Showing posts with label Mantel. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Mantel. Show all posts

Tuesday, 8 January 2013

Mantel 'excited' by adaptations of her novels

7 January 2013 Last updated at 11:48 GMT By Sinead Garvan Entertainment reporter, BBC News Hilary Mantel Hilary Mantel's novels have won numerous prizes Hilary Mantel has told the BBC she is "excited" by the forthcoming stage and TV adaptations of her award-winning novels.

Wolf Hall and its sequel Bring Up The Bodies both won the Man Booker Prize, with the latter picking up the Costa novel prize last week.

Tony award-nominated writer Mike Poulton, who has worked with the Royal Shakespeare Company many times, is writing the stage adaptation.

The BBC announced last year that Bafta award-winning screen writer Peter Straughan was working on the TV version, which is expected to be shown in six-parts on BBC Two.

Mantel is currently writing the third instalment in the historical trilogy about Thomas Cromwell, titled The Mirror and The Light.

The stage production is actually two plays, this is what we are hoping to do. One play of Wolf Hall and it will be followed the next evening by Bring Up The Bodies so you have got a mini-cycle there.

The TV adaptation is six hours, so that's a very different pace at which to tell the story. Peter Straughan is still writing it and he is now getting along very fast so we should have a first draft of all the episodes very soon.

I think you have to accept that when your story goes into a different medium, it needs to be told in a radically different way. You have to shake up all the elements of it and watch them come down again.

I am trying to help out but not be a control freak. I don't want to bulldoze the whole project and be seen to be nudging elbows. I am there for people to talk to if I can help out.

I do believe it is possible to produce a version for either stage or TV which is accurate as far as the history goes but is also dramatically strong. I don't see any contradiction between those two aims and because we have excellent people working on both projects, I think that's something we can pull off.

Peter Straughan Screenwriter Peter Straughan won a Bafta for Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy

Well it is too soon to say what it will be in total but I am reading the scripts as they evolve.

To me, it is more exciting particularly to have a stage version because I love the theatre. I suppose one of the things I regret is that I've never tried writing a stage play.

I am very glad someone else is putting in those hours, applying their experience, their craftsmanship and - if it does eventually come to the stage - that, to me, perhaps after winning all these glorious prizes, will be absolutely the best thing that could happen for my books.

I have had little time to write since the publication of Bring Up The Bodies last May. It's coming along at the pace of one good idea a day, some of those ideas are very big, some of those are very small and some of them will turn out to be not such good ideas. Considering how little time I have had, I am quite happy with the way it is going.

What I am not prepared to do is predict when it will be ready. Fiction is so surprising, you never know what a book will do. I am really prepared for anything. Wolf Hall and Bring Up The Bodies are very different books and I expect this one will be again.

I do want above all things to be working on my new book because I have a feeling that it has surprises for me. There are things about it I don't know and I am curious to find them out, I want to know what I will write.

I'm not thinking about how this book can match up to its predecessors, I am not letting the whole prize thing get to me in that sense because it is starting again.

Every day for a writer should feel like that, so when you come down to sit at your desk, you are not remembering the prizes or the reviews or the critics, you are just trying to solve the problems in front of you.


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Sunday, 6 January 2013

Hilary Mantel wins Costa novel prize

2 January 2013 Last updated at 20:06 GMT Hilary Mantel Hilary Mantel's Bring Up The Bodies also won the Booker Prize in 2012 Hilary Mantel has won the 2012 Costa novel prize for her Booker Prize-winning book Bring Up The Bodies.

The judges described the historical story as "quite simply the best novel of the year".

Kathleen Jamie won the poetry category for her collection The Overhaul beating newcomer Sean Borodale.

Each winner will receive a £5,000 prize. Maggot Moon by the former illustrator Sally Gardiner took the Children's award.

The book sees her hero Standish take a stand against a ruthless regime which has taken his friend away.

The judges called it "truly outstanding with a unique voice, it's a magnificent book."

Sally Gardiner has described the award as "the most phenomenal" experience since becoming a full time writer.

"Maggot Moon is a book I've always wanted to write and Standish has been waiting to be written for years. It is thrilling that the story now stands defiant in the world" she said.

"It is a great honour to have won this award, and for me, it goes towards proving the power of dreams.'

Husband and wife team Mary and Bryan Talbot from Sunderland jointly won best biography for the graphic novel Dotter of Her Father's Eyes.

It is part personal history, part biography and tells the story of two interweaving father-daughter relationships.

Graphic novels were included in the shortlists for the Costa Book Awards for the first time in 2012.

It is Hilary Mantel's second award for Bring Up The Bodies, a historical novel about Thomas Cromwell, which also won the 2012 Man Booker Prize.

She became the first living UK author to receive the prize twice, having won it for its prequel Wolf Hall.

"I'm delighted, it is lovely and this is the first time I've have featured on a Costa shortlist I think, I've certainly never won one of the Costa prizes before" she told the BBC.

Mantel said the awards were not making her complacent: "I'm always greedy for readers, like every author.

"I had a letter from one the other day which confused Thomas Cromwell and Oliver Cromwell and when that is going on, I think there is work to be done."

Mantel beat off competition from James Meek's The Heart Broke In and Stephen May's Life! Death! Prizes!

Debut author Francesca Segal won the first novel category for The Innocents.

It is the story of childhood sweethearts, preparing to get married when a cousin turns up and puts temptation in one of their ways.

"It felt hard to believe that this affectionate, witty novel was the author's first," the judges said.

All five books, which were selected from more than 550 entries, will now compete for the 2012 Costa Book of the Year, which will be announced in London on 29 January.

A panel of judges including actress Jenny Agutter, comedian Mark Watson and chaired by the BBC Radio 4 broadcaster, Dame Jenni Murray will decide which is the overall winner - who will receive an additional £30,000 prize money.

Last year's Costa Book Prize went to Andrew Miller for his novel, Pure.


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