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ITV announces new take on Jekyll and Hyde

A new Jekyll & Hyde is coming in 2015, along with ghouls, zombies, werewolves and vampires.

2014-11-25_1121UK broadcaster ITV has commissioned a new take on the classic Jekyll & Hyde saga.

To be written by novelist Charlie Higson (The Fast Show, Randall and Hopkirk (Deceased), The Young James Bond books, The Enemy) it will be ten-part action adventure drama with ghouls, zombies, werewolves and vampires.

Inspired by Louis Stevenson’s characters it will combine mystery, fantasy, horror and sci-fi, with the theme “Man is not truly one, but truly two.”

ITV Studios Director of Drama Francis Hopkinson (Lucan, Wallander, DCI Banks) will executive produce with Higson and Foz Allan (Wolfblood, The Dumping Ground, Robin Hood) is Series Producer.

“It’s an exciting challenge to take Stevenson’s work and use it as the basis for a new Jekyll & Hyde,” said Higson. “So many superheroes with secret dual personalities have been brought to life thanks to Jekyll & Hyde. He’s one of literatures most important and influential characters and it’s a privilege to be rediscovering him.”

ITV’s Director of Drama Steve November and Head of Drama Series, Jane Hudson said, “Charlie’s vivid and compelling scripts cleverly introduce a brilliant set of characters to a new generation of viewers,”

“We’re thrilled to be commissioning Jekyll & Hyde for a modern day audience.”

In 2007 James Nesbitt starred in a modern-day Jekyll for BBC.

Set in 1930’s London at a time of Hollywood glamour, aerodynamic cars and monster movies, the drama will pay homage to the Stevenson novel, and focus on the young, attractive, troubled hero, Robert Jekyll, the grandson of the original doctor.

At the heart of the drama is Robert Jekyll’s quest to discover his real identity, his true family history and the nature of his ‘curse’. One actor will play the lead role Jekyll transforming into Hyde in moments of extreme anger, stress and when his or the lives of others are threatened.

Higson’s Jekyll is a young, sensitive and naïve man of intellect and morality, a well meaning if slightly repressed character who slips between his two personas unwillingly. Hyde is a totally different person; a superhero with super powers, great strength, speed and invulnerability. He is confident, risk-taking and lives life on the edge. His self-destructive nature gets him into trouble, and yet he is an incredibly powerful force. He is a man of action who gets things done despite the consequences! Throughout the series we will witness Jekyll wrestling with the dark, brooding personality of Hyde as he struggles to come to terms with his superhero alter ego.

In the opening episode Jekyll is a newly qualified doctor living with his foster parents in India. He knows nothing of his family history or his inherited condition, which his foster father, Dr Vishal Najaran, is controlling with medication. The drama follows his path to discovery, which coincides with the transformative powers of his condition growing stronger and more disruptive. His journey will take him into a dark and unforgiving place, as his alter ego seems capable of anything. At the same time there are shadowy forces trying to find Jekyll and the source of his powers.

Jekyll & Hyde will be directed by Colin Teague (Being Human, The Town, Sinbad) with production in India commencing in January 2015 and filming in London from February until July 2015.

CGI will play a huge part in the main character’s transformation from Jekyll into Hyde and the subsequent superhero sequences when the darker side of our hero emerges and demonstrates extraordinary strength and agility. Certain characters will also be created by CGI techniques, as there are no limits to what will be imagined by the production team.

Jekyll & Hyde will feature several recurring characters, some human, and some freaks of nature. Monsters will thrive throughout the series and there’ll be spooky creatures, ghouls, zombies, werewolves and vampires.

Charlie Higson is known for The Fast Show, Randall and Hopkirk (Deceased), The Young James Bond books and his current horror series for teenagers, The Enemy.

8 Responses

  1. David Knox November 25, 2014 at 6:06 pm –

    “I really shouldn’t name drop but I attended a lunch with James Nesbitt yesterday. Friendly bloke.”

    Have always been a big fan of James, going back to his Cold Feet days..
    Comes across as such a personable, easygoing bloke and love the Irish brogue.

  2. Rather think they’ve lost the central idea of RLS’s story-no supernatural monsters, just us-the rest of it is very derivative of many series currently airing including ‘Penny Dreadful’ in particular.

  3. I second MuchTB – Nesbitt was fabulous in the 2007 series. Fantastic if anyone wants to check it out (and you should). Shame they didn’t do a season two…

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