We all love the Horrible Histories show and I really wish we'd had something this cool when I was at school!
Diane Parkes spent some time with Horrible Histories author Terry Deary
Q&A
WITH HORRIBLE HISTORIES AUTHOR TERRY DEARY
By
Diane Parkes
Q: When you wrote your first Horrible Histories
did you ever imagine the idea would go on to be so successful?
A: Yes, I think most authors believe their work
will be a huge success even though most books disappear from print after a
couple of months. It’s that hope that keeps us going. When I wrote my very
first fiction book 38 years ago my publisher said, ‘writing is like a sausage
machine and you have to keep stuffing in at one end so something comes out the
other end – it is like a process’. I kept writing book after book – fifty
fiction titles before HH came along - but I never imagined I would have a
series which would become first of all iconic and secondly that would still be
selling 20 years later Roald Dahl has managed that, but I can’t think of anyone
else who is still selling so well. What usually happens is that people have
sensational ideas and they sell really well for a while but they do tend to
come and go. It is a shame you can’t predict which are the ones that will last!
Q: What do you believe is behind the popularity
of Horrible Histories?
A: Nobody had done anything like them before and
they filled a desperate need. There were fact books for children but they
tended to be written by experts on the subject. They knew their history but
they didn’t have a clue how to write about it for children. So with Horrible
Histories, instead of an expert who couldn’t write, they approached a
children’s author who knew nothing about history. I get all my facts from
research. I do my research and say ‘you will never guess what I discovered’ and
‘phwoar, this is great’. It is actually a simple answer. I say I am not an
expert in history and this is why they work. Down the years people have tried
to copy Horrible Histories by doing funny fact books but they never get it
right because they use experts not writers.
Q: Have you ever found any facts which were too
horrible to include?
A: Well the publishers have said so. For example
when the Vikings invaded they became settlers and had families here. But these
settlers were as vicious as the Vikings and when they invaded a Viking village
they would find a Viking child, swing it by its legs and bash its brains out.
But when I told the publishers they said ‘we can’t have that’ which is strange
as I can’t see it is any worse than some of the other parts which have been
included.
On the other hand there are facts which some
people feel you can’t talk about, say in World War Two. For example when we came
to the television series, we were sitting round the table and we talked all
about the bombings and the Blackout and got that sorted. Then we got to the
Holocaust and there were six or seven pages and they read them in silence and
then said ‘of course we can’t do that’. I am actually quite proud of the fact
that television can’t do the Holocaust but I can.
Q: Why do Horrible Histories work so well on
stage?
A: We work really well as a team. BSC
actor/director Neal Foster is very knowledgeable and experienced in children’s
theatre. BSC has been going over 20 years now. I
have been a professional actor for 40 years. So, between us, we know what we
are doing. We are not trying to write literary stuff. It isn’t the books on
stage, we are not determined to be true to the spirit of the books, we are
writing for theatre. So it is fresh and original.
Q: So what next for Terry Deary?
A: I am working on some adult history books in a
new series called “Dangerous Days”. The first was published in November 2013
and was entitled “Dangerous Days in the Roman Empire”. That will be followed in
2014 and 2015 by books on Victorian Railways, Elizabeth I and Ancient Egypt...
They will have a layer of humour and will be a bit gruesome. They are more or
less Horrible Histories for adults but we can never ever use that title. There
will also be new Horrible Histories titles while I’m planning movies and
television series based on my adult books and my fiction.
Q: After all this research are you now an
accidental history expert?
A: Definitely not. I know very little about
history because I can’t keep it all in my brain. I have only got about three
brain cells. I often forget what I have written because I can’t hold all those
facts. I pick up a Horrible Histories book, maybe to revise it, and I read
something and think ‘I never knew that!’
But I can be an anorak with facts. I was watching
Horrible Histories on television and up came the Vile Victorians and along came
Burke and Hare, the body snatchers. And I was jumping up and down and shouting
at the television ‘no, they were 1827 – 12 years before Victoria came to the
throne. They weren’t Vile Victorians!’ Now that is anorak.
Horrible Histories:
Groovy Greeks & Incredible Invaders with amazing all new 3D Bogglevision special
effects is on tour around the UK in 2015/16 & will play at Norwich Theatre Royal from Wednesday 22nd April to Sunday 26th April 2015. Tickets can be booked by calling the box office on 01603 630000 or by visiting https://secure.theatreroyalnorwich.co.uk/Online/
No comments:
Post a Comment
Thanks for taking the time to read my blog. Please feel free to leave a comment, I'd love to read what you have to say!