Pramface: A blossoming bromance
"The meeting is on Wednesday. They want you to read for the part of Keith. I'll email you the details over now," chirped the chirpy voice of my agent.
I checked my email. "Keith: Late 30s, Jamie's Dad, practical and working class." I looked again. Yep, it definitely said "late 30s." A year out of drama school and suddenly I've aged nearly 20 years.
Maybe my photo needed changing? Maybe poor diet and an apathetical approach to exercise had bumped my casting bracket up a generation? Maybe there was an administrative error? Please let it be an administrative error!
I called my agent back. "It was a balls up. He’s 16/17 and is a bit of an oddball. You’re good at oddballs."
And that was it. That was my first introduction to Mike.
The audition was at the ³ÉÈËÂÛ̳ Television Centre; a majestical doughnut-shaped palace of tellydom! As a boy I’d spend Saturday mornings in my jim-jams watching Live and Kicking with a breakfast platter of cereal and pop tarts before me. As the pinball whirled around Television Centre in the opening credits I would ready myself for the imminent three and half hours of killer entertainment.
In the lift up to the audition, I was told I would be reading with the actor playing Jamie.
"Oh, I said, "Who is that?"
"His name is Sean Verey. They cast him a couple of weeks ago," she replied. Oh.
The previous summer Sean and I had filmed together on a little known comedy called Shelfstackers for ³ÉÈËÂÛ̳ Switch. We were famously unable to make it through a scene without corpsing. To the uninitiated, 'corpsing' is when you unintentionally and uncontrollably laugh and ruin a take. It is a bizarre sensation that is nearly impossible to stop once you've started.
At the time we put our unprofessional behavior down to our 'onscreen chemistry.' But the reality was we were immature boys with short attention spans and a penchant to try and make the other laugh.
In the audition, Sean and I were on our best behaviour. Other than a rather long-winded anecdote with no punch line, the audition seemingly went well because a week later I got the call to say the part was mine.
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Soon myself and the rest of the cast found ourselves in Edinburgh, home of heartwarming documentary After a quick - and I'm pretty sure rigged - game of rock, paper, scissors, Sean had triumphantly bagged the big room in the flat, complete with an uninterrupted castle view and its very own chaise longue.
Our first all-night shoot required me and Sean to 'sleep' in a Volvo with the odd bit of whispered dialogue. Easy enough you'd think. But each take we’d corpse longer and harder than the previous. As we sprawled out in the car giggling like schoolgirls, heaters on, the entire crew stood outside in the biting cold. Eventually, after many apologies we nailed it on about take 27.
I've visited Scotland many times and have never failed to be bowled over by this unutterably lovely, whimsical land. So on days off, I would take in what delights were on offer - stunning architecture, markets, picturesque walks, a Loch Ness Monster exhibition in all new "4-D"! If I remember rightly the fourth dimension was 'time.'
I hope I've managed to convey how much fun was had, although what I've offered up is mainly a document about the blossoming 'bromance' between myself and Sean. Even so, filming Pramface was more pleasurable then a strawberry pavlova laced with chocolate. I hope you're enjoying it!
Pramface continues every Thursday at 9pm.
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- Scarlett Alice Johnson on playing pregnant teenager Laura.
Comment number 1.
At 22nd Mar 2012, Tim wrote:Just love this program, really makes my thursday night :)
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Comment number 2.
At 22nd Mar 2012, blogger jamie wrote:I absolutly love this programme ive been waiting fir the new one all week
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Comment number 3.
At 29th Mar 2012, stookman wrote:Dylan, you are a natural comedy actor who will surely go on to greater things. I loved this well written and well directed series and look forward to the second series. The whole cast gelled well and it rose above so many teen comedies currently being aired. It made the average American comedy look stilted and wooden by comparison. One up for British productions. Congratulations to all involved.
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Comment number 4.
At 1st Apr 2012, Ricardo Wensleydale wrote:An excellent programme that deserves better than to be languishing on ³ÉÈËÂÛ̳3. Get thwem to repeat it on a proper channel and watch those figure rise.
Well made with excellent performances from all eight of the characters, not a weak link amongst them. Quality writing and production.
If the ³ÉÈËÂÛ̳ can still make programmes as good as this how come I have to make do with the formulaic New Tricks on a Friday evening. Yes New Trick is safe on a Friday when the ³ÉÈËÂÛ̳ assumes everyone is out but it's never going to be as original or entertaining as new programmes like Pramface.
Keep up the good work. I'm looking forward to the second series already. 10/10
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