The Sunday Telegraph

Father’s pain at losing child is heart of drama

BBC production The Cry explores a man’s reaction to tragedy as couple face scrutiny in community

- By Laura FitzPatric­k

THE trauma of losing a child is usually dramatised in film and television from the mother’s point of view.

But in a new BBC drama the emphasis is on how the father of the child feels and copes with such a tragedy.

The Cry promises to hook Sunday evening audiences with the harrowing story of a missing child, told through the pain of both parents.

The four-part psychologi­cal thriller sees young parents Joanna, played by Jenna Coleman, the Victoria star, and Alistair, played by Ewen Leslie, faced with their child’s disappeara­nce when they travel from Scotland to Australia with their son.

Adapted from Helen FitzGerald’s 2013 novel, the series takes a new approach to the story, with new scenes included to show the father’s emotional struggles.

As the story unfolds, the couple face public scrutiny in a small Australian community, changing their relationsh­ip for good.

“In the book, Alistair’s point of view is never portrayed; it’s told inside Joanna’s head,” said Claire Mundell, the show’s executive producer.

“Alistair was vital to the programme. He is also a complex character trying to do the best thing in a terrible situation.

“We felt we could add him in to understand this situation properly. It’s not just about the mother.”

At first, though, the story – which has echoes of one man’s search for his daughter in The Missing, the BBC drama – feels very personal to Joanna who battles with postnatal depression as one part of her experience as a young mother.

But Jacquelin Perske, who wrote the screenplay for The Cry, also wanted to focus on the couple’s experience together.

She said: “Joanna is not just the victim. We are supposed to see how both of them deal with a very real situation.

“They are an extremely average couple hit with terrible circumstan­ces. When one parent is not coping, the other will start to wonder what they can do to help.”

The team were left with a fair amount of creative freedom to build their three dimensiona­l version of Alistair. Mundell said: “We could have easily made Alistair into a monster but that wasn’t interestin­g to us.

“The writing and Ewen Leslie’s performanc­e give more depth to Alistair’s character. He is trying to do what he thinks is the right thing and we see his character go on a journey as well.”

Naturally, mental health is a strong theme that runs through the show, the narrative diving into how our health suffers in traumatic situations. Mundell said: “The story explores mental health full stop, not just male mental health.

“Both characters are in a situation of extreme pressure and we wanted to examine how that plays out.”

Their focus led to copious extra research to get it right. Perske specifical­ly cited hours of research into the symptoms of postnatal depression.

She said: “I needed to look into what happens if you don’t seek help or treat it. If people have gone through that, I needed to make sure the story had veracity.”

‘ The Cry’ starts tonight at 9pm on BBC One

 ??  ?? Alistair (Ewen Leslie) and Joanna (Jenna Coleman) are the main characters in the BBC’s four-part psychologi­cal thriller The Cry, in which their child goes missing in Australia
Alistair (Ewen Leslie) and Joanna (Jenna Coleman) are the main characters in the BBC’s four-part psychologi­cal thriller The Cry, in which their child goes missing in Australia

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