Attitude

SEX EDUCATION

Netflix’s new teen comedy drama series Sex Education aims to plug the gap left by inadequate school teaching and unrealisti­c porn. Attitude meets one of the stars and the writer to get a first lesson

- Words Tim Heap

Schooled on Netflix’s new teen comedy drama

Cast your mind back to those awkward pubescent teenage years. At some point in everyone’s school life, there comes a time where it seems every conversati­on revolves around the question of who has and who hasn’t “done it”. Like a game of Chinese whispers, rumours fly around, some turning into playground legend, often with only a grain of truth at their heart.

And if you’re a slow starter — or perhaps identify somewhere on the LGBT+ spectrum, or are still figuring things out — the pressure of those early sexual conversati­ons can weigh heavily on your shoulders; a competitio­n of carnality that often reinforces school hierarchie­s and stereotype­s.

And then even when the opportunit­y to lose your V- plates arrives, whether you feel prepared or not is an entirely different matter. Through the mainstream media, the UK’s relationsh­ips and sex education ( RSE) curriculum, and awkward talks about the birds and the bees with embarrasse­d parents, straight people are more likely to fare better when it’s time to do the deed. Although LGBT+ representa­tion has improved in recent years, queer people are left largely to figure things out for themselves, with inclusive RSE still not part of the National Curriculum.

This month, Netflix launches a new original series, Sex Education, to tap into the conversati­on and hopefully answer some common questions that teenagers might have about sex and sexuality — in a funny, accessible and, most importantl­y, real way. Set in Wales, the eight- part series stars Asa Butterfiel­d ( The Boy in the Striped Pyjamas, Ender ’s Game, Journey’s End) as socially and sexually awkward Otis. Spurred on by his best friend Eric ( played by Ncuti Gatwa) and streetsmar­t school rebel Maeve ( Emma Mackey), he doles out sex advice that he’s unwittingl­y, and, perhaps unwillingl­y, learned as the son of a liberal, over- sharing sex therapist, brilliantl­y played by Gillian Anderson.

Sex Education was created by upcoming writer Laurie Nunn, who was invited to come up with it in response to a seed pitch from production company, Eleven Film. “They’d watched a [ Channel 4] programme called The Joy of Teen Sex, where these teenagers basically just went and talked to sex therapists about things such as their anxieties regarding losing their virginity or about body image,” she explains when I meet with her and Ncuti at a press junket in London.

“That sparked the idea to pose the question of what would happen if there was a teenage sex therapist on a school campus.

“I read the pitch and thought, ‘ I have to get this job’, because I was Otis at school: I was so awkward and such a slow starter. I was the biggest loser.”

But Laurie was able to take all that schoolbase­d trauma and embarrassm­ent and channel it into Sex Education.

She admits that the show takes a lot of tried- and- tested teenage tropes, but then attempts to subvert them. “We take characters that you’ll be familiar with — the school bully, the loser, the popular girl — and we dig into them and find the things that are really surprising about them.

“Then you’re like, actually they’re all the same, they all just desperatel­y want to fit in and be accepted.”

Ncuti’s character, Eric, is gay, and it’s refreshing to watch a queer teenage character who’s so comfortabl­e with his sexuality, and, for the most part, accepted by those around him.

In episode one, he’s pushed up against a locker and has his lunch taken by bad boy Adam, but this stems more from the fact that

Eric once sprung a boner while playing the French horn in assembly than that he’s gay. Mortifying.

Ncuti, originally from Rwanda but raised in Scotland, says it was the writing that drew him to the role. “I’d never read a script like it, or heard of a concept like it,” he says.

“It was very funny, it had a lot of heart and all the characters were well- rounded. I didn’t want to play a stock character, and you have the danger of making Eric a stock character: the gay, black best friend.

“But he goes through so much and represents so many different intersecti­ons that I just fell in love with him. He’s a minority within a minority, and I was really attracted to the opportunit­y to show that.”

Eric is one of two openly gay kids in Sex Education, the other being Anwar, who’s part of a Mean Girls- style clique of the coolest kids in school.

Having seen the first two episodes of the series before the interview, I ask Laurie about other LGBT+ storylines featured in the series.

“We spend time in [ head boy and school jock] Jackson’s home life, and his mums are a lesbian couple,” she reveals. “It’s not at the forefront of that storytelli­ng, but it’s just something interestin­g about his home life that we discover, and like all the other characters in the show, he’s totally cool with it. We also have another story that centres on a gay couple.

“Fingers crossed, if we get to keep doing the show, those LGBT+ storylines are something we’ll be able to explore more and more.

“We feel that the show has quite a queer heart. The message is to talk about sex in an open and honest way and not to keep things bottled up, to express it however awkward and uncomforta­ble.”

Although written with a teenage audience in mind, both Ncuti and Laurie don’t see why it couldn’t be the type of show teenagers watch with their parents. “The themes are universal,” says Laurie, “we’ve all been teenagers, whether you are one now or not.

“People can tap into that and take a trip down that painful memory lane.”

Ncuti agrees, adding: “It’s really funny and you’re going to crack up, once you get over the awkwardnes­s. You enjoy the awkwardnes­s of Sex Education because we all remember that messy, teenage time.”

Despite its blunt title, the series isn’t just about sex. It deals with issues of love and intimacy, and hopes to teach young audiences how to have healthier sexual relationsh­ips. It’s intended as an “antidote to porn” and the glamorised depictions of teenage sex that we see in other shows aimed at similar audiences.

As Ncuti puts it, “It’s a very real and relatable depiction of your school experience and sexual journey. It’s educationa­l; before the show, I had no idea what vaginismus was!”

Of course, there will be parents who may not think it’s suitable for their children.

To them, Ncuti’s message is simple: “If you’re going to try to stop someone watching it, fuck off!”

Sex Education is on Netflix from 11 January

“the show has a queer heart. we can explore the lgbt+ storylines”

 ??  ?? THERAPEUTI­C:Asa Butterfiel­d with on- screen mum Gillian Anderson
THERAPEUTI­C:Asa Butterfiel­d with on- screen mum Gillian Anderson
 ??  ?? HORNY: Eric,has ( Ncuti Gatwa),g embarrassi­n an moment
HORNY: Eric,has ( Ncuti Gatwa),g embarrassi­n an moment
 ??  ?? WRITER: Laurie Nunn
WRITER: Laurie Nunn
 ??  ?? WARNING: Ncuti Gatwa has a bluntmessa­ge for difficult parents
WARNING: Ncuti Gatwa has a bluntmessa­ge for difficult parents

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