Seward)
and Sergeant Giffen (Rob Dixon). However, there were
some unusual problems to overcome as a result of the
showÕs realism.
Some members of the cast expressed
concern that, considering the high profile of the programme,
the~Õ were surprised about how few offers they were getting
for further work. The trouble was, it seemed, that The
Cops was so lifelike, so natural and so well staged,
that many assumed it was a docu-soap. Grittier than Hotel, racier
than Cruise, but still a programme about real
policemen.
Garnett comments: "ItÕs
a pity if the actors had trouble finding work afterwards.
I was very pleased with them and proud of the way they
settled into the second series and did better work. They
hadnÕt let the attention and exposure they got following
the first series go to their heads. They felt comfortable
with their characters in the second series and we then
stretched them to give them more challenges." Aside
from the audience reaction to the too-authentic drama,
many viewers also missed the subtle sense of humour in The
Cops. "We all thought there was a lot of laughs
in it. It was pretty black humour, but many people claimed
it was too depressing for them," says Garnett.
And then there was that tricky
moment when the police withdrew their help. Greater Manchester.
The trouble was that The Cops was so lifelike,
so natural and so well staged, that many assumed it was
a docu-soap about real policemen. Police expressed extreme "disappointmentÕ over
scenes such as the cocaine-snorting WPC and repeated
brutality against members of the public.
There was no way they were
going to have anything to do with the second series.
A terse statement from the police read: "Our main
responsibility is to our is to our local community
to ensure, where we can, that any portrayal of the police
does not increase the fear of crime. As we did not feel
the series met this aim, we felt that we could not offer
any further assistance."
Garnett remains philosophical: "I
understand their reasons and I wasnÕt surprised. All
institutions would like the media to project a certain
image of them. Most police shows present an image which
the top brass approves of. I donÕt see why they should
co-operate with a show that doesnÕt deliver the public
relations advantage. So, from their point of view, it
is quite understandable. But from my point of view, IÕm
not in the public relations business."
"I like shows with energy
and bounce and life in them. I like pace. I have got
more energy than I had 30 years ago and more stamina"
What does please the publicity-shy
Garnett is the response from ordinary policeman. "That
has been extremely positive," he says. "The
actors are often greeted very warmly by uniforms on the
beat." But how much further can the whole concept
of The Cops be taken?
"Every show has a different
lifespan and you canÕt predict them. But I only do two
series of anything because I get bored and there is always
a new show I want to do. There is a third series being
prepared now, but I wonÕt be doing it."
So what is the catalyst that
drives Garnett, a northern man with firm working-class
roots?
"I remain curious about the world. Curiosity keeps me going... and anger," he
says. "I do appreciate tha we lead a very privileged life. We get paid quite
handsomely for being given a passport to travel into other peopleÕs lives and
find out about them." And, despite feeling that he has "got to an age
now where I donÕt know how many more shows I have got time to do," 64-year-old
Garnett assures us that he is not ready to throw in the towel just yet. "There
is always another show playing in my head and that is the one I want to do," he
explains. "I like shows with energy and bounce and life in them. I like
pace. I have got more energy than I had 30 years ago and more stamina. As you
get older, you learn how to work. You learn how to dispose of your time effectively.
You learn how to focus it better. "One of the greatest
pleasures I get now is nurturing another generation. All
my colleagues are half my age or less and it is an enormous
pleasure for me to be working with their energy and freshness," he
says with a tangible sense of enthusiasm and pride. "IÕll
continue to plough the same furrow. It is an attempt at the
distilled naturalism that I have been trying to make succeed
for four decades." Garnett knows he has been fortunate
in his career. "My old man would phone me and say, ŌWhere
are you? In the office? YouÕre lucky. YouÕre in out of the
cold and thereÕs no heavy lifting.Õ Of course there are pressures
in my career too, but it is a privileged existence for those
lucky enough to be working. My saying goes. if youÕre working,
donÕt moan." And, for as long as Garnett continues to
make such compelling television drama, neither should we.
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