When I set out to write a history of the activities of the
Women’s Institute of England and Wales in 2009 I had no inkling that it would
lead to a full-blown television drama series. None at all. So you can imagine
that it has been a journey of many exciting twists and turns: to create a drama
out of the greatest crisis to hit the lives of those living in the middle of
the twentieth century.
First things first. I am a historian, not a script-writer,
so the suggestion that a village women’s institute might be a potential seed of
an idea for a drama came not from me but from the brilliant mind of Home Fires’
creator and writer, Simon Block. He and I met on a course in the beautiful
English county of Devon in 2012. Simon was one of two tutors on a TV script
writing course. If I am not script writer, what was I doing on this course?
It’s a good question and one I asked myself several times during the week. I
had written ten books and fancied that writing in a different format or
discipline might be a new challenge.
Home Fires © ITV |
At the end of the course Simon and I discussed the fact that
I did not want to become a script writer but that storytelling was my great
passion. I told him about my book on the WI, which I had just submitted to the
editor in its final draft, and to my surprise he was very interested. I think
even back then he could see the potential for a women-led drama set against the
backdrop of the Second World War. He wrote to me earlier this year with his
thoughts:
‘Like most people I think, I had no idea of the extent and
importance of the role played by the WI during the Second World War. Not only
in regard to its activities aimed at supporting the home front but also in
terms of the support and friendship it offered to often isolated women who
needed the companionship of other women like never before - even if for a few
hours a month. The book opened my eyes to the great extent WI women
mobilised to make such a huge contribution, generating a fantastic spirit
of 'community'. The fact that this was largely unknown (as is often
the case with women's history) left me feeling it was a significant episode in
British culture that should be more widely recognised. Plus, it offered a
fantastic opportunity to write about a lot of women in their own right, and not
merely as adjuncts to - or victims of - various men, which is so often how
women are portrayed in television drama.’
Selling jam in episode 1 of Home Fires © ITV |
Simon approached Catherine Oldfield at ITV Studios and we
were introduced. Within an hour of meeting Catherine I knew that I could trust
her with my work and within four days she and her boss, Francis Hopkinson, had
taken out an option on my book, Jambusters (Home Fires in the USA). That
meant ITV Studios would be able to work up a first script and submit it to the
television networks in due course. But
how to translate historical non-fiction, the voices of real women, and the
goings on in the Second World War on the Home Front, into a television drama that
would pack a punch but remain true to the history? Francis Hopkinson explained
to me that in the normal course of events an author is not involved in drama
development. However this appeared to be a slightly unorthodox situation as my
book was to be the source for inspiration rather than adaptation. Simon Block
describes it as the DNA of the series.
So I was retained as the historical consultant to the
scripts, which means that I have had the immense good fortune and delight to
have been involved in meetings when story lines were discussed. My role is to
produce the history, when required, of both the progress of the war and the
situation at any given point in time of the WI. I was able to offer a sense of
background for the first series, emphasising the mood in Britain during that strange
period called the Phoney War: the country was at war, the British Expeditionary
Force was guarding the Maginot Line in France, but nothing was actually happening. It produced a kind of
paralysis in the country, which changed into anxious boredom and then the
acceptance of the calm before the storm.
Erica Campbell hitches a lift with Steph Farrow, Home Fires © ITV |
All the characterisation was developed by Simon Block and he
knows each of the men and women in his drama intimately. In a fascinating three
day meeting ‘in conclave’ in April 2014 five of us sat down, with tea, coffee
and cakes (WI style), and discussed the back-stories to all the main
characters. Nine months later we were back in conclave considering the possible
story lines for a second series and that is when I realised they are moving
slowly through the war and this next series only takes us up to the end of
summer 1940. As my mother’s friend said to me with a grin: ‘Julie, there’s a lot
of war left!’
Domestic violence was prevalent in the 1940s Home Fires © ITV |
My involvement stops with the scripts. The production is a
whole different game and I find it both fascinating and bewildering. When I
write a book there are perhaps half a dozen people involved – editor,
copy-editor, proof reader, publicist and so on. That is about the same number
of people working in the make-up truck on the set of Home Fires. On my first
visit to set in September 2014 I was completely overwhelmed by the scale of the
enterprise. Watching the filming of series 2 was no less magical, just a great
deal more muddy. I have enjoyed the experience enormously but I think I made
the right decision to stick to writing and story-telling. I’ll leave television
to the professionals.
Home Fires Season 2 starts on ITV on Sunday 3rd April at 9pm and will be seen on
PBS later in the year.
Home Fires © ITV |
6 comments:
How exciting for you! Congratulations and now I must chase up your book. I haven't seen Home Fires/Jambusters, but will chase that up too.
Thank you, Sue. I hope you enjoy Home Fires if you get to see it.
This sounds like so much fun - congratulations!
I loved series one and can't wait for series 2. It puts the reality with the memories my grandmothers, their sisters, daughters and friends used to share with us as children.
I loved series one and can't wait for series 2. It puts the reality with the memories my grandmothers, their sisters, daughters and friends used to share with us as children.
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