By Radio Times staff

Published: Thursday, 21 October 2021 at 12:00 am


By: Alex Moreland

“I loved every minute of it,” says Patrick Ness of his Doctor Who spin-off Class. “I’d be doing it now if they’d let me.”

Following a group of students at Coal Hill school, Class was Doctor Who’s third spin-off since its 2005 revival. With a celebrated young adult author at the helm, Class was a series in the same vein as Buffy the Vampire Slayer, always bursting with ideas and deeply invested in its characters. After the success of The Sarah Jane Adventures and Torchwood, Class seemed set to reach similar heights – until it didn’t.

Five years since the show aired, creator Patrick Ness, director Ed Bazalgette, and stars Greg Austin, Sophie Hopkins, and Jordan Renzo look back on Class – reflecting on its complicated relationship with Doctor Who, their experiences making the show, its untimely cancellation, and the series two episodes we never saw. 

Class began life when Patrick Ness was asked to write for Doctor Who. “It was a bit unexpected,” he remembers. “[The BBC] approached me to see if I’d be interested in writing episodes of Doctor Who, but I declined, feeling like I really wanted to work on my own creations at that point. To my surprise, they said, ‘Well, we’ve got this other idea…’”

“They had been inspired by The Caretaker, where the Doctor was undercover at Coal Hill. Their first idea was to have another caretaker-type character,” Ness continues. “I remember they’d mentioned Frank Skinner as a possible idea – but I said, with the greatest respect to Frank Skinner, if you do that in a show for teens, what you’ve got is a bunch of teens waiting around for an adult to take action.”

“I argued that you’d have to get it away from what Sarah Jane Adventures did so beautifully and make it for older teens, who are all about having their own agency and making their own choices. In other words, they’re the centre of the show, not the authority character.”

“They liked that idea, and my pitch for the show came together really fast” says Ness. “It’s how I knew it was working, ideas came fast and furious. Which they don’t always.”

Ed Bazalgette – who had recently directed Doctor Who series nine episodes The Girl Who Died and The Woman Who Lived – soon joined the series as lead director.

“On [Doctor Who] I was working with [Class producer] Derek Ritchie. We had a good rapport and I really enjoyed working with Derek: he has great instincts, insightful and supportive,” explains Bazalgette. “Later in the year there was a call from [executive producer] Brian Minchin and we started talking Class. Over Christmas I read the first script and also A Monster Calls and More Than This to get more of a sense of Patrick’s writing.”

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Writer and screenwriter Patrick Ness (Getty)

Bazalgette directed the first three episodes of Class – For Tonight We Might Die, The Coach with the Dragon Tattoo, and Nightvisiting – and was heavily involved in the initial stages of production. “As lead director you come in and become an integral part of setting up the series,” he explains. “Tone, style, locations, feeding back on scripts, casting – you’re immersed in the process.”

“Casting is always such an important process,” continues Bazalgette. “First and foremost, you’re deciding who will play your characters but there’s so much more to it. You’re hearing scenes out loud often for the first time, you’re getting all these nuances in the way scenes are performed, and it’s exciting seeing the script start coming off the page. Then there’s the chemistry between the characters to be considered. Sophie, Vivian, Greg and Fady all really shone out and worked well together.”

“I was sent initially one scene to audition with,” explains Sophie Hopkins, who played April O’Neill, an ordinary student thrown into an extraordinary world. “There had been a lot of hush-hush around the project so at that time they weren’t giving much away!”

“The scene they sent me was from the first episode, where April wants to ask Charlie to the prom and is too shy to ask directly,” she continues. “Both characters are so sweet and unaware, and simultaneously manage to be encouraging and caring for each other without having a clue what’s going on! I fell in love with the two of them immediately.”

“What drew me to the script initially was the wonderful relationship between Quill and Charlie,” says Jordan Renzo, who played Matteusz Andrzejewski, very much the moral centre of the group. “I auditioned three times. First for Matteusz, then Charlie, and then finally in the room with everyone for Matteusz again.”

“I remember thinking ‘if this is the last time you speak these lines, go in and enjoy yourself’,” he continues. “It passed in a blur and next thing I know my agent called me with the offer.”

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Greg Austin and Katherine Kelly in Doctor Who spin-off Class (BBC)

“I was out in Los Angeles for pilot season when the final recall for Class came through,” remembers Greg Austin, who played alien prince in exile Charlie Smith, “so I had to make a wager (at a time when I had very little money to play with) and buy an expensive, last-minute flight back to London.”

“I almost didn’t go, but ultimately took the risk because of how interesting the role was,” he continues. “The allure of working with Patrick Ness and forever holding a place within the Whoniverse was enough for me to gamble on the flight, and boy, did it pay off.”

How did they each feel, stepping into a Doctor Who spin-off?

“It was just a tremendous privilege,” says Renzo. “Of course, there is pressure there, but also pride. It all seemed so overwhelming at first that I didn’t have a chance for any expectations, just excitement.”

“I was really excited to be part of a Doctor Who show,” agrees Hopkins. “I’d watched it for years and always had fond memories of watching the show with family and friends – we love a Christmas special! However [it was] only when we started filming and groups of supportive Whovians started showing up outside the studio did I realise the enormity of it all!”

“I’d seen every bit of the post-2005 Doctor Who,” says Ness. “I was a huge fan, and a slightly different fan in that – being raised in America – I had no childhood connection with the original series, I came to that part later. I got to see it without memories or nostalgia fighting with the reboot (as all Americans do when we watch Star Trek).”

“I always said that with Doctor Who, you’re not actually engaging with the older series,” he continues “you’re engaging with people’s memories of the older series, which is a different thing, a more challenging thing. But it’s also what makes it such a great creative puzzle. And the reboot is so rich and deep and full of challenges and contradictions, it’s an enormously rewarding place to set stories with real moral questions and grey areas. I loved it.”

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Peter Capaldi with Katherine Kelly during Class’ first episode (BBC)

“Everything revolved around Doctor Who,” says Austin. “The show’s legacy was looming over us the entire time. We literally had Peter Capaldi filming season 10 next door to us, not to mention getting to work with him briefly in episode one. It honestly felt quite imposing having the show’s magnitude following us everywhere. It was both a blessing, and a curse.”

Of course, Class was influenced by much more than just Doctor Who, as Bazalgette explains. “We viewed constantly through prep and built up a set of references. Some of the ones that stand out are Donnie Darko, The Thing, Gus Van Sant’s Elephant, Super 8, and contemporary horror movies such as The Babadook [and] It Follows.

“While [Class] came from the Doctor Who world, we all wanted it to have its own identity. I worked closely with the late and very wonderful designer Michael Pickwoad to establish that look. Michael had such a huge design influence on Doctor Who while he was on the show and it was such a pleasure working with him on Class.”

“The key for us was that although set in London and shot in Cardiff, we didn’t want to tie it down to one specific geographical location,” continues Bazalgette. “The exterior school was glass, steel, very modern, could be found in any number of cities [while] the interior school was influenced by that US High School look from innumerable movies and TV shows.”

Given some of those influences, it’s notable perhaps that Class was more popular in America. “I’ve always wondered if that’s because most American shows set in schools are about finding yourself and having relationships and figuring out who you’re going to turn into,” says Ness, “whereas most British shows set in schools are basically about, ‘Isn’t school s***?’”

“The British remember their school days with horror and misery, which I get,” he continues. “But maybe we forget it’s also the place where you make the most important first friendships and decisions and choices in your life. It’s why it’s such a compelling place.”

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Greg Austin (Charlie Smith) and Sophie Hopkins (April Maclean) recording for Big Finish stories of Class
Big Finish

For the younger cast, Class represented a big step up in terms of their career – and, appropriately, something of a learning experience too.

“It was totally new to me to work with the SFX and green screen,” says Hopkins, “which wasn’t without its challenges. I remember trying to pull myself together and remain looking horribly frightened of a fearsome monster [that was actually] a tennis ball on a stick, or alternatively a person in an ill-fitting, skintight in the wrong places Kermit-the-Frog-greenscreen suit… actually, the latter does sound pretty terrifying, doesn’t it?”

“Detained was a unique filming experience that I haven’t encountered before or since,” remembers Austin. “It was a bottle episode, and took place entirely in one location. We were in that blacked-out classroom for almost three weeks, doing high intensity, emotionally charged stuff; screaming, crying, fearing for our lives – you know how it goes. It was in that experience that I finally arrived at the realisation that I can do this. I can be an actor. It was a pretty big shift for me.”

“Our relationships were so important,” says Hopkins. “I think it shows on screen how much we all loved each other! They’re a great group of people, we balance each other out in the right ways and at the time we were all a really tight-knit group. Totally inseparable and it was a very happy set.”

“Most of my [scenes were] with Fady, who was a delight to spend time with. Honestly, he looks upon the world and each person he meets with a kindness, humour and excitement that’s so very endearing.”

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Katherine Kelly, Pooky Quesnel, Greg Austin and Jordan Renzo in Class series 1 (BBC)

“Being the oldest of the five of us, I think I was the serious one in the group,” she continues. “If I were to go back in time, I’d have let go a bit more and stopped caring so much about what people thought. But then, maybe I’d taken a little bit of April home with me!”

“Through Class I gained some friends for life,” says Renzo. “We were a wonderfully tight-knit group. Every night after shooting we would grab dinner, shoot the breeze. I have nothing but love and respect for everyone who worked on Class.”

“I’ve never had the kind of relationships on set as I had with Class,” says Austin. “For us ‘kids’ it was our first time having the weight of a show entirely on us, and we very much looked up to Katherine Kelly as an experienced and respected actor. Having worked with her before on Mr. Selfridge, it was a real moment of growth getting to reframe our relationship on a new set, and I’m genuinely so grateful for all her guidance and insight, she’s truly wonderful.”

After months of production, it was time for Class to begin – launching with a special premiere event in Cardiff. “It was a joy getting to present all our hard work and have it so readily appreciated by everyone at the premiere,” remembers Austin. “It was a moment of real hope, excitement and payoff.”

Class concluded its BBC Three run with The Lost, which saw a final confrontation between the Coal Hill students and the Shadowkin – and featured the cliffhanger appearance of a Weeping Angel.

After that, the series remained in limbo: its BBC One airing scheduled the following January and given a Monday night graveyard slot, its BBC America airing held to coincide with Doctor Who series 10 in April. Though the series was critically acclaimed, news of a return never arrived. When did they first start to realise that Class hadn’t taken off as they might’ve hoped?