Dream Wired
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Celebrity
  • DramaAlert
  • Gossip
  • Movie
  • TV
  • Music
  • Comics
  • Shop
  • Home
  • Celebrity
  • DramaAlert
  • Gossip
  • Movie
  • TV
  • Music
  • Comics
  • Shop
No Result
View All Result
Dream Wired
No Result
View All Result
Home Gossip

Candice Carty-Williams On Adapting ‘Queenie’ & Netflix’s ‘Champion’ – Deadline

Connie Marie by Connie Marie
January 11, 2024
in Gossip
0
Candice Carty-Williams On Adapting ‘Queenie’ & Netflix’s ‘Champion’ – Deadline
74
SHARES
1.2k
VIEWS
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter


You might also like

How Much Money She’s Worth Today – Hollywood Life

Emily Ratajkowski In Street Bikini Checked Out By Random Dude

Kris D. Lofton & Adrienne Walker Exclusive

EXCLUSIVE: Candice Carty-Williams was catapulted to fame by her hit novel Queenie, which made her the first Black author to win a top prize at the British Book Awards, but she tells Deadline adapting for TV has proved a seriously tough task.

The Channel 4–Hulu adaptation will air this year and Carty-Williams said she has been grappling to hold on to the true self of the character she created nearly a decade ago in the face of editorial wrangling.

She said she “can’t even explain how much harder it was” to adapt Queenie compared with writing her original BBC/Netflix series Champion, which drops on Netflix today.

“People buy something because they have an idea of what they want,” said the London-born auteur. “There was an idea of what they wanted to do with Queenie and for me it was like, ‘What?’. Of course it’s really important to adapt to the times and what’s going on but I’m never going to change my characters to adapt to what a group of people are telling me someone I created years ago should do. I will always fight for my characters as though they are real people.”

Queenie follows the life and loves of Queenie Jenkins, a vibrant, troubled 25-year-old British-Jamaican woman who is not having a very good year. The novel was published in 2019 to acclaim and the adaptation from Steve November’s Further South Productions in association with Lionsgate Television was commissioned by Channel 4 two years later, before being boarded by Hulu entertainment brand Onyx Collective last year.

‘Champion’

Champion

Champion

BBC/New Pictures Ltd/Ben Gregory-Ring

Working on musical drama Champion concurrent with Queenie acted as a “total balm” to the stress, added Carty-Williams.

“It kind of saved me in a way I think because I got to take myself into a world that I love so much, work with some amazing producers and see a different side of things,” she added. “I am wedded to the Champion characters but Queenie was my first big project and it’s how I made myself and made my name. I will always protect her.”

Champion drops on Netflix today and Carty-Williams said she hopes Americans’ love for British music and culture will help drive its success on the streamer.

Netflix jumped aboard Champion as co-producer around a year ago and it launched on the BBC last summer, garnering strong critic reviews and decent ratings.

The show is unique in its integration of British music, especially grime, and a number of artists and music producers worked on it to forge almost 40 songs across eight episodes, which Carty-Williams said could be the key to it taking off on Netflix. British artists such as Ray BLK, Shola Ama and Ghetts were involved and a record produced by Def Jam came out soon after the BBC launch.

“It’s nice for Americans to see what is going on over here,” said Carty-Williams. “From what I’ve seen and understand Americans have a real love for our music and culture and it’s also Jamaican culture [in the show], so American-Jamaicans can enjoy it. There are so many crossovers with American and British artists and I feel like they always show a lot of love to us.”

When creating the series, Carty-Williams was conscious she “didn’t want a musical but wanted the music to be situational.” “Attention spans are dwindling so you have to be realistic and know when things go wrong,” she added.

The author rejected the notion that Champion, which is set in her home of South London, is too ‘local’ a story to perform well globally, pointing out that the Queenie novel sold well in the States and was in fact launched there before the UK. Another London-set series, Top Boy, has proved one of Netflix’s biggest UK hits in recent years after it was picked up from Channel 4.

Starring up-and-comers such as Top Boy’s Malcolm Kamulete and singer Déja J Bowens, Champion focuses on the musical rivalry between two up-and-coming musicians, siblings Bosco and Vita, and the ramifications and fallout of which could drive their family apart in their quest for musical stardom.

Netflix was sold almost instantly, Carty-Williams said, as she recalled meeting execs from the streamer for the first time. “They asked what the music was going to be like and I just said, ‘Trust me’ and they said, ‘OK sure, we back you’.”

She heaped praise on Netflix’s involvement, saying that execs were close to the editorial – including weekly meetings – but “there was a difference between [this involvement] and a network telling you what to do.”

After toiling away on her first TV show and following many sleepless nights, Carty-Williams said she had been pleasantly surprised by the UK reaction to Champion. “It’s gone far and wide – I see clips of it around what I call the ‘WhatsApp Auntie network’,” she added. “I was at a funeral and a man came up to me and said, ‘Are you the empress who wrote Champion’ and that was really special to me because I know it has reached so many people. I try and come from a place of authenticity and truth, and I hope people can connect with that.”

The experience took a lot out of her. Not only was it her first writing gig on a TV series but she also show-ran, exec produced and was heavily involved with the music, spending nearly half a year on set in Birmingham and Jamaica.

“It’s hard for me to write and put so much into these characters and then be like, ‘OK there you go’,” said Carty-Williams. “I need to be in the mix.”

She posited the pros and cons of writing books versus TV, finding that television execs “go over things 500 times,” while with novels she would simply produce two or three drafts.

“But as much as TV is a challenge and a learning scape it drives me and excites me because I love how collaborative it is,” she added. “And books are very solitary. I’m writing another novel next and I’m dreading it.”



Source link

Tags: AdaptingCandiceCartyWilliamsChampionDeadlineNetflixsQueenie
Share30Tweet19
Connie Marie

Connie Marie

Recommended For You

How Much Money She’s Worth Today – Hollywood Life

by Connie Marie
November 9, 2025
0
How Much Money She’s Worth Today – Hollywood Life

Image Credit: Getty Images Kim Kardashian’s rise from reality TV star to billionaire business mogul is one of the most impressive success stories in pop culture. Known for...

Read more

Emily Ratajkowski In Street Bikini Checked Out By Random Dude

by Connie Marie
November 9, 2025
0
Emily Ratajkowski In Street Bikini Checked Out By Random Dude

Emily Ratajkowski turned heads in her bikini-infused look in a 2018-posted photo, and it looks like one bystander couldn't help but eye her up. Shortly before the pandemic,...

Read more

Kris D. Lofton & Adrienne Walker Exclusive

by Connie Marie
November 9, 2025
0
Kris D. Lofton & Adrienne Walker Exclusive

As Power Book IV: Force kicks off its third and final season, stars Kris D. Lofton and Adrienne Walker are telling BOSSIP what it takes to survive the...

Read more

Halsey Attacked On Stage Amid Rising Trend Of Fan Misconduct At Concerts

by Connie Marie
November 9, 2025
0
Halsey Attacked On Stage Amid Rising Trend Of Fan Misconduct At Concerts

Pop star Halsey is the latest artist to fall victim to inappropriate fan behavior after a disturbing incident during her Washington, D.C. show went viral. The 31-year-old singer,...

Read more

Big Sean Defends Jhene Aiko From Haters Amid Split Rumors

by Connie Marie
November 8, 2025
0
Big Sean Defends Jhene Aiko From Haters Amid Split Rumors

Source: PATRICK KOVARIK / Getty Big Sean may or may not be still in a relationship with his longtime girlfriend, Jhene Aiko, but he is making it clear...

Read more
Next Post
Win an Avenged Sevenfold + Foo Fighters Vinyl 2-Pack

Win an Avenged Sevenfold + Foo Fighters Vinyl 2-Pack

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Browse by Category

  • Celebrity
  • Comics
  • DramaAlert
  • Gossip
  • Movie
  • Music
  • TV
  • Uncategorized

CATEGORIES

  • Celebrity
  • Comics
  • DramaAlert
  • Gossip
  • Movie
  • Music
  • TV
  • Uncategorized
No Result
View All Result

Recent News

  • How Much Money She’s Worth Today – Hollywood Life
  • 911 – Día de los Muertos
  • I’m Clint Bentley, Director and Co-Writer of the film TRAIN DREAMS, AMA!

Copyright © 2025 DramaWired.
DramaWired is a content aggregator and not responsible for the content of external sites.

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Celebrity
  • DramaAlert
  • Gossip
  • Movie
  • TV
  • Music
  • Comics
  • Shop

Copyright © 2025 DramaWired.
DramaWired is a content aggregator and not responsible for the content of external sites.

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password?

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In