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The Ballad of Wallis Island: ‘Anyone can hypothetically write Carey Mulligan into their little thing. She was top of our list'

The Ballad of Wallis Island: ‘Anyone can hypothetically write Carey Mulligan into their little thing. She was top of our list'

Irish Times29-05-2025

The Ballad of Wallis Island is an excellent new British comedy drama starring Tim Key, Tom Basden and
Carey Mulligan
. Almost two decades in the making, the film expands on the much-admired short film The One and Only Herb McGwyer Plays Wallis Island, from 2007.
'When we started writing it, me and Tom were living together and writing a lot,' says Key. 'We were young and prolific. We weren't two guys who'd had an idea and then decided to develop the characters. We had lots of different sketches that we were equally excited about. But for some reason this one felt like it could be longer than a sketch.
'We didn't have to work hard to find my character. He sort of existed as an amalgamation of teachers and uncles and venue managers. It felt very natural when we started doing it on camera. Then going back to it 17 years later was easy.'
Key is a versatile comedian, actor and writer – he's renowned for his distinctive absurdist poetry and deadpan bent. His script (which he wrote with Basden) and cheery central performance make for a note-perfect movie. Key plays Charles, an eccentric double lottery winner living alone on a remote island. To commemorate the anniversary of his wife's death, Charles hands over vast sums of money for a private concert reuniting McGwyer & Mortimer, a favourite folk duo.
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The balladeers, Herb McGwyer and Nell Mortimer – played by Basden and Mulligan – are also former romantic partners. That both believe they're performing solo leads to a strained reunion. Nell also arrives with her new husband.
'Obviously, it makes a difference having Carey Mulligan's name on the project,' says Key. 'It was quite a surreal conversation. It felt like quite a hypothetical conversation. Anyone is allowed to dream. Anyone can hypothetically write Carey Mulligan into their little thing. She was the top of our list. When we reached out to her, the fact that she knew who we were and was amenable to reading the script was very exciting. From start to finish she was just incredible.'
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A hit at Sundance last January, The Ballad of Wallis Island has been praised by US critics as a 'sublime, adorable comedy' and 'the sort of hilarious heart-warmer that only comes around once or twice a year to offer a blessed break from darkness, snobbery and streaming schlock'.
'We couldn't have been happier with the way the Americans responded to the film,' says Key. 'It felt like a quirk of the universe that somehow this very British film would start in America. It was very surreal that the first time we saw it was in an auditorium with 1,400 people in Sundance. The first 30 seconds weren't easy, but then they started to laugh.'
British panel shows such as Taskmaster and Richard Osman's House of Games are graced by a wealth of witty folk, but only one of that merry-go-round of presenters and panellists has published two volumes of lockdown-themed verse.
'I went up the garden centre,' Key's poem Flora opens. 'Finally! I bought a cactus and some mint things/ and asked the cashier out. After work, we went up the park. I couldn't kiss her because my tongue was/ less than two metres long.'
Starting with the weightily titled Instructions, Guidelines, Tutelage, Suggestions, Other Suggestions and Examples Etc: An Attempted Book, Key has published six poetry collections and released a poetry album, Tim Key: With a String Quartet. On a Boat.
His musings greatly enlivened Charlie Brooker's Screenwipe, the much-missed TV review.
'That was a very interesting job,' says Key. 'I'd never written poetry prescriptively before. I usually just go to the pub for last orders and scribble. I definitely didn't know whether I'd be able to write about the news and serious themes. I don't really follow the news. Mostly I was constantly trying to work out what my angle was so I wouldn't be a complete disgrace.'
Wanting to do comedy was like watching Wimbledon and thinking, Oh, I wouldn't mind competing at Wimbledon
Key, who is 48, studied Russian at the University of Sheffield. After graduating he became involved with Footlights, the Cambridge sketch troupe, despite not attending that university. Pretending to be doing a PhD, he teamed up with Basden, Stefan Golaszewski and Lloyd Woolf to form the sketch troupe Cowards.
'I don't think it was particularly easy for my parents,' he says. 'They see a lot of potential in you and helped you to go to university. I don't know what they thought I would do, but trying to be a comedian probably wasn't on their list. They were incredibly supportive, but occasionally I'd hear phrases about journalism or conversation about law. At some point, three or four years in, I was on Radio 4 and they could tell people in the village.'
In 2009 Key's solo show The Slutcracker won the Edinburgh Comedy Award. He has gone on to perform seven more solo shows.
'It was all very unexpected,' he says. 'I had a millimetre of the end of one toe in the comedy world when I was 24. When I was 23 I would have said I had absolutely no chance. I thought you had to have friends or family in the industry. I never felt that it was a real thing. I felt like I was living my life and things like The Two Ronnies were happening in a completely different universe. Wanting to do comedy was like watching Wimbledon and thinking, Oh, I wouldn't mind competing at Wimbledon.'
In 2010 Key appeared as Sidekick Simon on Mid Morning Matters with Alan Partridge, an internet incarnation of Steve Coogan's satirical creation. Key has reprised the role in the BBC series This Time with Alan Partridge and in the 2013 film
Alan Partridge: Alpha Papa
. It was a head-spinning experience for a former schoolboy fan of Partridge's first TV appearances in the parody news show The Day Today.
'It was petrifying,' says Key. 'I watched The Day Today as it came out. I loved Chris Morris and Armando Iannucci and Rebecca Front. I think you'd have to have a screw loose not to be worried. You don't want to ruin a franchise and let down your 16-year-old self. So it was quite high pressure, going to work that first day. And leaving work as well. I didn't know whether I'd done a good job. Now I'm very comfortable. I loved doing it.'
The Ballad of Wallis Island: Tom Basden, Carey Mulligan and Tim Key. Photograph: Focus Features
The Ballad of Wallis Island is Key's first leading role since a series of big-screen appearances that began with The Double, in 2013, and continued through Greed, See How They Run and Wicked Little Letters to, most recently, Bong Joon Ho's
Mickey 17
. It's not quite Mulligan's glittering CV, but he knows his way around a set.
'It boggles the mind how many people were in the make-up team for Mickey 17,' says Key. 'Our film was a more familiar thing, where you're dealing with day-to-day things with maybe 17 other people, not 400. But someone from Mickey 17's make-up department would easily have done another film of our size and then probably three more in the last year. So we surround ourselves with the best people we can possibly find.'
He has racked up additional TV credits on Time Trumpet, Inside No 9, The Witchfinder, Taskmaster and The End of the F**ing World. No wonder he gets recognised on the street. But for what?
'Peep Show is very high in the mix, just from doing two or three episodes,' he says. 'Obviously, Partridge. In London, sometimes people have seen me in a show. And, during lockdown, me and Alex Horne and Mark Watson did an online parlour game called No More Jockeys. That rose through the rankings of things people know me for. I think there's still a kind of cult following for that.'
The Ballad of Wallis Island is in cinemas from Friday, May 30th

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David Beckham to finally be awarded knighthood after string of near misses & disappointments over more than a decade
David Beckham to finally be awarded knighthood after string of near misses & disappointments over more than a decade

The Irish Sun

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  • The Irish Sun

David Beckham to finally be awarded knighthood after string of near misses & disappointments over more than a decade

DAVID Beckham is to finally be awarded a knighthood, The Sun can reveal. The footie legend, 50, will become a 'Sir' in the King's Birthday Honours list next week. 8 David Beckham is to finally be awarded a knighthood - with wife Victoria set to be known as Lady Beckham Credit: Getty 8 The ex-England and Man United star has longed for a knighthood for years Credit: PA 8 David has struck up a firm friendship with King Charles Credit: PA His Spice Girl wife Victoria will be known as Lady Beckham. Ex-England and Man United star Becks has longed for a knighthood for years. The news will also bring some joy to the Beckham household amid a rift with their eldest son Brooklyn and his wife Politicians and fellow sports stars have spent years calling for the man known as READ MORE ON DAVID BECKHAM The father of four — who played 115 times for And the monarch dropped a potential hint last month that his wait was coming to an end. Countryside-loving Becks, who is an ambassador of The King's Foundation, was seen Coveted honour He shares a passion for horticulture with Charles and sported the King's rose in his lapel. Most read in Football Charles asked him: 'You got it, didn't you?' Becks replied: 'It was incredible, thank you. It was very kind.' David Beckham meets with King Charles at Chelsea Flower Show Letters inviting recipients to accept honours are sent out weeks in advance - and one may have already landed on David's mat at the time of their chat. He was first put forward for a knighthood in 2011 after helping to secure the London 2012 Olympics. But he was Becks retired from playing in 2013, and his finances were cleared by the taxman at least four years ago - paving the way for him to finally get the coveted honour. 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A Phrase that Passeth Understanding – Frank McNally on a rude biblical euphemism
A Phrase that Passeth Understanding – Frank McNally on a rude biblical euphemism

Irish Times

time4 hours ago

  • Irish Times

A Phrase that Passeth Understanding – Frank McNally on a rude biblical euphemism

When asking readers for the name or other examples of the rhetorical device used in such phrases 'a bigger bollocks never put his arm through a coat' (Diary, yesterday), I thought Shakespeare might feature in responses. I wasn't quite expecting the Bible. But there it is anyway, thanks to Charlie Goldsmith, who emails from Lusaka to draw my attention to the First Book of Samuel, verse 25:22. In the King James version, at least, that has a similar case of what Charlie calls 'aggression through circumlocution'. The context is a future King David vowing to kill all his enemies and invoking divine vengeance against any who escape him. Or as he puts it: 'So and more also do God unto the enemies of David, if I leave of all that pertain to him by the morning light any that pisseth against the wall'. READ MORE I don't recall ever hearing the last verb there mentioned at Mass. But as I now know, the phrase '[any] that pisseth against the wall' occurs repeatedly in the King James Bible. And always, it just means 'men and boys'. Walls are not the point, per se - it's more to do with the angle of urination practised by those being targeted: ie, they're not women. Even so, it reminded me of the 2016 European Football Championships, when thousands of Irish football fans, mostly male, congregated for several nights outside several neighbouring bars in Paris, where nobody had thought of proving portaloos. The walls of one local side street, Rue Pierre Haret, were turned into what the mairie called 'une pissotière géant'. Whether they knew it or not, some irritated residents were advocating vengeance along the lines of 1 Samuel 25:22, and not just as a figure of speech. *** It was less of a surprise that the late Hugh Leonard should feature in responses to my question, as he did in an email from Don Kavanagh. But by coincidence, his example covers similar ground to the Bible. It's from the memoir Home Before Night, where Leonard is returning to visit his elderly father in Dalkey (then as now, clearly, a place apart from the city that surrounds it). Despite increasing frailty, he finds the old man still fiercely proud of his independence: ''I blacked the range yesterday,' he would boast when I came to see him. 'And go out and look at the garden. Fine heads of cabbage that a dog from Dublin never pissed on'.' *** Getting back to James 'Skin-the-Goat' Fitzharris, whose 'I came from Sliabh Buidhe, where a crow never flew over the head of an informer' was the primary cause of my speculations on rhetoric, another reader suggests a sobering explanation. Gerry Gallagher doesn't put a name on the use of an apparently unconnected detail to emphasise a main point. But he suggests the avian image was not completely extraneous, having a grim origin in 'the association between crows and the gallows'. His email adds: 'The cabbie was born well within human memory of the 1798 rising and must have heard stories of the public hangings and evisceration of many of those judged complicit with the rebels.' *** It's not like James Joyce to raise the tone of a column that has been dominated by the theme of urination. But to the continuing mystery of the anonymous postcard in Ulysses, and the many possible meanings of 'U.P.: up' (also in yesterday's Diary), long-time correspondent Terry Moylan adds another layer of complexity. That too dates from the 1798 Rising, when the word 'up', as in 'risen', took on a political significance. Hence, for example, a ballad of the period, entitled 'A Vernal Ode', which might have passed for a reflection on Spring, unless you were in the know. An early verse goes like this: 'Each plant erects its pendant head/Each flower expands its cup/The very weeds in every bed/Set impudently - Up.' 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Then the squire has a brainwave: 'Union with the Papists, now I have it.' Although of radical politics, Porter was never proven to have been a member of the United Irishmen, or to have taken up arms in the rebellion. Even so, he was 'up' before the judge, in every sense, and hanged in July 1798.

Aidan Gillen and Ella Lily Hyland to star new crime drama Tall Tales & Murder
Aidan Gillen and Ella Lily Hyland to star new crime drama Tall Tales & Murder

Irish Times

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  • Irish Times

Aidan Gillen and Ella Lily Hyland to star new crime drama Tall Tales & Murder

Tall Tales & Murder, a new darkly comedic crime drama from the writer of Love/Hate, has gone into production in Dublin. The drama, which stars Ella Lily Hyland and Aidan Gille n, has been commissioned for two series by RTÉ and BBC Northern Ireland in association with Screen Ireland, with the first six-part run due to premiere in 2026. Tall Tales & Murder has been co-created by Stuart Carolan, the writer and creator of RTÉ's hit gangster series, and Chris Addison, who starred in political satire The Thick of It and has directed episodes of Veep and his Sky comedy Breeders. The series, which is based on the eight-book Dublin Trilogy series by Caimh McDonnell, will be made for RTÉ and BBC by British production company Avalon in association with Ireland's Metropolitan Pictures. READ MORE The one-hour episodes will be directed by Addison and Irish director Neasa Hardiman, with Avalon distributing the show internationally. Alongside Hyland – the fast-rising star of Netflix's Black Doves – and Gillen, who previously worked with Carolan on Love/Hate, the cast includes Philippa Dunne and Packy Lee. 'I've been a fan of the brilliant Chris Addison since The Thick of It – it's been incredible fun working with him to bring this insane story to life,' said Carolan, the writer and one of the executive producers of Tall Tales & Murder. Addison, who will executive produce as well as direct, said he was 'frankly giddy with delight to get to team up with the twisted and highly original mind' of Carolan to create the show. 'We've taken Caimh's wonderful novel as a jumping off point and ended up with what I like to think of as a dark and delicious screwball drama.' David Crean, who was confirmed as RTÉ head of drama this week after previously serving in the role on an interim basis, said the series had gone into production after 'a great development process' with Carolan and Addison. 'The scripts are fantastic, as is the cast. RTÉ is excited to be collaborating with such brilliant broadcast partners to bring this great series to audiences on a national and international stage.' Eddie Doyle, head of content commissioning for BBC Northern Ireland, described the series as storytelling 'at its darkest, funniest and most surreal', while Rob Aslett, executive producer for Avalon, said the scripts 'created a wildly original crime drama that shines a light on a modern Ireland'. McDonnell, who was born in Limerick and raised in Dublin, is a former stand-up comedian and television writer who published his first novel in the Dublin Trilogy detective series in 2016.

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