Movies

Helena Bonham Carter To Star In ITV’s ‘Nolly’ From Russell T Davies; Debut Project For Nicola Shindler’s Quay Street Productions

The Crown and Harry Potter star Helena Bonham Carter is to play the lead in an ITV biopic from It’s A Sin creator Russell T Davies, the debut project for Nicola Shindler’s ITV Studios-backed drama label Quay Street Productions.

Nolly will tell the story of Noele Gordon (Bonham Carter), who played Meg Richardson in hit ITV soap Crossroads before being abruptly axed at the height of the show’s success. With the boss’s words “all good things must come to an end” ringing in her ears, Gordon found herself thrown out of the show that was her life for almost 20 years.

The three-parter is Doctor Who showrunner Davies’ first show for ITV since 2004 and reunites him with long-time collaborator Shindler, who he has worked with numerous times including on It’s A Sin for her previous outfit Red Production Company, which she left last year to set up Quay Street. It’s A Sin director Peter Hoar, who won an RTS Craft & Design Award last night for the Channel 4 Aids drama, is set to direct Nolly, Davies and Shindler will exec produce and ITV Studios is distributing internationally.

ITV Head of Drama Polly Hill called Nolly a “bold exploration of how the establishment turns on women who refuse to play by the rules, the women it cannot understand and the women it fears.”

“Russell’s scripts are magnificent and a great tribute to Noele Gordon, but also to our national love of soaps and a celebration of the incredible women they create,” she added.

Shindler said:”I couldn’t be prouder or more excited that the first drama we will be filming for Quay Street Productions is this beautiful script by Russell T Davies. And that Helena Bonham Carter will star as such an iconic British woman is dream casting.”

Products You May Like

Articles You May Like

THE YEAR IN MUSIC, 2024: Thing of the Year
Band Aid Boss Bob Geldof Slams Ed Sheeran’s “Wealthy-World Argument”
Emmanuel Macron Visits Notre-Dame Plus TV Cameras
Pearl Jam Unearth ‘Hunger Strike’ For First Time In 10 Years
The Best Books of 2024, According to the New York Public Library