Monday, 24 August 2009

My Hero director, producer John Stroud Dead at Just 54

We're very sorry to report that My Hero and producer and director John Stroud has died aged 54 of a brain tumour.

John, who was also co-founder of Big Bear Films with Marcus Mortimer and is probably best known for his work on My Hero, enjoyed a TV career that spanned 30 years, from joining Thames Television as a trainee to setting up the indie in 1996.

Both John and Marcus were keen to use their experience to hothouse new writers, as well as developing projects with more familiar talents and produced six seasons of My Hero, as well as the upcoming BBC circus-based comedy Big Top (due to screen later this year on BBC1) and The Hairy Bikers’ Cookbook, a rare foray into factual fare. (John discovered The Hairy Bikers, brought them to Big Bear and co-produced and/or directed 21 episodes of The Hairy Bikers Cookbook and The Hairy Bikers Ride Again and a special for BBC 2).

A Cambridge Footlights contemporary of Griff Rhys Jones, Jimmy Mulville and Peter Fincham, Stroud’s first TV credits included Rainbow and The Sooty Show, where he notoriously secured an appearance by punk group UK Subs.

John, who is survived by a wife and two children, made his name with Channel 4 sketch show Who Dares Wins, he directed shows such as Spitting Image, Harry Enfield and Chums and the final episode of Minder.

While we were covering production of My Hero John was a wonderful supporter of this micro site, providing valuable background material and more to the making of the show. 

We're sure he will be much missed.

Big Top Comes to BBC1

On its way to BBC 1 this autumn from Big Bear, makers of My Hero, is a new 'high concept' family comedy, Big Top.

It’s set in and around a travelling circus and isi about the performers and backstage staff that make up Circus Maestro. Each week a story is unfolded, erected, performed and taken down just like the big top itself. 
As you'd expect, the circus is fraught with problems, which the Ring Mistress (Lizzie, played by Amanda Holden) must overcome. What do you do when you’ve advertised a death-defying stunt which everyone has bought tickets to see, and the performer is just that little bit too injured? How do you manage a group of people who are so jealous of each other they are happy to sabotage their colleagues performances; or so dedicated as performers, that they are willing to sabotage their own survival? When the star acrobat is being chased by immigration, how do you hold on to him? Big Top's characters clash with a cacophony of egos and Lizzie must keep the whole thing going... somehow.

Big Top stars:

Amanda Holden as Lizzie, The Ringmistress, keeping the show going against all odds;
John Thomson and Sophie Thompson as Geoff and Helen, The Clowns, a husband and wife team. Geoff thinks he knows more about comedy than anyone, but hasn’t a funny bone in his body. Helen is his long suffering wife.
Tony Robinson as Erasmus is the soundman and accountant. He is cynical, manipulative and callous and will do anything to make a quick buck. His attitude to the other performers borders on contempt.
Ruth Madoc as Georgie and David the Dog. Georgie is the “Grande Dame” of Circus Maestro and now works with a dog, whom she often uses to get what she wants – “David’s not happy with the size of our caravan” - In truth she couldn’t care less about the dog.
Bruce MacKinnon as Boyco, the East European Acrobat. Without Boyco, Circus Maestro would go down the pan. He is dazzlingly talented and incredibly naïve to the ways of the English World. As a result, everyone tries to take advantage of him.

Tuesday, 15 July 2008

No Heroics Previewed

Over on Comic Book Resources, Rich Johnston has published a preview, complete with several photographs, of ITV2's new superhero sitcom No Heroics, as part of his latest Lying in the Gutters comics news and gossip column. The show is being executive produced by one of the former My Hero team.

The show, set to debut later this year, is currently being previewed for the press, so expect more mainstream media to pick up on the new show, which is being produced by Tiger Aspect.

Created and produced by Drew Pearce, whose credits include ITV2's magazine reality show Deadline, No Heroics is ITV2's first original sitcom, and centres on the lives of four London-based off-duty superheroes and their struggles in love and with fame - or the lack of it. The show sees the off-duty superheroes living their day to day life, which for supposed saviours of the world is actually rather normal – as they just can’t be bothered. Instead, this group of b-listers would rather get drunk in their local superheroes-only pub, The Fortress and commiserate at their lack of superiority. 

No Heroics is directed by Ben Gregor and executive produced by Sophie Clarke-Jevoise, who also worked behind the scenes on BBC1's My Hero series as its executive producer. The show stars Patrick Baladi as Excelsior - the strongest of the heroes and bane of the Hotness’ life), Nicholas Burns (as the Hotness, a heat-controlling hero desperate to save, well something…), James Lance (who plays Timebomb, who can see sixty seconds into the future), Claire Keelan (as Electroclash, who can control machines but prefers to use her powers to empty out cigarette machines) and Rebekah Staton (who plays super-strong She-Force, a mighty heroine who’s more interested in waiting for Mr Right to sweep her off her feet). Commissioned by the ITV2 controller, Zai Bennett, and the ITV editor of comedy, Michaela Hennessey-Vass, the initial commission was for eight episodes and is seen by ITV2 as part of a wider strategy to develop its comedy output. 

 "This is a perfect ITV2 comedy," commented Bennett last year, when the show was first announced. "It's witty, accessible and laugh-out-loud funny, and is being produced with real passion from a great team." For creator Drew Pearce, No Heroics is an opportunity to put a British take on superheroes. "Plus, I have about 20 years' worth of comic books that I'm looking forward to finally being able to claim as expenses."
 

• ITV2 web site: itv2.itv.com
• Fan Site:
www.noheroics.com

Wednesday, 11 June 2008

Ardal O'Hanlon stars in BBC Radio 4 'Spike's Lookalikes'

My Hero and Father Ted star Ardal O'Hanlon stars in a new sitcom for radio which starts on Monday on BBC Radio 4.

Spike's Lookalikes is stand-up comedian Mark Watson's first sitcom for Radio 4 and the first of three episodes will air on Monday 16 June at 11.00pm.
Ardal plays Spike, whose efforts to run a successful lookalikes agency are continually undermined – invariably by himself. His client list is diverse, if nothing else, and includes a Del Boy, a Posh Spice and a Pope John Paul II.

Loveable but thoroughly useless, Spike is bailed out on a regular basis by his wife, Maggie, office boy and lookalike wannabe Phil, and their friends, Jimmy and Sandie.

In the first episode, 'To Del And Back', Jimmy, Spike's Del Boy impersonator, has had enough and has decided to pack in the lookalikes game and fulfil his dream of being a dentist in Spain. But as Jimmy is about the only one of Spike's clients who actually gets booked, Spike has to pull out all the stops to change his mind.

Spike's Lookalikes also stars Doon Mackichan and Bruce Mackinnon.

Friday, 16 November 2007

'Bewitched' Reborn for the UK

The classic US sitcom Bewitched is set for a British makeover by My Hero creator Paul Mendelson.

Broadcast reports Sony Pictures Television International, which owns the rights to the original show, has agreed to a UK adaptation, which is likely to be made for the BBC.
Paul told
downthetubes the pilot will be shot early next year at Teddington Studios, which is also where My Hero was shot. The cast has yet to be announced but he hopes to be able to share the information soon, but says "it's a goodie!" 


Paul Mendelson, who in addition to
My Hero also created the BBC1 sitcoms May to December and So Haunt Me is now in talks with the BBC about a full series. If accepted, the show would strengthen the BBC's relationship with Sony, which has sold the Dragons' Den format around the world.


The original ABC series ran for eight series from 1964 to 1972 and spawned spin-off show
Tabitha and inspired a big screen remake starring starring Nicole Kidman and Will Ferrell. It starred Dick York (and, later, Dick Sargeant) as a man who discovered he was married to a witch, Samantha, played by Elizabeth Montgomery. Agnes Moorhead played the wicked mother-in-law, Endora. None of the major cast of the show are still alive (see this list for more information).


Buy the original
Bewitched on DVD from amazon.co.uk
Buy the original
Bewitched on DVD from amazon.com
• More about the original show on www.bewitched.net

Tuesday, 18 February 2003

Creating the My Hero Title Sequence



Malcolm Dalton, who designed and directed the title and end credits sequences for My Hero, has shared some of the secrets of their production.

"Did you know that the person flying in the titles is not actually Ardal? Only the close up grin is the man himself!

"The rest is a stand-in called Eddie. At one point poor Eddie was suspended on fine tunsten wires, six feet above the floor of the studio. The sequence was shot using a "Chroma-key" effect to place Thermo Man onto the night sky. A computer controlled camera was used to move around him to create the sense of movement. Wind machines and wires create the feeling of speed causing the cape to flap creating the finished effect.


"The planet Ultron was actually a fibre glass globe open on one side with rotating lights to give the lava effect. "Stars, smoke and streaks were added electronically on a Digital Frame store called 'Fire'.

"The title lettering is a font called "Geometric" and a variation of this font was vacuum formed in silver plastic which was turned a gold colour electronically. The image of the Earth was a simple still picture taken from the public domain photographed by NASA."

• Find out more about Chroma-key:
www.seanet.com/Users/bradford/bluscrn.html


Friday, 10 May 2002

My Hero: From Script To Screen

Interview by John Freeman. My Hero creator Paul Mendelson reveals how the show is brought to our TV screens. This interview was conducted in May 2002

John: Take us through the process of taking an episode of My Hero to screen. What happens after you have written a script?
 

"My Hero is a much more complicated show than most sit-coms. Birds of a Feather is just three people talking in a kitchen -- we've got people flying!"
PM: Well, what you do is, you have a weekly read-through where all the cast sit round a table and you read through the script. That’s in a rehearsal room, which could be a church hall or something like that. All the sets are there, in that the furniture is there or rudimentary furniture the same size as the furniture will be on the set. But there are no walls, just little bits of tape on the floor and little poles to suggest where doors are. But it replicates the set.

So you have the read through and all sit round a table, and obviously you time it because if it's over length you cut a bit and if it's under length you have to add bits. Over length is better. Under length is a real nightmare! And people make comments and we hear which bits people laugh at.

Then the actors go and have a coffee and we go and see what we need to do with this episode.

John: You and director John Stroud?

PM: Me, John Stroud, Marcus Mortimer the producer and Paul Mayhew-Archer, who's the Script Editor but who also writes scripts as well; I don't write all the scripts, but I work on the scripts that I haven't written as well, as the creator of the series.

It's quite an ensemble thing; it's quite collaborative, which how it's done these days.

And we will have already had a big read through beforehand, a few weeks before we have done the locations ... When you have a series you will read through all the scripts, the whole lot together. All of them, and then we do a bit of work on them.

All the location scenes, all the outside filming scenes are done together over a period of about six days. To save time and also because you're going to be playing them into the audience each week so they see the whole show.

Then we have the read through per episode, as I said. It's one week per episode. When we've got a script that we're reasonably pleased with, John blocks it out and they work through it over a few days in this church hall, getting more and more accurate and funny etc.

I'm not there the whole time. I used to stay the whole time and do things, but now I do other things and they don't really need me anyway. They manage quite happily on their own!

We record on a Wednesday; the producers' run is normally on a Monday. And so Marcus and I will come in and we'd watch the show; they'd do a run of the show and we'll make comments.

Then the next day, and this isn't true of most series, but because we have a lot of special effects we do quite a lot of pre-recording work so we'll be in the studio the day before the recording and we'll do some of the special effects stuff so that the audience can see it the following day. We'll do that on the set.

On the day of recording, Wednesday or whatever it is, the actors will come in and all through the day they will do the show on the set, and that's really for the cameras so the cameras can rehearse the camera script that John's written. Then, at about 4.30, we do a dress run, where they do the whole show in costume, in make-up, so we can see exactly what the audience are going to see. Then we give notes to John and he gives notes to the cast or whatever about little rewrites, but there won’t be many by that stage. Then they play it to the audience.

"The audience sit down, and there's a warm up man to help them through the gaps and tell them what's going on. He says "You may be very lucky, you may get to see a scene more than once!"
The audience sit down, and there's a warm up man to help them through the gaps and tell them what's going on. He says "You may be very lucky, you may get to see a scene more than once!"

They love that, the audience, especially when somebody makes a mistake. They think all their birthdays have come at once. They do the whole show and they show the film sequences as well, so that we can record the laughs to the film sequences. And they will see the whole show over a period between 7.30 and 10.00pm. They'll see a whole half hour being put together and obviously there's some editing to do afterwards.

John tries to do as much as he can live, even the special effects, he'll try and find a way so that the audience sees them live. Which is much more exciting. And that's how it's done.

My Hero is a much more complicated show than most sit-coms. Birds of a Feather is just three people talking in a kitchen -- we've got people flying!

John: How are the visual effects done?

PM: There's somebody there, let’s say for the baby. At one point we had the baby juggling, she comes in and she says, "There's balls... or fire breathing." But they're all done by the special effects people, they get hired and they do those live for the audience, which is very funny.