Showing posts with label jacob hay. Show all posts
Showing posts with label jacob hay. Show all posts

Thursday, 22 December 2022

Coronation Street Episode Review;Wednesday the 21st December 8 pm


With Christmas just around the corner, Coronation Street has hung up the tinsel and overloaded Eileen's with Grotto tatt, but this year's present from the cobbles is still a few days away, and the wrapping up of certain storyline presents is continuing with good momentum!



Tonight, Max is readying for his camping survival trip initiation with Griff and the gang, troubling Shona and David, who have reluctantly let him go. At the campsite, things prove a bit too much for the youngster, (it's blatantly a right-wing training group) twisting his ankle whilst running and refusing to skin a rabbit for camp lunch. As a staunch vegetarian, the mere thought twisted my stomach, and I think Max felt the same. Grassroots fanaticism may be one thing, but Griff taking a bomb with him, out into the woods, and inadvertently blowing up his car, made tonight's Corrie surprisingly high-octane!



Max is taken to hospital with burns and concussion, and Griff pretends to be David, presumably to cover up his bomb-making. Shona and David are home and none-the-wiser, so they leave their son a voicemail. With Max in a hospital bed, Griff pushes him to cover up the accident and makes a subtle threat about skinning rabbits. With the bomb explosion covered up, Spider heads behind the ginnel to facetime his police colleague with the latest developments. He then bumps into Toyah and tells her the truth, but she doesn't believe him. 



Tyrone is still organising the secret Christmas day nuptials to Fiz, and much to his surprise, his bride-to-be decides to book a week-long cottage break for the festive season. Ty secretly tells the girls to lie about not wanting to go, telling them about his Christmas day wedding plans. Fiz seems saddened by the news, with Hope using the secret to her advantage.  



Meanwhile, Nick’s subterfuge to shore up the bistro finances, via Harvey’s funding is risking opening up old wounds and creating rather large new ones. Although new to the street, Damon’s making his presence in the Bistro well-known, forcing Nick to tell Leanne that Damon is Jacob’s dad, lying that he’s an old friend, but Leanne agrees to take the cash anyway. Jacob seems to have turned a corner, and Simon tells Amy that he is good at the factory. Carla seems charmed by the reformed bad-boy until Damon decides his son should work at the Bistro, blowing Jacob’s evening calls to Underworlds USA clients. Simon is also miffed, and although the lads share bants at the factory, I sense things won't last. Carla tells Leanne that Jacob’s got an evening job at the Bistro, and she’s fuming too. Amy is also less than impressed with her boyfriend's two jobs. What are Damon’s plans for the Bistro, exactly? 



Later, Daisy and Daniel await the test results and are pleased to learn the lump is a benign cyst. With Daniel's article refused publication, Daisy decides he should head back to teaching. 


Elsewhere, and at N0.11, Todd seems awkward around Lawrence, while George is struggling to hide his secret Santa sofa! He gathers the gang in the rovers and devises a plan to swap it without Eileen noticing. George offers Eileen a few nights at his house, and she agrees. I'm guessing this is Corrie's comedy Christmas day element gathering pace also. 


What did you think of tonight’s Corrie? Let us know in the comments box. 


I am @rybazoxo your cobbles connoisseur & Coronation Street superfan.







All original work on Coronation Street Blog is covered by a Creative Commons License

Thursday, 24 February 2022

Coronation Street Episode Review; Wednesday 23rd of February 7.30 & 8.30 pm



Free of son deaths, sinkholes, and shoot-outs, you would think Abi would enjoy the honeymoon period before more drama? Monday nights Corrie saw her admit to Sally that she had a one-night stand with a nameless suitor. We viewers know who it is, but how long before everyone else on the street finds out? With Sally finding out, it was evident that Kevin would soon find out, and tonight that was what happened. We did get to see the first half of the adoption hearing, and the results surprised me! Normally, soaps would have blown through that with a successful outcome, but having been adjourned until March, we get a swift and stark reminder of the substance abuse past. 



Abi's mortified with the outcome, but Kev is upbeat and readies a campervan for their journey away. All was looking good until the van's Bluetooth tuned into Abi’s phone call to Sally (plus pronouns!) that was very clever indeed, and nothing to do with the EE sponsorship, ahem. It was, however, a super soap moment, and Sally’s involvement only added another level to this drama. With Kevin finding out the unsavoury truth, he and Jack headed off on their own. However, Kev leaves thinking it was Tez (Seb’s Dad) and not Imran. Surely the truth will out, eventually? 



A few days back, I tweeted out my fandom for newsboy Stu. He's lost that cough superquick, thankfully, and having been formally introduced to Corrie's patron saint, Ken, it seems he may be sticking around? Tonight, having gained gainful employment and a roof over his head, thanks to Yasmeen, our ex-hobo chef/wine connoisseur has decided to grapple with Tracy too. The wine tasting switch subplot was light relief - I enjoyed it. Is there going to be a romantic courtship with Yasmeen? Drinks with his boss/landlord around their garden heater would suggest so? I think he would make a great pairing with Bernie - we shall see. Meanwhile, Tracy’s face at tasting grape-flavoured paint stripper was a delight. Will this put her at crosshairs with Yasmeen, again? I do hope so. 



Hopefully, Sean will heed Imran’s (Monday night) warning and leave it out, or if we are honest about it, maybe he could just leave altogether? Tonight, he was back flouncing around the factory, and I’m thinking he’d make a great adversary of loony Lydia? He dished out some advice to her tonight which means Sean is officially involved in it now - am I right? We can only hope. Maybe Sarah can sack him? 



 

Joseph’s latchkey kid existence (and in poverty for a quad of siblings) has brought some great drama to the street these last few months. I wasn't quite expecting it to culminate in him flying off with granny Linda to Portugal, but tonight, that seems to be what's going to happen? Great to see Izzy back on screen and I enjoyed Bernie and Dev's meddling, in the process. 



Meanwhile, loves young dream, Amy & Jacob, have officially re-coupled up. A stunningly shot scene on an old wooden boat / dark lighting /candles could easily have been a pastiched rom-com moment, yet, these two fine youthful actors performed a believable courtship, of course, this will lead to more chaos on the street, as Jacobs dubious past comes back to the fore. Could this be a Shakespearean tragedy ala Montagues v Capulets or a violent reprise like West Side Story? I think the latter is where this is going, and I must admit, I’m looking forward to seeing more of Tracy’s (lesser-seen recently) nasty vicious bile. The sour wine will leave a bad taste, but I think Jacob's return will be much more bitter! 

 

Overall, an enjoyable midweek visit to Weatherfield! Again, I must mention how pleased I am to see a plethora of cast back on the screen.

 

Same time, next week then!


I am @rybazoxo your self-styled cobbles connoisseur!







All original work on Coronation Street Blog is covered by a Creative Commons License

Thursday, 17 February 2022

Coronation Street Episode Review; Wednesday 16th of February 7.30 & 8.30 pm


This week, Wednesday night’s Coronation Street concentrated on Amy’s post-birthday spiking nightmare, and her new relationship with the reformed bad boy, Jacob. Drink spiking is another issue-based storyline, but, it's also very relevant - less so in the U.K mainstream media, but, Sheffield (my home town) had a spate of drink spikes just before Christmas, so kudos on this occasion! Steve takes the fatherly concern to the extreme and wallops Jacob with a (well-staged) punch. 


Thankfully, Amy speedily recovers from the spiking (thanks to her boyfriend) and is soon ready to leave the hospital. However, we viewers are left wondering about who would put GHB in her drink? Would I be wrong in thinking it could be one of the teens that were out at the club that night? Aadi and Asha were both out, and Aadi has had one or two drunken random acts in his recent past, or, is that a red-herring? 



Jacob does try to make some headway with Steve tonight ( he does seem genuinely rehabilitated) but that punch puts paid to any resolution between the two. I guess Jacob could remind Steve of his younger self? Even Leanne is on Steve’s side and chastises Amy with a verbal warning about her new fella’s past. 


Anyway, the police have reviewed nightclub CCTV which confirms Jacob didn't do it, so it seems Daniel’s own investigating is well worth continuing. Later, Jacob is arrested anyway, but for supplying fake I.Ds to the youths.  Amy is muddled by all of the events and seeks solace in a chat with Sam and Simon, who drive forward a few more home truths. Simon then admits to getting Jacob arrested, and rather than stick up for her fella, Amy proceeds to dump him instead. Is this the end of their relationship, or merely the beginning? I hope it's the latter, as those two have great chemistry, as do Daniel and Daisy, who I’m pleased are also back together following their Valentine meal. 

Also, following their separate drunken Valentine night, Sarah and Lydia are both back at Underworld and nursing hangovers. It is brilliant to see Underworld back on screen, and loony Lydia’s hate campaign against Adam and Sarah is a treat. Tonight, Lydia’s machiavellian machinations continue and with all talk of her affair with the married man, Sarah gives her a warning about wrecking her own life for a fella. Is Lydia suggesting that this fictional married man she’s seeing is Adam? This story is one to keep me watching, unlike Tim’s heart attack recovery, which gets less funny by the week! Elaine has embarked on a heart health course, much to her son's, and Sally's annoyance.


 
Meanwhile, familial fallouts at N0.5 continue, as Joseph’s Grandma pays a visit to check on the young lads home situation. Bizarrely, Izzy didn't tell her Mother about her grandchild going missing, and being oblivious to recent drama's, Linda takes Joseph's parents to the bistro for a meal. The truth is nearly out via big gob Debbie Webster, but Chesney and Gemma cover it up instead. 

Overall, a good pair of episodes with a lot going off tonight! It was great to see Leanne back on screen, Mary, albeit briefly, and this new 'whodunnit' alongside loony Lydia's incessant craziness, was a real treat. 

Ps - I have a 5-year-old daughter so I can very much relate to Russsian poo-lette!
PPS - I absolutely adore Bernie!
 
I am @rybazoxo your self-styled cobbles connoisseur






All original work on Coronation Street Blog is covered by a Creative Commons License

Monday, 10 January 2022

Jack James Ryan interview: Jacob's dramatic return to the cobbles


After being able to finally escape Harvey’s drug gang, Jacob Hay is set to return to the cobbles. Jack James Ryan chatted to us about Jacob’s plan to make amends, plus a surprise new romance for the character. 

“The last time we saw Jacob he was causing a lot of trouble,” Jack reminded us. “He was part of the Harvey storyline, luring Simon Barlow into dealing drugs for his drugs boss. We recently saw Jacob again making an appearance with Kelly’s homelessness storyline where I think it was the first time we saw him thinking about someone apart from himself.”

Having separated himself from the drugs gang, Jacob is determined to turn his life around and be a better person. “I think he’s always going to be tied up in his unsavoury past, but I think he is genuinely wanting to change.

“I think it’s important to point out that Jacob is a victim in regards to the whole drugs situation. In the same way that Jacob groomed Simon, Harvey groomed Jacob in the first place to get him involved in this gang. 

“The reason he was doing all that stuff that he was doing was because he was being blackmailed. Now that Harvey’s back in prison, I think this is the perfect time for Jacob to be like: ‘This is my chance to get out to create a new life for myself.’”

At the start of his return storyline, Amy and Summer run into Jacob at the hospital. As Jacob tries to explain he’s changed, Amy swiftly orders him to stay away. “I think there’s a definite naivety to Jacob when he first comes back,” Jack said. 

“Although his intentions are good, I think he almost expects them to instantly forget about all the bad things he did. Amy and Simon are cousins, so of course she is going to be extremely hostile towards him, but I think he just feels totally rejected and a little bit lost, to be honest. It’s going to be a long road for him.”

In our recent interview with Iain MacLeod, Iain revealed that 2022 will see Jacob become Amy’s new love interest, which is sure to cause problems with Amy’s family… “They already know Jacob; they already hate Jacob,” Jack told us.

“Well, they think they know Jacob, but will they give him the opportunity to prove that he’s changed? Who knows? I think one thing for sure is that you do not want to get in the way of Steve McDonald and his girls, and you don’t want to get on the wrong side of Tracy Barlow full stop. He is going to have a difficult time.”

Jacob made quite an impression on Corrie during his first stint, and Jack told us how pleased he is to be back. “This is beyond my expectations. I hope the writers won’t mind me saying this, but when Jacob was first conceived, he was there to serve a purpose. 

“He was going to come in, be horrible, cause lots of trouble and then sort of vanish into the ether. Whilst I was filming the first time, I was working really hard to find some different qualities to Jacob. I tried to show that although he was flawed, he was human as well. 

“I really didn’t expect the reaction from the fanbase. It was hugely overwhelming. It was amazing, and I think that was also a big factor into why they decided to bring me back. I remember one fan tweeted me and said: ‘I love to hate Jacob, he’s a likeable Artful Dodger,’ and that’s always stayed with me. That’s a really good way to describe him.”

In addition to his own return, Jack’s older sister Rebecca Ryan has just joined the cast as Lydia (read our interview here). “I was so buzzing to find out she’d be joining the cast,” Jack told us.

“She was my biggest inspiration growing up. I’ve wanted to be an actor since I can remember and a big factor of that was since my sister was 11, she’d been on TV every week through Shameless, to Waterloo Road, to Casualty, now to this. I’m incredibly biased, but I think she’s a stunning actor and I know she’s going to make a great addition to the cast.

“She’s so used to being on set, she didn’t really need any advice from me. I just told her to enjoy herself. One of the best things about Corrie is everyone is so nice, so welcoming. I knew she’d settle right in, but beyond that I told her where the canteen was and the toilets, then she was good to go.”

Since Jack’s return to set, he told us how he’s settled back in himself. “Everyone has just been super supportive and seemed genuinely excited to have me back which has just been amazing. 

“Jane Danson, who plays Leanne, has given me lots of great tips and has been super supportive of me and my work, which is incredibly humbling. She was one of the actors that I really looked up to before coming on the show. It’s cool to now call her a mate.

“Jane Hazelgrove as well, who plays Bernie, has also been amazing. She’s just proper taken me under her wing and just looked after me and given me loads of great advice. I’d love to see some Bernie and Jacob scenes.”

Upon his return, Jacob is going to have a hard time trying to right his wrongs, and Jack is optimistic for his alter ego. “I do believe that everyone deserves a second chance and I hope that Jacob can prove to us all he really wants to change and be a better person. 

“Jacob as a character is very close to my heart. I love playing him and I’m really excited for the viewers to get to know him a little bit better. I think the possibilities for Jacob are endless.”

Sophie Williams

Find me on Twitter @sophie_writer1 

Monday, 3 January 2022

Iain MacLeod interview: Stories revealed for 2022!


Happy New Year! I hope all your Christmases were filled with food and joy, and that you enjoyed the frankly wonderful Christmas Day Corrie ep. Now, as we move into 2022, we’ve got more gossip from Corrie producer Iain MacLeod about what we can expect from the cobbles throughout the next year. Grab a cuppa and get comfy, because there’s a lot to go through! 


Emma & Faye find themselves in a nightmare

“In terms of ‘start the new year as you mean to go on’, things couldn’t really get off to a much worse start than they do for Faye and Emma. They’re out for New Year’s Eve, drowning their sorrows in one case and celebrating in another. On their way back to Weatherfield the following day, there’s a terrible, cataclysmic, life-changing event that happens. It’s certainly not their fault, but it pitches them into this total nightmare of impossible dilemmas and secrecy and cover-ups.

“I can’t imagine a more hapless person to find themselves in the middle of a catastrophe than Emma, so actually in places, it’s really funny and quirky. The bottom of it all is something will trigger a fairly seismic shift in both of their lives going into 2022. When you watch it happen, I think what you’ll feel is all the decisions they make are totally in-keeping with the decisions you or I might make. Unfortunately, when you add them all up, it just turns into a total nightmare. Suddenly when things take a turn for the worst, they realise there’s already a number of witnesses like Imran who can actually incriminate them. It’s a really interesting story. Emma and Faye are in the beginnings of a really close friendship; they’re flatmates by this point. It’s a brilliant story about challenging this new friendship.”


Abi & Imran’s secret threatens to explode

“[Abi] is somebody who is used to finding herself in a pickle, and over the course of 2022 will find herself in the Branston of all pickles, I think it’s fair to say. Another really challenging year for Abi. It will see her risk losing Kevin and Jack, it will see her pitched into a protracted legal battle where it’s kind of a David and Goliath struggle for her again to try and keep hold of her life as it ebbs away from her.

“It threatens to destroy Imran and Toyah’s relationship because at present, Toyah thinks she knows the whole truth about what went on in the aftermath of Seb’s trial, but of course, she does not. It’ll test the bounds of Toyah’s forgiveness to the max. It will force Imran to maybe do some things which will ultimately cause him to have a long, hard look in the mirror and question whether he’s the decent guy he’s always felt he was. He’s forced to go to the dark side, you might say in some instances.

“We’ve just finished storylining it and it’s big and shocking and I think it’s probably the last thing you imagine will happen at the end of all of this. It starts off quite small and domestic about secrets and romantic intrigue, and just turns into this absolutely gobsmacking cataclysm. It’s not of the huge cinematic popcorn size thing of super soap week, it’s a bit more intimate than that. The shock of it I think will just make people fall off their chairs.”


Lydia puts strain on Adam & Sarah’s marriage

“What we wanted to do with this story was kind of an updated version of a 90s thriller. You might remember all the way through the 90s there were loads of thrillers like Fatal Attraction. Looking back on them now, they look horribly dated in terms of their gender politics, so we sort of thought, what might a story of that type look like in the 21st century and I hope we cracked it.

“I think what we got is a really nuanced story where everybody is capable of behaving badly. There is no vilification of the scorned woman or anything like that, but the bottom line is Lydia will come to be quite a threat to Sarah and Adam’s marriage, or indeed perhaps more accurately, she will be the catalyst for Sarah and Adam to risk destroying their own relationship.

“Bottom line is, there’s lots of secrecy involved and scheming and incredibly intelligent subterfuge going on in the part of various parties and it does culminate in quite an exciting sequence that again I’ve just read which will be taking place at some point in the first six months of 2022. It will start small, and character led and nuanced about relationships, but then gradually becomes more and more nightmarish, particularly for Adam and Sarah as the story unfolds.”


Jacob’s return

“What appealed about him was he’s a fantastically good actor, he feels very Coronation Street. He’s got a lot of that kind of badinage that you get from your classic Corrie leading men. He’s got funny bones; he’s got a really good way with comedy. He feels very authentic as well in the way that’s perhaps sometimes when you import a ‘bad guy’ or ‘criminal’ into a show like ours.

“We also really liked the idea of the story we’re going on to tell with him, which is pairing up with someone who is historically quite well-behaved and wouldn’t say boo to a goose and is quite sensible given her genetic provenance and that’s Amy Barlow. We thought, how would Tracy and Steve react to her suddenly ending up in a romantic relationship with possibly the most unsuitable boyfriend they’ve ever heard of.

“It’s very funny as Steve and Tracy try with increasing failure to strategise this and go: ‘What are we going to do? Ok, we’ll try reverse psychology, we’ll try freezing her out, we’ll try cutting her off financially,’ and all of these things just make things worse and worse to comedy effect and in the end, they kind of have to bite the bullet and try and get along with this lad.

“Meanwhile, Jacob is going about redeeming himself. The story we’re telling is, from his point of view, about redemption. We discover things about how he arrived into the drug gang that we first encountered him in that will, I think, reframe people’s view of him and make you see him in a slightly different light. It’s about him trying to put the past behind him, rehabilitate himself, make amends where necessary to people like Leanne and Simon.”


The Nazirs try to rebuild their family

“The reintroduction of Zeedan has added a whole extra layer to them and the fact he’s brought trouble with him is good, because there’s nothing more difficult to storyline than a stable, soap family. But we want it to be clear that he’s still, underneath it all, a good guy who made a terrible mistake and partly our way of seeing that is through the introduction of his wife.

“She comes in, and suddenly holds a mirror up to some of Zeedan’s worst behaviours and he starts to regret hugely the man he’s accidentally become in trying to protect his secret and his crimes. The threat to him is, will he ultimately lose his happy ending as a result of the dishonesty he’s been perpetrating? It’s a really good story with lots of secrets, and lies, and family strife.

“Stu and Yasmeen, we like the idea there of re-exploring something of Yasmeen’s psychology after the Geoff story. I think it would be, and it happens in soaps including ours, it would be easy to sort of go: ‘Right, Geoff’s done now, let’s move onto the next thing with Yasmeen,’ and risk forgetting that happened and in reality, it’s such a colossal bomb that fell on her emotionally and psychologically that it would have life-long aftereffects so what we wanted to do is explore those aftereffects but do it in a way that didn’t feel we’re re-treading old ground.

“What we find is a story about whether she can trust again, whether her emotional circuitry, her psychology regarding relationships and friendships is irrevocably damaged by Geoff, or whether she can find a way through that. 

“I think Bill as Stu is just Corrie to the core. We imagined when we kind of dreamt him up as being a bit like what Peter Barlow might be if he was in his mid-sixties, so he’s a little bit rough and ready. He likes carousing and causing trouble and is generally a bit of a firecracker going off in Yasmeen’s front room, so that will have its own challenges for her, especially as some of his behaviours, which we will know are entirely benign and born of hijinks, will just subtly resemble some of the things Geoff did and it messes with her head quite a lot. It’s a really complicated and unique love story, I think. I will remain tight-lipped about exactly how it ends, but I’m looking forward to watching it.”


Family struggles for Chesney & Gemma 

“I wish, for many reasons, there hadn’t been a pandemic-related curtailment of our filming, but what that has meant, among other things, is that we haven’t been able to see as much of the quads and the children as we would have liked… but it felt like we were now able to examine what it’s like in that house a bit more, especially if you are Joseph.

“You’re a sensitive, young lad whose already got a certain amount of tragedy in your backstory with the death of his mum, and you’re also essentially in the box room while your parent’s attention is lavished entirely on these four little screaming children over there.

“It causes him to run away which provokes widespread panic which spins off into another story for a neighbouring household, but ultimately it’s the kind of beginnings of [Chesney and Gemma] struggling to deal with this kid who, I must stress, is not going to turn into a classic tearaway teen. 

“It’s a really heart-breaking story about a kid having an incredibly hard time and his parents, however well-meaning, struggling to contend with that and the wider family make some terrible decisions because it’s a drama and people have to make terrible decisions, but Bernie for one, in the aftermath of Joseph’s disappearance, makes a kind of pact that is for all the right reasons at the time, but will ultimately cause the whole family to be brought into disrepute. It jeopardises her burgeoning friendship/relationship with Dev. It makes the whole of the street really look sideways at the wider Winter-Brown family.

“It also spins off into a story that will see the reintroduction of a character connected to that household that will provide yet another threat to the stability of the residents of No.5. It’s got a lot going on, but I think that family can stand it.

“There is a story next year where Gemma in her eagerness to be an ally to the deaf community of which she and her family are now part, ends up in classic Gemma fashion of going ever so slightly too far in pursuit of a great, admirable goal and it ends up in a significant incident of public disorder, but it’s played in a kind of classic, slightly comedic, Coronation Street way. Gemma never quite knows when to quit or close her gob, and basically, in setting out to make the world a better place for Aled, she ultimately will succeed in increments, but on the way there she will lay waste to a lot of buildings and relationships.

“At the bottom of it, I think there is a really important story to tell about access for disabled and deaf children. I’m really anticipating it will be something that we should be quite proud of and we do, in a light-touch way, like to try and tell stories that we feel are provoking important conversations out in the world and I think this will probably be one of those if we do it right.”

Speaking about the actors in this story learning British Sign Language, Iain added: “It’s phenomenal. Dolly-Rose in particular is incredibly proficient and obviously we initially facilitated the lessons, but since then she’s taken it on and doing loads more than is ‘necessary,’ in her own time. She’s taking exams and qualifications in BSL. Maybe others in that acting family are as well that I’m not aware of, but all of them are really throwing themselves into it with gusto. Hats off to them all, they’re taking it incredibly seriously, if that’s the right way of describing it. It matters a lot to them, I think.”


Summer battles her self-confidence

“What we wanted to do with Summer is tell a relatable story about the pressures of being a teenager, specifically a teenage girl. That encompasses romantic travails, exam stress, academic pressure, the pressure to look a certain way, the pressure to conform with your peers, and even to the extent that the conformity with your peers might be risky from a health point of view.

“What it sort of spins off into is going to be one of our most important stories [this] year. It will dig further into her experience as a diabetic young woman, and I think reveal to our audience things that, certainly in my case, I was not really aware of as part of the diabetic condition. It’s going to be very long-running, very nuanced, and heart-breaking I think to watch this incredibly promising young woman disintegrate, but then in the best tradition of our storytelling, it will have a redemptive ending.

“It will be something which ultimately she will come through, will come to value herself for who she is rather than aspiring to some kind of abstract academic ideal. She will learn to love herself and, in the process, it will pull together that brilliant, but as yet, largely underexplored family dynamic where she’s kind of got three dads.

“I love the potential in that character group. I think the pandemic has meant it’s been very hard to put all of them in the same room at the same time, but when we’re able, having Paul, Todd, and Billy trying to co-parent this troubled, young woman, but always with the undercurrent of their messed up romantic entanglements underneath it all, I think is going to be really watchable and has bags of potential.”


Barlows Vs. Platts

“The Summer story also kind of forms part of a big new family feud that we’re already starting to bring to the boil, which is the Barlows vs. the Platts. Summer’s got a small part to play in that, and then peels off into her own big story, but then leaves behind this burning fuse which is a rivalry between Max and Daniel which then spins off into a fairly pronounced and bitter feud between David and Daniel, and obviously that sucks in Sarah and Adam, and it’s got that kind of clan warfare vibe to it.

“I was suddenly struck with the fact that I don’t think I’ve ever really seen Daniel and David in a scene together before… so having these two actors in really big, angry, emotional scenes, it’s just dynamite. I can’t believe that we haven’t done it before. I hope it works as well as the early phases suggest it will.”


Jenny’s blossoming relationship with Leo 

“It’s funny that when an older man goes out with a younger woman, barely anyone remarks on it, but when it’s the other way around, it’s the story. Partly, we’re telling this to address that, actually, and it’s about the fact that it shouldn’t be remarkable and there is a genuine level of emotion and love between these two characters.

“On the way there, Jenny has to kind of overcome her own internalised prejudices about what this is. It’s played like a rom-com, I think there’s some incredibly funny bits in it and one bit I’ve read in particular is very funny, but it’s kind of like mega-cringe. I nearly cringed myself inside-out when I read it, but in a really good, funny way. It’s funny, it’s romantic, it’s long-running.

“It’s about Jenny reckoning with her own sub-consciousness and everybody else’s prejudices and, in the end, single-mindedly decides to pursue her own happiness, but it being soap, it probably won’t turn out to be that straight-forward. It brings a lot of fun into the pub. The Rovers has been one of the biggest challenges during the pandemic. It’s one of the things that I’m itching to chuck 15 people in there as soon as I’m able, but at the moment we’re not.

“When we’re finally allowed to see them all at the same time, it’s been Sean and Daisy, and Ryan, and Emma, and Gemma and Jenny as this kind of mother-figure trying to wrangle her wayward children is just going to be brilliant. I’m really looking forward to getting The Rovers dynamic back to normal. I think the casting of the Rovers family is perfect. I just want to see them all now, please, at the same time. The Jenny story is bringing the fun and I think we probably all need some fun after the last two years. It’s funny, and it’s heartfelt. Again, it feels quite fresh.”


Fiz faces a huge dilemma

“I have absolutely loved every single second of that Fiz/Tyrone story. I certainly know that when I told some people about the plan to do it, there was a little bit of a roll of the eyes like, it’s going to be another soap affair, and actually I think right from frame one, it’s not been anything like that at all. It’s been bizarrely at times incredibly funny, it’s been incredibly heartfelt. I think the scene that Jennie did with Alan written by Ian Kershaw that went on for about nine minutes of uninterrupted marital breakdown was one of the best things I saw on television last year.

“It’s transitioned from the sublime to the ridiculous, to the highly dramatic around the dark psychology of Hope. We’ll be giving the audience cause to question Phill’s motives at times and I won’t spoil the outcome of all that but Fiz will end up in a huge dilemma about where her future lays. 

“We haven’t actually storylined it yet, but I think I know what I think Fiz’s happy ending looks like, shall we say. It’s going to be a long and brilliant and complicated story for the both of them. I think once you’ve been hurt like Fiz has and once you’ve been humiliated like Fiz has, even if you find yourself wanting your ex back, is it that straightforward?

“I think it’s going to be a cracking year for that household and, as if it wasn’t brilliant enough, you’ve then got Evelyn in the corner. I could essentially just watch a whole episode of Evelyn being sour and witty. It’s just about my favourite thing, ever, so there will be a lot of that as well.”


Sally & Tim’s relationship put to the test

“It stems from a New Years resolution, which seems quite innocuous at the time, and then very quickly turns into something that is fairly life-altering for one of that household. It then turns into a story that I don’t think I’ve ever seen on a soap done in anything other than a glancing way. But we’re sort of really dragging an incredibly prevalent issue out into the daylight and pointing the camera at it.

“I think some people might find the subject matter a bit awkward, but I think it’s incredibly potent in that family. It starts off quite small and ends up being this colossal threat to everything that Tim and Sally think they know about each other, about themselves about the nature of their relationship and what that might look like for the rest of their lives together. It’s massive, basically.

“It kicks off right at the start of January with a brilliantly ludicrous scene that I won’t describe in full, but suffice to say, Tim spends a portion of it mistakenly thinking he needs to take his trousers off. He pulls down his pants at precisely the wrong moment, and from there it turns into this huge kind of relationship threat for Tim and Sally.

“I love Tim and Sally. They feel like an iconic Corrie couple. Every so often, somebody will come along to a story conference and pitch something that splits them up and sends them off with different people, as in permanently, and it always starts a massive argument, just like it did when we talked about doing it with Tyrone and Fiz. I think they just feel right together, Tim and Sally. They’re peas in a pod, aren’t they? I think that’s why this story will really matter to our audience.” 

Caught your breath after all that? I hope you’re all looking forward to 2022 on the cobbles as much as I am! 

Sophie Williams

Find me on Twitter @sophie_writer1.






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