He’s one of the most talented writers of his generation. He first
came to prominence in 1999 when he wrote, produced and became the public
face of Queer as Folk. He was later credited with reviving British
Saturday night TV drama with his 2005-2010 revival of Dr Who, the
success of which enabled him to create the spin off series The Sarah
Jane Adventures and Torchwood.
In 2008 he was awarded an OBE for
services to drama. Laurence Watts meets Russell T Davies.
Russell and I are meeting at a restaurant in Manchester. I’m hoping
it’s third time lucky.
Twice before we’d agreed to meet only for
Russell’s plans to change, forcing him to cancel. The last cancellation
has been playing on my mind. We’d been due to meet in Los Angeles, but
he’d emailed me from a planned holiday in Britain to say he wasn’t
returning to America. His partner, Andrew, needed long-term medical
treatment and they wanted to be closer to friends and family. At the
time I didn’t want to pry. Now that we meet, I’m wondering whether
Russell is OK to talk about it. He is.
“There we were, living in LA and loving it,” he tells me. “I had
shows lined up and everything when Andrew started to get these
headaches. We wondered if it was the change of city, the water or the
fact he wasn’t working. It was getting bad so we decided he’d see a
doctor when we came back in August for a three-week holiday. He went to
the doctor, who sent him for a scan. When we got the results they told
us he had cancer of the brain. They needed to operate straight away.
Three days later he was having surgery.”
“That’s where we are now. He’s had thirty consecutive days of
radiotherapy and chemotherapy and we’ve got six months of chemotherapy
ahead of us. He’s not allowed to drive. The lives we had in LA just sort
of closed down overnight. All of my stuff, my computers and clothes
were over there. We had to have everything shipped over here in crates.
We were lucky we never sold our house in Manchester. Lo and behold we’re
now a ten minute drive from Europe’s best cancer hospital.”
Russell is spending his days keeping Andrew company and making sure
he’s healthy. This entails copious amounts of daytime television,
Coronation Street and daily walks for exercise and fresh air.
“I’ve stopped work,” he says. “I haven’t worked since August. We’re
lucky we’ve got enough money in the bank that, if need be, I can take
the whole of next year off. I’ve always been a good saver. I’ve always
had that mentality that you’ve got to be ready for a rainy day. People
keep asking me if I’ve really stopped working. I used to work so hard
you see, they think I must be secretly working on something, but I’m
not. It was a simple decision: he’s more important. Who gives a f**k
about writing scripts if I can stay at home with him and make his day a
bit happier?”
Although he won’t be writing, Russell will undertake a small project
for CBBC. He says it won’t take up much of his time and his commitment
predates Andrew’s illness. Which begs the question: what will happen to
the other projects Russell has been working on? I ask him if his much
anticipated new gay series is really called Cucumber. It is. When it’s
obvious I don’t share his enthusiasm for the title he explains from
where it originates.
“There was a genuine scientific survey done somewhere in Switzerland
about erectile dysfunction, which categorised hard-ons into four
categories: tofu, peeled banana, banana and cucumber. When I heard that I
knew it had to be the title of the show. Those are actually the first
lines of the script.”
While Russell appreciates television has reached the stage where gay
characters are no longer defined by their sexuality – nowadays they are
detectives or lawyers first and foremost and their sexuality is
secondary – Cucumber is very much about gay men and their gayness.
That’s what he wants to write about.
“I don’t know what’s going to happen to it,” he says. “It’s the best
thing I’ve written in a decade. Showtime loved it. We’d just got to the
point of casting when Andrew and I came back to Britain. There’s no way
I’d let it happen without me. Showtime was lovely. They were like: your
boyfriend needs to get well. The BBC was the same. I don’t know when
I’ll start work again. I’ve got see how Andrew’s health goes.”
“It was originally written for America, but in theory I could rewrite
it for Britain. It’s tricky because it’s a BBC property, but it uses
much stronger language and attitude than I’ve ever seen before on the
BBC. I don’t know if they’ll make it. I’m sure I can get it made, but
of course when you leave the country, television executives don’t
exactly sit around crying and waiting. They move on. I’ll get it made
though. Or I’ll turn it into a novel.”
Russell’s hiatus also casts doubt on a future series of Torchwood. He
tells me that Miracle Day, the show’s fourth season, didn’t do
brilliantly. Reviews were mixed. With the head of American-partner Starz
on record as saying he’d only bring back Torchwood if Russell was part
of it, the outlook for the series is uncertain at best.
As a writer, Russell’s fan following sets him apart from other
writers. He claims he never wanted to be famous and not to like the way
he looks or sounds. He was thrust into the spotlight when Queer as Folk
premiered and came under fire for its depiction of underage sex. Russell
stood up to defend the show.
“You can’t expect the cast to be politically minded. They just use
the material they’re given. When the show first aired the actors
probably didn’t even know what the gay age of consent was. There were
journalists literally waiting with bear traps, waiting for one of them
to say the wrong thing. I had to step forward.”
“I went on Nicky Campbell’s Radio Five show to talk about the
criticism we’d received and the underlying issues. A retired female
schoolteacher called in and said she’d been so shocked by what we’d been
talking about, she’d had to come in from the garden. She said: “I was a
schoolteacher for 40 years and we never had any gay students.” Usually
people are polite on the radio, but how often do you get to go one on
one with a homophobe or someone who’s ignorant? I told her she was a
failure. Did she really think she’d taught no gay people during her
career? She was wrong. I said she should go back out into the garden.
Nicky Campbell loved it.”
Having demonstrated that he could stand up for and promote a show he
says the public relations people have never let him stop. He hopes he’s
not a fame whore. He tells me he only usually does interviews when he
has a show to promote. Set against that record, our interview is a
rarity.
I tell him Queer as Folk was brilliant. It’s a series I go back to
again and again. It remains as true to life as ever. Only the mobile
phones used in the series seem to date it.
“You know, there are things that are said in there that I just
haven’t seen anywhere else: like when Vince is standing in the disco and
says: “That man there, I’ve known him for ten years. We just nod at
each other.” It’s one of those forgotten speeches. “That man there: he
went mad, he went to drugs, he died his hair blonde and now he’s
settled. Don’t know his name.” I love that.”
When I revisit Queer as Folk one of the things that strikes me, in
contrast to Russell’s later work, is the near-absence of gay actors.
Especially for a series portraying gay men.
“I’m not deliberately casting gay actors,” he tells me. It’s just
that I have no problem casting them. I would never cast someone if they
weren’t right for the role. In Britain you can’t ask about someone’s
sexuality in an audition. When Charlie Hunnam walked in I guess I
thought he was gay because surely only a gay man could be so perfect for
the part of Nathan. I only found out later he wasn’t, but it was
irrelevant at that point. When it comes down to it you always have to go
with who’s right for the part.”
The success of Queer as Folk paved the way for Russell to pen
projects like Bob and Rose, The Second Coming and Casanova. As a
lifelong and committed Dr Who fan though, Russell had always longed to
get his hands on that property. Eventually he got his
wish. Did he have
any reservations when the BBC finally offered it to him?
“For a couple of days I had a lot of doubts,” he says. “My cleaner
comes to clean every Tuesday and we always natter and put the world to
rights. I sat there babbling for half an hour saying: “Should I do it? I
love that show! Will I stop loving it? Will it have enough money? Will
they want to put it on BBC3?” And he said: “Have you seen what you are
doing?” While I’d been talking to him I’d been unpacking a big box of
toy Daleks, each covered in bubble wrap, trying to find a specific black
and gold one. I was like, “Yeah. I think I’d better do it.””
Having long dreamt of rebooting the then 40-year-old series, I ask
him how many of the changes he introduced had been planned in his head,
years in advance.
“Less than you’d think,” he answers. “Although an old friend of mine
from Granada reminded me I once told him if they ever let me bring back
Dr Who, I’d cast Denise Van Outen as the companion and Thora Hird as her
mother. In a way that’s pretty much what we did.”
After reviving Dr Who and creating the spin off series Torchwood and
The Sarah Jane Adventures, Russell was rightly recognised as one of the
most powerful figures in television. He was certainly instrumental in
reviving the career of the late Elisabeth Sladen and turning John
Barrowman into a household name.
“John, God bless him. What have I done? I’ve created a monster,” he
laughs. “I always say though, if I ever accidentally murder someone and
need to get out of the country fast, he’s the man I’d phone. He’d do it.
He’d wrap me up in a carpet and smuggle me out of the country in the
back of a van. He’s a lovely man. People don’t realise how kind he is.”
Official recognition, not that he needed it, for his cumulative work
came in 2008 when he was made an OBE in the Queen’s Birthday Honours
List. The citation accompanying his medal recognised his services to
drama. He tells me he has no idea where the medal is right now. I wonder
if it’s in a crate he has yet to unpack.
“You know, I had second thoughts about accepting it,” he says. “I’m
not a big fan of the monarchy, but I did think it was a good thing for a
gay man to be publicly given. In the end I think that why I said yes.
Then when they published the full honours list I found out they’d given
Paul O’Grady one as well!”
Russell doesn’t need the affirmation that comes with the awarding of a
medal. His work speaks for itself, as do his actions. Much as I hope
he’s back at his computer and writing soon, I doubt there’s anyone who
won’t empathise with his new priority. We’re happy to wait and I’m sure I
speak on behalf of many thousands when I say we wish Andrew the very
best of health.
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