Latest news with #Mark Gatiss


Telegraph
16-07-2025
- Entertainment
- Telegraph
Look out, Sherlock, Mark Gatiss has created a brilliant new sleuth
In Bookish (U&Drama), a detective drama by Mark Gatiss set in 1946, Gabriel Book is a super-sleuth without a super power. Book doesn't bang on about little grey cells or make Sherlock-style synaptic leaps. He is just a bookshop owner who has read a lot of books, and from there gleaned knowledge about what makes people tick. No violin-playing, no bravura deduction, no visions. It's actually quite refreshing. Mark Gatiss, Bookish's writer and star, has also quite evidently read a lot of books, as well as seen a lot of classic movies. With his work on Sherlock and Dracula, as well as his annual ghost stories for BBC Two, Gatiss is steeped in crime fiction. He knows the genre inside out, and Bookish therefore toes a teasing line between things you've seen or read before and new ways of repackaging those old things for television in 2025. Although the story is set in 1946, that strange era immediately postwar where a broken Britain was rebuilt in a hurry, away from the whodunits its themes are contemporary. Book is gay but has to hide behind a lavender marriage to avoid social stigma. Much of the show away from the mystery of the week unpicks how Book and Trottie (Polly Walker) aka Mrs Book, first met, and how and why they came to their convenient arrangement. Similarly, at the beginning of the series a young man called Jack (Connor Finch) is released from Whitechapel prison and thereafter welcomed into Book and Trottie's embrace with suspicious alacrity. There is, obviously, some connection between Jack, Book and Trottie. What it is forms another gentle puzzle that bubbles along beneath all six episodes of what will surely be the first of many series. (In fact as I write a second has just been announced). Bookish is first and foremost a clever, witty, well-plotted sleuther. From an opening two-parter about a poisoned butcher (Danny Mays, having a blast) to a finale about murder at the esteemed Walsingham Hotel, Bookish is a series of puzzles that are presented and then solved with a satisfying completeness. Gatiss plays fair by his viewer, asking them the same questions based on the same evidence that he asks of his detective. This, of course, is the Agatha Christie formula, but it is much easier to get wrong than right. What it isn't is gritty or cutting-edge, and at times it veers towards arch. But then in a series called Bookish about a man called Book who owns a bookshop called Book's Books (and loves to tell everyone why the apostrophe is quite correct in this instance) there should be no expectation of gore or grime such as in Netflix's recent Dept Q or HBO's True Detective. This is an overwhelmingly fun-filled drama that happens to be about multiple murders. It helps that it looks superb, given what must have been a low budget, and its cast – featuring names as grand as Elliot Levey, Joely Richardson and Paul McGann – adds extra lustre. Bookish is not game-changing, but it is not trying to change the game, just let us enjoy playing it. In the last 12 months we have had Ludwig, Death Valley and now this, all plotting a course for what British drama can offer having been priced out of the market for grandeur by US streamers. Another puzzle solved. Bookish airs on U&Alibi on Wednesday 16 July from 8pm
Yahoo
16-07-2025
- Entertainment
- Yahoo
Sherlock's Mark Gatiss teases 'thrilling' new detective show Bookish
Mark Gatiss has always wanted to play a detective, and in his new series Bookish, he finally is able to fulfil that dream, but he admits to Yahoo UK it was "f***ing hard" to follow in the footsteps of Agatha Christie and Arthur Conan Doyle by creating his own murder mystery. The writer wears many hats in the U&alibi series; he not only created the show he also co-wrote several episodes, and takes the central role of Gabriel Book — the aptly named bookseller whose hobby is helping police solve puzzling cases in 1940s London. It's a concept not dissimilar to another crime drama he co-created, Sherlock, but this time Gatiss is working with an entirely blank canvas and that made it an interesting challenge. "I'm a great student of the genre. I've always loved murder mysteries, obviously Sherlock Holmes, Poirot, Miss Marple, but also a lot of the others I read as a teenager — Dorothy L Sayers and Margery Allingham, and lots and lots. I just love them, and I've always wanted to be one," Gatiss shares. "So I sort of had this idea in this form for about eight years, but it's a sort of synthesis of all of the bits I love, really." When it came to piecing together mysteries, Gatiss bows down to the Queen of Crime, Christie, for her incredible ability to create story after story and make it look easy. "Excuse my French, it's f***ing hard," Gatiss admits of creating his own murder mystery rather than adapting one like he did with Sherlock. "They are beasts. The reason that Christie is still preeminent is that her plots are amazing, and everyone bow down to her. "There is an amazing letter in her archive from Graham Greene, who wrote to her asking to buy plots off her because he couldn't think of any, and she just dashed them off. There are short story plots of hers which would sustain a novel, and it's just amazing, really, some of the cleverest twists and variations of a theme, you never know. "So they are difficult, and the big problems, the biggest challenges, are motive... but mostly it's clues, you have to lay clues that are not too obvious and not too obscure. One of the rules is you have to play fair with the audience; they have to be able to somehow piece it together, and that is the other problem, which is how your detective does it. "Every detective has a thing, and the thing for Book is the bookshop. It is a sort of analogue computer; it's all there somewhere, and he has so many obscure references that somehow he can kind of piece it together. He's a bit of Sherlock Holmes, a bit of intuition. A line I was very proud of is, he says, 'you can read a lot of things as well as books'. I thought that's kind of the ethos of the series." Bookish is more than just its initial premise, though. The six-part series features mysteries of a personal nature too, opening with Book and his beloved wife Trottie (Polly Walker) hiring Jack (Connor Finch), a young man just out of prison with a story to tell. And then there's Book, who has secrets of his own as a gay man in a lavender marriage during a period when homosexuality was illegal in the UK. The show's 1940s setting gave Gatiss the chance to explore interesting, important topics, as he says: "The setting is very crucial. I love this period; it's very under-examined. I love the films of the period hugely, it's the best decade of British film, I think. "What I wanted was to create something in the flavour of The Lady Vanishes or a great film — which if you haven't seen I really recommend — called Green for Danger with Alistair Sim, which is set during the war and is a very clever murder mystery with a central eccentric detective. It's my perfect film, really. "Plus, the idea that he was a gay man in a lavender marriage, and that would be a way of talking about now." Gatiss goes on: "I saw a discussion on TV a couple of years ago with a wide age range of gay people and they started talking about decriminalisation and the two youngest ones looked a little uncomfortable, and eventually the interviewer was saying 'what is it?' And one of them said: 'Oh, I didn't know it had ever been illegal,' and your heart just drops. "But weirdly, that is the great triumph of the gay rights movement; it's an extraordinary thing, and it is like fighting any battle — the real success comes when you don't have to think about it. But at the same time, you want people to acknowledge it or know about it because it's crucial. And also now it could be undone like that, and it's all around the world." "So that's why I think it's important to show 'here's a very dangerous time and you don't know how lucky you are' without wagging a finger," Gatiss says of Bookish. "But also that this dangerous time could come back in a heartbeat, absolutely it could. It's happening all over the world with banning Pride, banning representation across great swaths of the world. It's really frightening." It's a subject that Gatiss feels strongly about. But it was equally important for the writer not to make Book's queerness the central theme of the story, because in a way it heralded progress: "When people asked me the question about representation, I used to say one day, when a detective is incidentally gay, then we will have made progress. And that's kind of what we've done here, because if this show were made in 1980, it would be called 'The Gay Detective.' "The point is not that he is gay, that's a part of the series, but it's not the defining characteristic, like the way there was a show in 1980 called The Chinese Detective with David Yip. Once that would have been the issue, but now it's not. It's not incidental because it's part of the plot and part of the scenario and what we're trying to examine dramatically, but it's not the defining thing." He adds: "As much as people love period and I love period, we also wanted to make sure it wasn't stuffy. The music and the style of it are interestingly not 40s, so it's about trying to find what's common to our time without lecturing people." Gatiss took his role as leader of the production "very seriously" and part of that was ensuring that they had a "very happy production" on set. The writer admits he has no tolerance for pageantry or egos on his sets, and so was keen to ensure that kind of thing didn't occur on Bookish. "It was very, very, very happy company, and I take my responsibilities as leader very seriously, to welcome people, any guest actor, but also the regulars. You have to look after them and make sure they have a good time," he reflects. "I absolutely can't bear any kind of onset bullying or friction or bad atmosphere, I just can't stand it, and I won't tolerate it. It's my show to not tolerate it, you know. "But it's really important to have a happy atmosphere because you feel creative and you can do stuff, me and Carolina [Giammetta], the director, really take that very seriously. "I remember a friend of mine directed Breaking Bad, and they had a guest actor and he said it was just a nightmare. Bryan Cranston wasn't on set until later in the day, and he arrived and he could just see what was going on with this guy, and he just went: 'We like to have a good time on this show, OK?' And that did it. That's the principle I had." And as a writer, he admits that it is inevitable that his latest work is compared to other crime dramas, even his own, because they all share similarities by virtue of being in the same genre. "It's very difficult because in the end Sherlock Holmes said, 'There is nothing new under the sun,' so you have to find variations on the theme, really, and that's the key," Gatiss remarks when asked how he tried to make Bookish different to what has come before. "There's a little bit of Holmes in it, you have to do some sort of deduction because that's how it works, otherwise he either knows everything, or you have loads of scenes of him just looking at stuff. Some of it has to be intuition and some of it has to be cause and effect." Ever the Sherlock Holmes fan, Gatiss references one of Conan Doyle's short stories The Adventure of Silver Blaze as he adds: "You know the ultimate thing really is to find the equivalent of the curious incident of the dog in the night-time, because that's a piece of genius and everyone gets that. "Also, there's the beautiful simplicity of that idea. I thought it was genius: the curious incident of the dog in the night-time, but the dog did nothing in the night-time, and that was what made it curious. It still is just brilliant. So it's [trying to do] that sort of thing, it's inflected by Sherlock Holmes." While he is on the cusp of releasing the first series, Gatiss is already well underway with the second as he reveals he has just finished writing the new episodes with Matthew Sweet and is "cheek by jowl" to "publicising this one and shooting" the next. It's a lot of pressure on the writer's shoulders, but he also enjoys the challenge too. "It's thrilling to create this world, and I always think about it," he says. "There's a marvellous thing Steven Moffat and I used to say about Sherlock, our favourite bit always was before we started a new series. We'd sit in a room and just think about what it might be... it is very thrilling to think about where characters might go and what sorts of cases you might have." Bookish premieres with its first two episodes on U&alibi on Wednesday, 16 July.