Neil Morrissey: Working-class actors are ignored by ‘Oxbridge’ financiers
The Men Behaving Badly actor grew up in a care home in Stoke-on-Trent.
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Men Behaving Badly star Neil Morrissey said working-class actors are often unrepresented because productions are funded by “Oxbridge people”.
Morrissey, 58, grew up in a care home in Stoke-on-Trent and studied at London’s Guildhall School of Music and Drama with the help of a grant.
The actor, who as well as comedy Men Behaving Badly is known for dramas Waterloo Road and Line Of Duty, said wealthy financiers behind TV projects often “want their own”.
![Radio Times](http://content.assets.pressassociation.io/2021/03/22212526/3b4c4347-3f86-4ee5-9ee1-68c9d1c2a54c.jpg)
He told the Radio Times: “When Oxbridge people are pumping a lot of money into a production, they want their own.
“We’re (working-class actors) always under-represented, because it’s hard to sell a bunch of northerners to an American network when they consider Brits to be slightly fey James Bond-ish types, not people who work in a factory.”
However, Morrissey believes the pandemic could lead to a shake-up of British TV.
He said: “We just went through a period with all these glamorous series about spies or aspirational families.
“But I’ve got a feeling we’re going to head into a transition period, a bit like the kitchen sink era, where we’re going to want to know about the general public and the frontline workers. I think a lot of people are going to want to tell their stories.”
Read the full interview in the Radio Times.