A TV adaptation of the National Theatre play Dear England is heading to BBC, who beat Netflix in a bidding war.
We got a sneak peek at BBC’s upcoming slate of dramas in February. Among those was a TV adaptation of Dear England, the hit play which has been charming football-friendly audiences in the London theatre scene since its debut in June 2023.
Deadline now reports that Dear England could have very narrowly been a Netflix production instead. There was a fierce bidding war over the rights and according to Deadline, Netflix made a “more lucrative” offer but writer James Graham and Left Bank Pictures chose the BBC instead.
The outlet also reports that the reason behind Graham and Left Bank’s decision was because the team “view Dear England as a national story that should be told by the UK’s national broadcaster.”
Dear England is a fictionalised narrative of England coach Gareth Southgate and his team as they gear up to three important moments in major tournaments: semifinals at the 2018 World Cup in Russia, the 2020 European Championship final at Wembley, and their quarterfinal exit from the 2022 World Cup in Qatar.
Joseph Fiennes plays Southgate in the stage version and is expected to reprise the part in the TV adaptation. The adaptation will be a four-part drama, written by Graham and directed by Rupert Goold, who also helmed the stage version.
Andy Harries, the founder of Left Bank Pictures, has also spoken about the importance of a “healthy” BBC.
“Are we in danger of our business ending up as a first-class, top-end service industry to the U.S. at the expense of our own shows? Shows that reflect our own lives in the UK,” Harries asked at last week’s Broadcasting Press Guild Awards.
“The streamers need the competition. Our industry needs a healthy BBC. The BBC keeps us British, its role in our society is unique and unifying,” he added.
It’s hard to disagree with that.
Related Stories
- While Netflix numbers go up, Disney+ numbers are going down
Price rises keep the profits coming in, but Disney+ was losing subscribers at the end of 2024 - and the outlook is tricky.
The story’s been told many times over about the seismic gamble Disney took in launching its own streaming service. From pretty much shuttering its home entertainment division as it stood to spending over [...]
- Wednesday | Lady Gaga joins cast for season two
Joker 2 star Lady Gaga has reportedly joined the already-impressive cast actors confirmed for Netflix show's second season of Wednesday.
The second season of Wednesday is on the way, and several talented new faces have already been added to the show's roster to ensure that it builds on the success of its predecessor. We've already learned [...]
- Video Nasty episode 6 review | An epic finale
Video Nasty concludes on a pleasingly chaotic note. Here’s our Video Nasty episode 6 review.
Warning! Unlike previous episode reviews, this review will be full of spoilers for Video Nasty episode 6!
Video Nasty comes to an end with episode 6 and what a chapter to conclude on. Episode 5 ended with Zoe and Joe getting hit [...]
- Video Nasty episode 5 review | Less horror, more character development
After an action-packed previous instalment, BBC horror comedy Video Nasty slows the pace down. Here’s our review of episode 5:
Spoilers lie ahead.
Welcome to another review of BBC’s Video Nasty! We’re now up to episode 5 and I do hope you’re reading this after you’ve managed to pick your jaw off the floor after the shocking [...]
- Video Nasty episode 4 review | Whatever It Takes
After an explosive end to the previous episode, the latest chapter gives us more answers. Here’s our review of Video Nasty episode 4.
NB: Spoilers lie ahead.
I think most of us can agree that episode 3 of Video Nasty was quite something. Not only did Fangoria Fangirl turn out to be a boy named Topher, but [...]