Jimmy McGovern
James Stanley "Jimmy" McGovern (born September 1949 in Liverpool) is an English screenwriter and producer. He created the television series Cracker (1993-1995), a popular and critical success in the UK, for which he received two Edgar Awards from the Mystery Writers of America. He has also received recognition for The Lakes, The Street and Accused, among others.
Early life
McGovern was one of nine children born to working class Liverpool born parents, William McGovern and Jane Warner.[1] He had a stammer until the age of eight. He attended a Jesuit secondary school, St Francis Xavier's College in Liverpool. He taught for a time in a secondary comprehensive school, where he organised the end-of-school play. He has four grandchildren.
Television writing career
In 1982, McGovern started his TV career working on Channel 4's soap opera Brookside. He tackled many social issues in the course of the series, especially unemployment – which was at a post-war high at the time. In 1993, he created the drama serial Cracker, about the work of a fictional criminal psychologist played by Robbie Coltrane. Made by Granada Television and screened on ITV, the series was a critical and popular success, lasting until 1995. Cracker also aired in the United States, on the Arts and Entertainment cable network. McGovern's writing earned him two Edgar Awards from the Mystery Writers of America. In 1997 he created The Lakes, a drama that shared Brookside's realist setting and reused themes from Cracker, such as gambling addiction. In 2006 he created the BBC One drama, The Street; its third and final season aired in 2009.
McGovern also wrote the script for the 1996 television docudrama Hillsborough, based on the events of the Hillsborough disaster in 1989, which claimed the lives of 96 Liverpool fans at an FA Cup semi-final. Among the cast of this critically acclaimed drama was Christopher Eccleston, who also starred in Cracker, along with former Brookside actor Ricky Tomlinson.[2]
His series Accused aired from 2010 to 2012 on BBC One. It followed a similar format to The Street but with a crime component. The series' writers included McGovern, Danny Brocklehurst, Alice Nutter and Shaun Duggan. It was produced by Sita Williams.
In 2012, McGovern together with local Indigenous Australian writers from Sydney, developed the Australian television drama series Redfern Now, set among the Indigenous Australians of the Sydney suburb of Redfern. The six-part series follows a similar format to Accused, telling the stories of six inner-city households in one street whose lives are changed by a seemingly insignificant incident.[3] The series debuted on 1 November 2012, was produced by Blackfella Films, and has already been commissioned for a second series.[4]
Film writing
McGovern wrote the screenplay for the 1994 drama, Priest.
Theatre
McGovern wrote the book for the musical stage show King Cotton, which explores links between the transatlantic slave trade and industrialisation in North West England, as part of the Liverpool European Capital of Culture 2008. King Cotton premiered at the Lowry in September 2007 before moving to the Liverpool Empire.
Producer
In 2009, McGovern was the executive producer on the BBC One miniseries Moving On.[5]
Views
McGovern has described cinema scriptwriters as being treated like hacks and forced to crank out countless drafts by successive producers. McGovern has openly criticised dramas such as Footballers' Wives,[6] lamenting the lack of quality, believable storytelling in the early 2000s.
He believes that television directors are underrated. He says: "I have worked twice with David Blair [on The Lakes and The Street], and I can tell you that he is the best there is. He can make a good project great... Why David hasn’t won the acclaim he deserves is a mystery to me."[7]
Awards and honours
- McGovern received two Edgar Awards for Cracker.
- McGovern won an International Emmy for best drama series for The Street in 2010 and The Accused in 2011.
- McGovern won the BAFTA for Best Drama Writer in 2013 for the second series of The Accused.
Filmography
As writer
Programme | Date | Channel | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
Brookside | 1982 | Channel 4 | |
Cracker | 1993–2006 | ITV1 | |
Hearts and Minds | 1995 | Channel 4 | |
The Lakes | 1997–1999 | BBC One | |
Hillsborough | 1996 | ITV1 | Dramatised reconstruction of the events of the 1989 Hillsborough disaster |
Dockers | 1999 | Channel 4 | Dramatisation of the 1995–98 Liverpool Dockers' Strike |
Sunday | 2002 | Channel 4 | Based on the events of Bloody Sunday |
Gunpowder, Treason & Plot | 2004 | BBC One | Dramatisation of the lives of Mary, Queen of Scots and James I of England |
The Street | 2006–2009 | BBC One | |
Accused | 2010–2012 | BBC One | |
Common | 2014 | BBC One | 90-minute film for BBC One, set in the North West of England and based on the UK’s controversial Joint Enterprise Law. |
Banished | 2015 | BBC Two |
Notes
- ↑ "Cracker writer Jimmy McGovern says he could have been IRA soldier if born in Ireland". Mirror. 24 February 2015. Retrieved 24 November 2015.
- ↑ "Christopher Eccleston says Jimmy McGovern's Hillsborough is most important work he's ever done". Liverpool Echo. Retrieved 2013-01-02.
- ↑ "Industry Support – Indigenous Programs". Screen Australia. 2010-10-25. Retrieved 2013-01-02.
- ↑ "Renewed: Redfern Now". TV Tonight. 2012-11-13. Retrieved 2013-01-02.
- ↑ "BBC - Press Office - Moving On press pack: introduction".
- ↑ "BBC NEWS - Entertainment - Cracker writer attacks ITV drama".
- ↑ "Seeing the director's point of view". Financial Times. 2006-08-27.
External links
- Jimmy McGovern at the Internet Movie Database
- In Conversation with Jimmy McGovern, BAFTA webcast
- Jimmy McGovern biography at the British Film Institute's Screenonline
- http://www.guardian.co.uk/tv-and-radio/2010/nov/07/jimmy-mcgovern-tv-drama-irony