Edinburgh Evening News

Renegade Nell causes a rumpus in exhilarati­ng fantasy adventure

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A world inhabited by characters that are smart, resourcefu­l, camp, canny and highly amusing

In the opening minutes of Renegade Nell,

Nelly Jackson tells highwayman Isambard Tulley: “Little word of warning. You don’t want to mess with me.”

The Disney+ fantasy adventure series is the latest show from Happy Valley writer Sally Wainwright.

Nell has inadverten­tly stumbled on Tulley and his gang robbing a group of wealthy travellers in the woods. The date is 1705 and Nell is returning to her family tavern in Tottenham, widowed, after her husband, Captain Jack. was “blasted in half at the Battle of Blenheim”, writes Beth Johnson, University of Leeds Professor of Television & Media Studies.

Despite this horrifying set of circumstan­ces, Nell (or Nelly as her family call her, much to her annoyance), is upbeat, her cockney wit as quick and cutting as her sword skills.

The series sets up a story world inhabited by characters that are smart, resourcefu­l, camp, canny and highly amusing. While tragedy and greed take up space in the dark edges of the plot and the minds of the show’s villains, it is humour that occupies its centre. This comes courtesy of both Wainwright’s sharp writing and the performanc­es of Nell, played by Louisa Harland of Derry Girls fame, and Billy Blind, her magical, pint-sized spirit.

Nick Mohammed purposeful­ly uses his most famous comedic creation, Mr Swallow, in his role as Billy Blind, drawing on both Mr Swallow’s squeaky voice, and his pattern of biting off more than he can chew.

Harland’s performanc­e as Nell is equally magical, driving the narrative at breakneck speed. Her supernatur­ally powered fight sequences are something to behold, and she showcases a multitude of accents, from contempora­ry cockney to “posh” Scottish.

Wainwright, the creator, executive producer and writer of the first five episodes of the series, is largely considered a safe – and extraordin­arily capable – pair of hands. She is most well-known for Scott & Bailey, Last Tango in Halifax, Happy Valley and Gentleman Jack.

Renegade Nell sees Wainwright parry with and between genres, themes and styles for which she is less well known. The magic realism and playful spirit that frames Renegade Nell may feel worlds away from Happy Valley, but – as with Wainwright’s indomitabl­e women characters and frequent focus on class inequaliti­es – magic realism does have precedence in her back catalogue.

Wainwright’s reimaginat­ion of the three Brontë sisters in the BBC film To Walk Invisible (2016) included scenes of the siblings as children, their heads adorned with burning crowns of fire. Renegade Nell has a similar interest in the magical relationsh­ip between three extraordin­ary sisters.

The show is a magical mix of Wainwright’s previous creative expertise. Its adventure is drawn from Jane Hall (2006) and comedy from Bonkers (2007). It has period costume and a musical score reminiscen­t of Gentleman Jack and magic realism from To Walk Invisible. Then there’s the determinat­ion and resilience from Happy Valley, and the focus on family, care, community and class that was inherent to Wainwright’s soap opera writing for Coronation Street.

Alongside its interest in women and the inequaliti­es they experience and battle to overcome, a theme central to Renegade Nell is social class.

With Nell as our guide, the structural inequaliti­es between the wealthy and the poor are aligned directly to power and its abuses. The law, Nell tells us, “is made by the toffs, for the toffs”. Ending up on the wrong side of it, she talks to Billy Blind, joking and lamenting in equal measure: “How come I’ve ended up so far on the wrong side of the law?”

In response, Billy suggests, “Maybe when someone like you ends up on the wrong side of the law … there’s something wrong with the law … and maybe me and you was supposed to do some disruption to redress the balance.”

Their work to redress the balance, alongside an exceptiona­l cast of supporting characters, explores the corruption of government, the control of the news and questions of truthful and objective reporting, poverty and gender-imbalanced opportunit­ies.

Though the setting in 16th century England provides a sense of temporal distance, the contempora­ry relevance of the issues explored are unlikely to be lost on viewers, who may well be inspired to join Nell in kicking up a rumpus.

 ?? ?? Enyi Okoronkwo as Rasselas and Louisa Harland as Nell
Enyi Okoronkwo as Rasselas and Louisa Harland as Nell

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