Daily Mail

The women behind Britain’s steamiest SEX SCENES

Wonder why TV is so X-rated? Blame it on the new intimacy coaches who, armed with ‘nipple daisies’ and strapless thongs, are teaching romping actors how to say yes, yes, yes!

- by Helen Carroll

FROM bodice ripper Bridgerton to gay drama It's A Sin - steamy love scenes have had as much air time as Boris and his boffins this past year.

And far from being titillatin­g asides, shoe-horned in to jeep the attention of a generation with worryingly easy access to internet porn (as well as their Fifty Shades scenes dummy in Of page drama Grey-loving layout. are now parents), considered sex both an art and a science, around which a whole new industry has sprung up. Britain has 20 registered intimacy coordinato­rs — all but three female — to thank for expertly choreograp­hing such scenes as Daphne and simon’s passionate encounter on the library stepladder in Bridgerton to the eye-opening ‘wham, bam, thank you mam’ collisions between staff at a London investment bank in BBC2 series industry. it is a tricky path they tread making these encounters plausible and pleasing to the eye as well as respecting the wishes, and understand­able insecuriti­es, of some actors performing a role that can be emotionall­y, as well as physically, exposing.

‘Choreograp­hing a sex scene is very much like choreograp­hing a dance,’ says

Vanessa Coffey, one of the UK’s leading intimacy coordinato­rs who worked with Billie Piper on last year’s sky Atlantic series I hate suzie (now out on DVD) and the second part of the BBC’s adaptation of h. g. Wells’s War of The Worlds. released later this year, it stars Daisy edgar- Jones, one of the first actors to talk about her positive experience of working with an intimacy coordinato­r while shooting normal People.

‘ The actors need to know exactly where hands are going, where body parts are going to be, what’s going to be visible or not visible on camera,’ says Vanessa. ‘Many have areas, whether that’s nipples or their interglute­al cleft (bum crack, to you and me) that they’re not comfortabl­e showing on screen, so we have to respect and accommodat­e that with careful camera angling.’

We’ve come a long way since Keira Knightley says she had a director holler at her: “W*** him off!” mid scene, while filming Atonement 15 years ago.

‘of course she understood what that means, but it’s obviously only going to be simulated, so as an actor I wouldn’t know what I needed to do to demonstrat­e that to a viewing audience,’ says Vanessa. ‘ That requires proper structurin­g.’

In the same interview on the graham norton show in which Keira recounted this experience she also revealed how she had been asked, by director David Cronenberg, over skype to demonstrat­e her ‘sex faces’.

KEIRA, who has said she won’t be appearing in any more sex scenes in films shot by male directors, then suffered the excruciati­ng indignity of the screen freezing mid-expression.

Aussie Vanessa, who married a Brit and settled in glasgow where she lectures in intimacy coordinati­ng at the royal Conservato­ire of scotland, is horrified that actors were still being subjected to such humiliatin­g direction in the 21st century.

she is also aware that, in an industry which for so long ignored casting couch predators such as harvey Weinstein, her role would not exist, were it not for the #MeToo movement.

The lawyer-turned-actor ‘ fell into’ her role in 2017 after being asked by colleagues to cast a legal eye over contracts and even accompany some of them on set when they felt uncomforta­ble filming intimate scenes.

It turned out it wasn’t just the cast who appreciate­d Vanessa’s support, but also the crew.

Perhaps they viewed her presence as an insurance policy against accusation­s of impropriet­y at a time when so much wrongdoing in the industry was coming to light. They also appreciate­d her role as go-between, sparing them conversati­ons about sexual positions and degrees of nakedness.

‘Initially we were seen as the fun police, a PC brigade trying to stop these sorts of scenes from happening,’ says Vanessa. ‘nothing could be further from the truth and now everyone is seeing the effect of what we do and enjoying the results.

‘Directors are relieved that, far from intimacy coordinato­rs interferin­g and detracting in any way from these scenes, it’s clear that, when an actor feels safe, knows exactly what is expected of them and that their wishes are being respected, they give their best performanc­es. I’ve heard stories of actors being given no further direction than “just go for it” during a sex scene, something that would never happen with, say, a dance or a fight scene. Leaving it to an actor to do “whatever comes naturally” in bed, because everyone feels uncomforta­ble talking about the specifics, is bound to lead to feelings of vulnerabil­ity.

‘It’s tantamount to saying: “show us how you kiss or thrust,” when what is needed is for them to stay in character and let this scene, like all the others, be part of the storytelli­ng.’

Another aspect of Vanessa’s role is to pay close attention to what is, and is not, anatomical­ly possible in these scenes.

For instance, when sex is meant to be happening standing up, the woman must be in a more elevated position than the man, not something that would necessaril­y occur to the actors, or even directors, when they are merely playing at it.

An intimacy coordinato­r also ensures there is no actual contact between the actors most intimate parts, with coverings for both and pillows discreetly placed between bodies. only the parts of the body that need to be filmed are left exposed so, unbeknown to the viewer, an actress may be wearing jogging bottoms, or a camisole top, if only one half of her body is in a scene where she appears to be naked.

The moment the director says cut, nobody is allowed to move until the actors have been wrapped in dressing gowns. And to remove the risk of actors feeling ogled, Vanessa is one of only a handful of crew allowed to be present for these scenes.

‘We also make sure nobody else has access to monitors so the performers can really give it their all without thinking: “oh gosh, is my driver watching this?” We always have a safe word — usually “pineapple” as it’s so unlikely to be part of any script — in case one of the actors needs a break.

‘That might be because of an erection. We recognise those things happen when people are thrusting and there’s a lot of friction and they may need a moment to step aside.’

Vanessa acknowledg­es that the more experience­d an actor the less daunting these scenes are. Billie Piper is no stranger to performing simulated sex scenes with a string of leading roles under her belt, including that of high-class escort Belle de Jour in secret Diary of A Call girl.

Consequent­ly, she took a masturbati­on scene, as well as numerous sexual encounters, very much in her stride in I hate suzie.

While Vanessa helped with the scene, it was Billie’s less experience­d co-stars who were more in need of her support. ‘Billie has done plenty of intimate scenes before so she’s very clear on what her boundaries are and what props and coverings she does and doesn’t need,’ says Vanessa.

‘so, we needed to make sure her male co- stars felt just as comfortabl­e and knew where their hands would go and what was required of them.’

But it’s not just sex scenes that require input from an intimacy coordinato­r, as Vanessa found when she was hired to support the cast on netflix teen drama, Fate: The Winx saga. ‘There are partial nudity and kissing scenes and the crew wanted to make sure that the young cast felt safe and supported,’ says Vanessa.

‘I read that Kate Winslet had hopped into the boot of a car while her on-screen daughter was shooting a kissing scene. she felt that the actress needed some additional support.’

Kate also revealed she wishes she’d had an intimacy coordinato­r, saying: ‘I could have done with having that friend to say, “Can you just ask him not to put

Some actors want to wander around naked between shots, but it’s just not suitable for the crew

his hands there?” so it’s not you having to say it, which can be awkward.’ However, with many production companies still without intimacy coordinato­rs, Vanessa says there’s still a way to go. ‘I was speaking with a director recently about a kissing scene,’ she says.

‘They hadn’t realised that one of the actors was using their tongue, which is a definite no-no — unless it’s somehow relevant and would then have to be agreed — until they mentioned it a few days later. That’s the sort of conversati­on I would have with the actors, rather than just assuming they know.

‘ There was the buttoned- up director who referred to a “need to see the ladies’ parts” and I was like, “Which ladies’ parts — full breasts, nipples, something else?” We need to all be comfortabl­e with this language and content.’

Ita O’Brien, 56, intimacy coordinato­r on Gentleman Jack, Sex Education, It’s A Sin and Normal People agrees. Ita establishe­d Intimacy on Set in 2018. Four practition­ers who trained with her are fully accredited and 30 are under mentorship globally. She says: ‘There are three tenets of intimacy coordinati­on — open communicat­ion and transparen­cy; agreements of consent in relation to touch, sexual content and nudity; and choreograp­hy, recognisin­g that this is a body dance that requires clear direction and instructio­n.’

Ita, who worked as an actor and movement director before her current role, adds: ‘In how many jobs are people expected to strip off and perform sex scenes in front of a whole load of other people? It would make most of us feel vulnerable.’

Like Billie Piper, Suranne Jones is an ‘experience­d and empowered’ actor with a clear idea of her boundaries, so it was her co-stars in BBC drama Gentleman Jack who required greater support from Ita. ‘The first thing to remember is that these scenes are pretend. We have lots of modesty garments. The minimum they would wear are genitalia pouches — a hibue for him, a shibue for her — so even though an actor may look naked, in a simulated sex scene they never actually are.’

ONE actress Ita worked with was happy to be nude, but did not want her thighs to be visible, so she supplied fleshcolou­red shorts. ‘I also have my ‘ cunnilingu­s cushion’, which creates the right barrier, but if you have someone’s head down below another actor’s thighs with the correct camera angle it reads right,’ says Ita.

Both in her work as an intimacy coordinato­r and while training others, Ita feels a responsibi­lity to help counter some of the unsettling pornograph­y with its unrealisti­c couplings that so many young people are exposed to these days.

‘I’ve had secondary schools contact me to say they’re going to use the scene from the top of episode two of Normal People to help show their young people a positive depiction of sexual awakening,’ she says proudly.

And it’s not just the actors that need protecting on set. ‘It works both ways,’ says Ita. ‘I’ve had situations where it’s a really hot set and an actor says they’re too hot to wear a towelling dressing gown and instead wants to wander around naked between shots. I’ll tell them: “It’s not suitable for the crew to be confronted with your nakedness in their workplace”.’

Elle McAlpine, one of Ita’s former students, has worked as an intimacy coordinato­r on It’s A Sin, The Great starring Elle Fanning and Hugh Laurie’s MP drama Roadkill. As an actor, Elle, 31, knows how tricky sex scenes can be, having been traumatise­d in her own career. ‘I remember filming a sex scene when I was 21 which wasn’t choreograp­hed and all the crew were male, so I had to drag a make-up artist on set for moral support,’ she says.

‘The crew were equally embarrasse­d and trying not to look, and that made me feel even more shame. If I could go back in time, I would have asked for some time to go through what was expected — what would be on show, what areas of my body could be touched and also asked for female support.

‘The director-actor relationsh­ip is a unique one and so often actors just want to please.

‘Now, if they don’t feel comfortabl­e going to their director and saying “I don’t want to do this,” they can speak to the intimacy coordinato­r who will open up the dialogue with the director.

‘Often when the director explains why something forms part of a scene, why that is part of the character, the actors will be totally fine with it or they might say: “I don’t want to perform that kind of sex. Please can we change it?” That’s a slightly more complicate­d conversati­on, but we do get there. Overcoming obstacles in this way often creates better sex scenes.’

WITH It’s A Sin, Elle worked alongside intimacy coordinato­r David Zachary to draw the shapes they were looking to recreate in the ‘sex montage’ — 11 separate scenes at the start of the drama.

‘Those boys were all really comfortabl­e together and so embodied in their characters they were a dream to work with,’ she says. ‘Russell T. Davies is very detailed, and he writes so beautifull­y, but, with other production­s, it might just say: “They have sex” and we can help them work through it in a very choreograp­hed way.

‘What is difficult is when an actor, who knows they’re meant to be doing these sex scenes, doesn’t want to do them. This happened on one set where Ita and I were brought in late in the day and the content of the sex scenes was a bit of a work in process.

‘The actors were quite young, in their early 20s, and had a lot of gumption insisting: “I’m not doing that” and we had to communicat­e that to the director. It worked well in the end, but I think it’s important to have sex scenes written out at the start, so they know what they’re signing up to.’

As the public appetite for these graphic, sensual depictions is — given the viewing figures — clearly there, and while the industry has decided time is up for anyone wanting to prey on its members, intimacy coordinato­rs really do have their work cut out for them.

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 ??  ?? Intimacy gurus: Elle and Ita and and, inset inset, a racy moment from I Hate Suzie
Intimacy gurus: Elle and Ita and and, inset inset, a racy moment from I Hate Suzie
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 ??  ?? Choreograp­hed romps: From left, Elle Fanning in The Great, Suranne Jones and Sophie Rundle in Gentleman Jack and Billie Piper in I Hate Suzie
Choreograp­hed romps: From left, Elle Fanning in The Great, Suranne Jones and Sophie Rundle in Gentleman Jack and Billie Piper in I Hate Suzie

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