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The Guardian - UK
The Guardian - UK
Entertainment
Catherine Shoard

Prince Andrew’s Newsnight interview to be the subject of a new film

Prince Andrew, the Duke of York, in 2021.
Prince Andrew, the Duke of York, in 2021. Photograph: Neil Hall/PA

A new film will tell the story of how producers at Newsnight, the BBC’s flagship current affairs programme, secured and executed their interview with Prince Andrew.

According to Deadline, Scoop, which will begin shooting in November, is being written by Peter Moffat, whose previous credits include the Bryan Cranston series Your Honor and the 2004 film Hawking, which won acclaim for star Benedict Cumberbatch as Stephen Hawking.

It is adapted from Scoops: Behind the Scenes of the BBC’s Most Shocking Interviews, a nonfiction book which gives insider information on how some of the broadcaster’s keynote interviews came about.

Written by Sam McAlister, a former Newsnight producer, the book was optioned by producer Hilary Salmon shortly after it was announced (it is published on 14 July).

Asked by Deadline whether rumours tipping Hugh Grant to play the central role were accurate, Salmon said that when it came to casting, “we have, of course, thoughts” but added “no one is attached”.

Representatives for Grant say the actor “has never heard of this project”.

The Newsnight interview, broadcast in November 2019 and conducted by Emily Maitlis, was widely perceived to be a remarkable coup for the programme and an ill-advised move by the prince.

In the interview, he sought to clear himself of wrongdoing linked to his association with Jeffrey Epstein, who had been found dead in his jail cell three months before.

Maitlis examined the relationship between the royal and the convicted offender, as well as his associate Ghislaine Maxwell, who was sentenced to 20 years for sex trafficking in June.

The prince expressed regret in the interview about his continued association with Epstein after the financier’s 2008 admission of soliciting underage sex. But he said he did not regret the friendship itself as it led to connections which were “actually very useful”.

He also offered no apology to the victims of Epstein’s crimes and made a number of statements protesting his own innocence over claims made by Virginia Giuffre that she was forced to have sex with him when she was 17.

These included his denial that they had had sex in 2001 saying he had been at Pizza Express in Woking that evening, and that Giuffre’s claims about dancing with him at a club in London while he was sweaty were false as he had temporarily lost the ability to sweat after an “adrenaline overdose” during the Falklands war.

Prince Andrew has largely disappeared from public life since the interview.

Moffat told Deadline that Scoop is “about how the BBC’s Newsnight team got the scoop, then the actual filming of it”, adding: “The other thing is, why did he agree to do it?”

“How was it that he decided it was a good idea to do a great big long interview with Emily Maitlis on the BBC?” Moffat continued.

The film will show how McAlister and two female colleagues “made the interview happen under real stress and pressure because once it was agreed it happened in secret. Almost nobody inside the BBC could know about it for fear it would leak”.

After the interview had wrapped, Maitlis offered the prince the opportunity to return in front of the cameras for reshoots, but he refused, apparently feeling the interview had gone “extremely well”, said Salmon.

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