Manchester Evening News

It’s about people struggling for independen­ce, that’s always going to be relevant

Sensual and moving drama, Little Birds feels different from anything else on TV. Here, GEORGIA HUMPHREYS hears more from some of its glittering cast

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JUNO TEMPLE was just 17 when she read Little Birds, a collection of erotic short stories by Anais Nin.

“They really affected me, and woke a sexual sort of fire that I didn’t know I had”,” notes the London-born star, who grew up in Somerset, and has been acting since she was a young teenager.

Now, 14 years later, the quirky actress is playing the lead role – New York heiress Lucy Savage – in Sky Atlantic’s adaptation of Anais’s book.

“I made a lot of notes of little things I wanted to add into the script, trying to get actual one-liner direct quotes from Little Birds, and I got a couple in there, which was really exciting,” reflects Juno, star of films such as Atonement, St Trinians and Maleficent, plus Netflix series Dirty John. “That was cool that everyone was open to me doing that.”

Little Birds is a six-part series, written by Sophia Al-Maria – an American-Qatari filmmaker and artist – and directed by Detroit-born Stacie Passon, whose previous projects include House Of Cards.

Set in Tangier Internatio­nal Zone in 1955, the contempora­ry and daring tale follows Lucy as she heads to exotic climes for love and marriage.

When her husband Hugo does not greet her in the way she expected, she finds herself on a journey to freedom and independen­ce.

We see Lucy discoverin­g the surprising, diverse and degenerate world of Tangier, in Morocco, a country quivering on the cusp of independen­ce.

Along the way, she meets myriad characters including a scandalous dominatrix, Cherifa Lamor (Yumna Marwan) who particular­ly captures Lucy’s imaginatio­n.

As the show is based on a volume of erotica, you can expect to see some bold sex scenes on screen, which look as though they could be quite awkward to film. So, was there anything the cast drew a line under when it came to depicting characters in intimate situations?

“I was very clear from the very beginning what is allowed and what is not allowed,” declares Yumna, who was born in Lebanon, but grew up in Beirut and then Iowa.

“I’m still scared to this day, to right this second, for when Little Birds comes out, how many family members I’m going to lose.”

It sounds like Yumna is being quite jokey at first, but then she stresses: “It’s funny, but it’s not funny; even though I made sure that I would never show my breasts or my a**, or I would never be in a scene where I’m having sex, it’s still like I did too much for what my family would expect from me.

“The production team, the director, were very, very understand­ing... It just felt like any boundary that the actor would set during the scene was accepted immediatel­y, which made me comfortabl­e to be able to do the scene.”

“Stacie has been quite attentive to any conversati­on we would want to have with her, related to any intimate scenes,” adds Raphael Acloque, who portrays an Egyptian aristocrat named Adham Abaza.

“She was always available, whenever we needed to discuss anything about it.”

Hugh Skinner – known for shows such as Fleabag and W1A – plays Hugo, who is not only trapped in a relationsh­ip with Lucy, who he doesn’t love, but we also see trying to become an arms dealer.

“It’s so hard because when you put it like that, he sounds dreadful,” quips Londoner Hugh, 35.

“But there are a lot of external forces weighing down on him and, in that sense, he’s a bit of an emotionall­y stunted pinball.

“But despite being gay and deciding to marry a woman, he’s really lucked out with Lucy actually because she proves to be incredible.

“All the characters, they’re all sort of outsiders in a lot of ways, taking ownership of their otherness and transcendi­ng the situation, and he’s lucky to be with Lucy as she finds liberation.”

This may be a period drama, but there’s no denying that the themes will resonate with modern audiences.

For example, the idea of people being desperate to shake off the shackles of society still very much exists today.

“Yeah, I think power struggles will always exist and I think this show is all about people fighting for their own agency, or struggling for their own independen­ce; whether that’s personally, or politicall­y, that’s always going to be relevant,” 51-year-old Nina Sosanya, who plays eccentric entertaine­r Lili Von X, agrees.

“It’s going to have a wide audience, because it’s set in a particular period, but it’s a period that’s incredibly attractive to us anyway, just visually,” continues the Londoner, who starred alongside Hugh in W1A, and is also known for BBC1 drama Last Tango In Halifax.

“And you’re going to have people that have lived through those changes – a section of the audience that might sometimes be overlooked, which is the people older than us, 70-plus who have actually seen those changes, who have lived through the sexual revolution of the 60s... “This is going to be interestin­g for them.”

The show was shot in Tarifa in

Spain, as well in Manchester.

While on location, did the cast have any particular­ly memorable cast nights out after filming had finished for the day?

“When wasn’t there one?” Juno quickly replies, grinning.

“Lots of dinners, lots of conversati­ons, lots of laughter, lots of tears, lots of screaming, lots of hugging. It was great. It was also an incredible learning experience.”

“I am always surprised by how much we liked each other because I’ve done so many projects with people that I absolutely hated,” Yumna follows candidly.

“At the end of the day, it’s a job. But something about this felt different... This felt like a very, very special project where, for some reason, most of us felt very connected to each other.

“There was something about just all of us being there together that helped me a lot during the process of filming.”

“Which makes it extra cruel we have to be doing press for this via Zoom, because of a pandemic!” cries Juno. “It really would be nice to be together to do this for real.”

 ??  ?? Juno Temple who plays Lucy Savage, first read Anais Nin’s daring tales when she was a teenager
Juno Temple who plays Lucy Savage, first read Anais Nin’s daring tales when she was a teenager
 ??  ?? Yumna Marwan plays dominatrix Cherifa Lamor
Yumna Marwan plays dominatrix Cherifa Lamor
 ??  ?? Lucy Savage with her conflicted husband Hugo Cavendish-Smyth (Hugh Skinner)
Lucy Savage with her conflicted husband Hugo Cavendish-Smyth (Hugh Skinner)
 ??  ?? Raphael Acloque as Egyptian aristocrat Adham Abaza
Raphael Acloque as Egyptian aristocrat Adham Abaza
 ??  ??

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