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Andrew Davies [1936-0] British
Rank: 104
Writer


Andrew Wynford Davies is a Welsh writer of screenplays and novels, best known for House of Cards and A Very Peculiar Practice, and his adaptations of Vanity Fair, Pride and Prejudice, Middlemarch and War & Peace. He was made a BAFTA Fellow in 2002.

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You're stuck with being yourself, so the important thing is to find people who like that.
101
I used to have this Mercedes, a dark blue 450SLC, which was the most beautiful car. I'd like to have another unusual, beautiful car. Car
102
I know that a ridiculous number of classic serials have been commissioned, and that reviews show a reaction against them. The critics seem fed up.
103
'Othello' is the most domestic of Shakespeare's tragedies and the one that's likely to strike a personal note with a lot of people watching it.
104
'Affinity' is beautiful and intense, with no laughs. It's a rather delicate and emotional love story, with a spooky element.
105
I adore doing classic adaptations, but I also feel their frustrations and their limitations.
106
I'm absolutely delighted if people think of me as a reliable purveyor of quality period stuff.
107
Novels often have leisurely openings; a TV drama needs an arresting opening.
108
From time to time there is a move to do a little less in the way of period dramas, but people rebel. Audiences say we want them. There is a big hunger for them. I don't think it's sentimentality or nostalgia, it's often that they are simply the best stories.
109
The most moving scene for me in 'Pride and Prejudice' is the Pemberley music room scene: Elizabeth has just saved Darcy's sister from embarrassment and confusion, and as the music plays on, Darcy's look of gratitude becomes a look of love, which we see reciprocated in Elizabeth's eyes.
110
One of the things I've always thought is a drag in so many period adaptations is that they are always buttoned up to the neck in so many clothes all the time. I'm always looking for excuses to get them out of their clothes.
111
I suppose I have the tastes of someone who teaches at a university in the provinces.
112
Look at Jane Austen. Her characters derive in a reasonably straight line from fairy tales.
113
An adaptation I was working on of Trollope's 'The Pallisers' has been axed by the BBC... I was also going to do Dickens' 'Dombey and Son' but they've asked me to do 'David Copperfield' instead.
114
People like bonnets. I don't think you can under-estimate that.
115
Plan for each episode to be a satisfying experience, but still leave the audience thinking, 'Oh, my God! Now what?'
116
I always do like to write love stories, even if they end tragically.
117
My wife likes history and documentaries, but I'm not so keen on them. I generally go and do some work if there's one of those on.
118
I had a mother who was very emotionally demanding, wanting to be the centre of attention. As they say in EastEnders, she thought it was all about 'er. I spent a lot of time trying to work out what was going on.
119
When you see two writers named on a movie, one of them did some drafts and got the boot.
120
Taking the humour out of Dickens, it's not Dickens any more.
121
I'm glad nobody has asked me to adapt 'Wuthering Heights' because I think I would make a mess of it. Everybody makes a mess of it. I think the Bronte Sisters are mad.
122
I would love it if anyone gave me the job of adapting 'The Great Gatsby,' but nobody ever does.
123
The writer in movies is about as low as you can get and you really are a hired hand. You are paid a lot of money to be treated like dirt.
124
I prefer love scenes to be shot up close with a lot of focus on eyes and mouths. Otherwise it can feel uncomfortable and voyeuristic.
125
The BBC fulfils a wonderful cultural function. Maybe the problem is that it feels it needs to be everything to everybody.
126
I got quite cross when I heard about Emma Thompson adapting 'Sense and Sensibility.' It was absolutely childish of me, but I thought, 'I should be doing that. They didn't even ask me.' Some mistake, surely.
201
I'd love to adapt more contemporary novels. But there isn't really enough story and character to make a really satisfying serial, so they tend to be single dramas.
202
I remain, however, fairly optimistic for the future of period drama because it's just such a popular thing.
203
Most actors hate readthroughs - they're exposing themselves before they're ready to, and before they've bonded. But I love them because they give us all the first inkling of what the whole show is going to be like, how each part affects every other part, and we won't see that again until it's all edited together.
204
People in the BBC are always dying to get out of their open-plan offices.
205
A distinguished producer called Kenith Trodd actually lived in his office for over a year - the cleaners refused to go in because it was such a tip.
206
I'm not one of these people who say how much better American drama is than English. I find it mostly too American, except for The Sopranos, which I think is the best thing.
207
Be careful about the advice you give, especially to your children.
208
Rebecca Eaton has made an enormous contribution to the cultural life of America, and, more than that, she is one of the most fun people I know.
209

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