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Novels often have leisurely openings a TV drama needs an arresting opening.
Andrew Davies
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Andrew Davies
Age: 88
Born: 1936
Born: September 30
Screenwriter
Writer
Rhiwbeina
Andrew Wynford Davies
Needs
Leisurely
Arresting
Openings
Novels
Opening
Drama
Novel
Often
More quotes by Andrew Davies
You're stuck with being yourself, so the important thing is to find people who like that.
Andrew Davies
'Affinity' is beautiful and intense, with no laughs. It's a rather delicate and emotional love story, with a spooky element.
Andrew Davies
People like bonnets. I don't think you can under-estimate that.
Andrew Davies
I used to have this Mercedes, a dark blue 450SLC, which was the most beautiful car. I'd like to have another unusual, beautiful car.
Andrew Davies
The most moving scene for me in 'Pride and Prejudice' is the Pemberley music room scene: Elizabeth has just saved Darcy's sister from embarrassment and confusion, and as the music plays on, Darcy's look of gratitude becomes a look of love, which we see reciprocated in Elizabeth's eyes.
Andrew Davies
I always do like to write love stories, even if they end tragically.
Andrew Davies
People in the BBC are always dying to get out of their open-plan offices.
Andrew Davies
I'm not one of these people who say how much better American drama is than English. I find it mostly too American, except for The Sopranos, which I think is the best thing.
Andrew Davies
I had a mother who was very emotionally demanding, wanting to be the centre of attention. As they say in EastEnders, she thought it was all about 'er. I spent a lot of time trying to work out what was going on.
Andrew Davies
As a fairly innocent teenager, growing up in a village in Wales, I just thought, God, I would like to go and hang about Soho and write great poetry and try to avoid drinking myself to death.
Andrew Davies
The older I get, the more fun it is to write young people. It's just a holiday from what is becoming old age, really.
Andrew Davies
I suppose I have the tastes of someone who teaches at a university in the provinces.
Andrew Davies
I got quite cross when I heard about Emma Thompson adapting 'Sense and Sensibility.' It was absolutely childish of me, but I thought, 'I should be doing that. They didn't even ask me.' Some mistake, surely.
Andrew Davies
I had a very high opinion of my father's judgement of things and he said, You better get a job that pays the bills because a writer doesn't make any money. If possible, get a job that allows you to write in your spare time.
Andrew Davies
I was getting rewarded for writing well, from about the age of five or six. A teacher would say, Look what Andrew has written, and I thought, Maybe I could be a writer.
Andrew Davies
I adore doing classic adaptations, but I also feel their frustrations and their limitations.
Andrew Davies
I'm absolutely delighted if people think of me as a reliable purveyor of quality period stuff.
Andrew Davies
Look at Jane Austen. Her characters derive in a reasonably straight line from fairy tales.
Andrew Davies
I remain, however, fairly optimistic for the future of period drama because it's just such a popular thing.
Andrew Davies
The writer in movies is about as low as you can get and you really are a hired hand. You are paid a lot of money to be treated like dirt.
Andrew Davies