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9 March 2005
For my next job I shall realise a long-held ambition
– to appear in Coronation Street. On 29 March I go to the Granada
Studios in Manchester and team up with the regulars for 10 episodes as Mel Hutchwright, a dodgy novelist invited to meet the local reading group.
More I shouldn’t reveal, except that the script is hilarious and well up
to the Street’s current high standards as UK’s most popular television
programme.
About 15 years ago I turned down a previous offer to
visit the Street, as Elsie Tanner’s long-lost nephew. But I chickened out.
After all it can’t be easy to fit in with the expertise of the cast who
have made Coronation Street so watchable over so many years. Now, I am
nervous but raring to go. I don’t yet know what Mel will look like nor
sound like (a bit of my native northern accent maybe) but I’m already
studying his lines, as rehearsal time is scarce for the five-times-a-week
show.
Coronation Street is recorded just off Quay
Street in Manchester where I did some of my earliest theatre-going at the
Opera House. So it will be a little like going home. Once I’m done, I go
further north to the Lake District to record for BBC radio the 12 books of
William Wordsworth’s verse autobiography, “The Prelude”, first published
200 years ago. Under the direction of Robert Woof who is curator of Dove
Cottage where Wordsworth lived, I hope to record the poem in the place
where it was composed, another chance to use my northern accent, akin to
Wordsworth’s own.

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