The Courier & Advertiser (Fife Edition)

MORE ANTICS AT ACKLEY BRIDGE AS SCHOOL’S IN

As the award-winning drama returns to Channel 4, Rachael Davis finds out what’s in store.

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Button up your shirt, knot that school tie and pull on that itchy blazer: it’s back to school at Ackley Bridge. As ever with the award-winning Channel 4 drama, this won’t be a straightfo­rward school term – there’s a new teacher on the scene, new students causing havoc, some awkward sex ed classes and plenty more of the antics the Yorkshire school has become known for.

The fifth series of Ackley Bridge starts with a bang, as Marina pulls a pulse-racing stunt at school in the hopes that it’ll boost her social media following. Parents are outraged, Academy Trust area manager Ken cracks down on headteache­r Martin Evershed, but ultimately the high is short-lived for Marina: she discovers that her mum, Jules, has racked up debt and that they’re being evicted.

Meanwhile, new teacher Asma arrives – an activist with a stolen statue and a bold plan to teach her students to raise their voices and change the world. Fizza – and Hassan – are enraptured by her, but all is not as it seems, as it transpires that behind her powerful facade, Asma is battling some demons.

All of this – and more – is happening on Martin’s watch, much to the irritation of Ken who appointed him as headteache­r.

“Ken comes to school one day and sees Martin’s new protege teacher getting arrested, so obviously he’s concerned,” says Rob JamesColli­er, who plays Martin. “Rather than letting Martin explain, he decides he’s going to move into Martin’s office and keep an eye on it. So obviously Martin’s not happy about that.”

Meanwhile, Kaneez Paracha, played by Sunetra Sarker, is settling into her new role as a student support officer. Not only is she tasked with teaching Year 11 sex education – as Sarker says, “no adult wants that job, ever, full stop, you know, in a school environmen­t or in a family environmen­t, within anything” – Ken is also insisting that she gets her GCSEs.

“Let’s be honest, how many of us right now could do our GCSE maths and English?” former Casualty star Sarker, 49, asks. “It’s like Mount Everest for her. With Ken assuming that she’s going to fail, she’s trying to prove to Ken she’s worth being in the school by other means: making the naughtiest boy in the school turn up and be the student no-one ever expected him to be. And the flip side is: how the hell is she going to get her GCSEs with the limited English she speaks, and the lack of education she’s had?”

The drama isn’t just left at the school gates. James-Collier teases that we’ll get to see more of Martin’s home life in this series, as his relationsh­ip with Marina’s mum Jules intensifie­s.

“It’s a really difficult tightrope for Martin to walk, particular­ly with Marina because she sort of resents him, because she hasn’t got that paternal influence in her life,” Downton Abbey star James-Collier, 45, says.

Getting back into the roles of teachers has made James-Collier and Sarker reflect on their own school days, and how their academic experience­s have influenced their performanc­es.

They were both self-confessed class clowns, with James-Collier admitting he was “disruptive” and Sarker saying she used to do “a lot of school pranks”.

“I realised very soon in my childhood that the joker in the class was my forte, making people laugh,” Sarker says.

“I was very small, I was actually the smallest in the class for a long time. So I could fit inside the piano, I could play the piano from behind the piano. And the teachers would think there’s a ghost in the room.

“I can’t tell you much about the actual education side of it, because I guess I wasn’t particular­ly super brains!”

“You look back and you think, maybe I should have got my head down more,” adds James-Collier, “but when you’re a kid, school can be boring. You’re just more interested in having a laugh.

“But there was a teacher, my English teacher, who sort of changed his mind on me because I got suspended a couple of times. He realised my potential in English in particular, he sort of gave me a second chance and I ended up getting an A for GCSE.”

As ever, this series of Ackley Bridge is working to spotlight the integratio­n of white and Asian communitie­s in the divided Lancashire and Yorkshire towns it represents. Diversity is part of the show’s DNA, from the complex character storylines such as that of Kaneez, to ensuring the cast and crew is representa­tive. Joining Ackley Bridge is Top Boy’s Ashley Walters, who directed episodes one to five.

“He was really open to hearing the difference­s between black culture and Asian culture and the nuances of playing the woman that Kaneez is,” Sarker says.

 ?? ?? CHALLENGES AHEAD: Sunetra Sarker as Kaneez Paracha, student support officer a Morgan as Marina, Yasmin Al-Khudhairi as Fizza, Ryan Dean as Johnny and Robyn C
CHALLENGES AHEAD: Sunetra Sarker as Kaneez Paracha, student support officer a Morgan as Marina, Yasmin Al-Khudhairi as Fizza, Ryan Dean as Johnny and Robyn C
 ?? ?? Ackley Bridge series five starts on Channel 4 at 10pm on Monday, July 11.
Ackley Bridge series five starts on Channel 4 at 10pm on Monday, July 11.

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