
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


Kirsty Young's castaway this week is the screen writer Paul Abbott. He has written some of the most controversial and successful television programmes of the past decade. Shameless, Clocking Off and State of Play all flowed from his pen and have won him bags of awards.
But he was driven to write as a response to the chaotic and traumatic childhood he'd suffered. One of eight children, both parents had left the family home by the time he was 11, leaving his older sister to bring them up. They had a near-feral existence, and lived, says Paul, like rats. At 15 he attempted suicide and ended up in a psychiatric ward. After that, without wanting to or really being aware it was happening, he wrote as a way of letting out the rage he felt inside him.
He was quickly able to turn this writing into short stories, radio plays and film scripts and to sell them. Now he is credited with making television the 'new National Theatre'. But it's not his greatest achievement - he is proudest of his successful marriage to Saskia, his wife of eighteen years, and of their two children.
[Taken from the original programme material for this archive edition of Desert Island Discs]
Favourite track: Town Called Malice by The Jam
By BBC Radio 44.6
128128 ratings
Kirsty Young's castaway this week is the screen writer Paul Abbott. He has written some of the most controversial and successful television programmes of the past decade. Shameless, Clocking Off and State of Play all flowed from his pen and have won him bags of awards.
But he was driven to write as a response to the chaotic and traumatic childhood he'd suffered. One of eight children, both parents had left the family home by the time he was 11, leaving his older sister to bring them up. They had a near-feral existence, and lived, says Paul, like rats. At 15 he attempted suicide and ended up in a psychiatric ward. After that, without wanting to or really being aware it was happening, he wrote as a way of letting out the rage he felt inside him.
He was quickly able to turn this writing into short stories, radio plays and film scripts and to sell them. Now he is credited with making television the 'new National Theatre'. But it's not his greatest achievement - he is proudest of his successful marriage to Saskia, his wife of eighteen years, and of their two children.
[Taken from the original programme material for this archive edition of Desert Island Discs]
Favourite track: Town Called Malice by The Jam

7,608 Listeners

1,047 Listeners

396 Listeners

5,480 Listeners

1,796 Listeners

1,880 Listeners

1,754 Listeners

1,043 Listeners

2,097 Listeners

1,981 Listeners

79 Listeners

71 Listeners

52 Listeners

37 Listeners

45 Listeners

56 Listeners

3,156 Listeners

101 Listeners

1,638 Listeners

82 Listeners

49 Listeners

159 Listeners

500 Listeners

27 Listeners

715 Listeners