Yorkshire Post

Expectatio­ns are high as Peaky Blinders writer tackles another Dickens drama

-

PEAKY BLINDERS creator Steven Knight has signed up to bring Great Expectatio­ns to the small screen – despite controvers­y over his last Charles Dickens adaptation.

The writer’s previous Dickens drama, A Christmas Carol, sparked complaints over violent scenes and use of the F-word. Coming-of-age story Great Expectatio­ns, featuring orphan Pip, will form a six-part series on BBC One.

Knight, who will again be collaborat­ing with Sir Ridley Scott and Tom Hardy as producers, said he felt a connection to the story. He picked Great Expectatio­ns “not just because of the timeless characters, but also because of the very timely story”.

“A story of class mobility and class intransige­nce, told through an intensely emotional and personal first person narrative,” he said.

“As the son of a blacksmith myself, Pip’s journey from the forge into society is a very special one to me.”

Dickens first released Great Expectatio­ns in chapters from 1860 before the story was published as a novel.

The BBC drama is at its very early stages and is not expected to go into production until next year at the earliest.

Knight, who was one of the creators of game show Who Wants To Be A Millionair­e?, previously defended A Christmas Carol, which aired over the festive season.

The drama, which was also accused of being too left-wing, opened with a boy urinating on the grave of Jacob Marley. Knight said viewers should be more worried about “hygienic violence” in video games.

“Everything that’s in there has its roots in the book,” he said.

“In terms of the language, with Dickens’ writing, the sensibilit­y of the time meant that you couldn’t use that language and dialogue.

“But that didn’t mean that people didn’t use that language because everybody knows that they did.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom