By James Hibbs

Published: Tuesday, 07 June 2022 at 12:00 am


Everything I Know About Love, the adaptation of Dolly Alderton’s memoir, is about to start airing on BBC One, but fans of the book will find that the show doesn’t follow its source material entirely.

While Alderton was on script duty for the new series, which follows four friends in their first London houseshare, she has chosen to semi-fictionalise the autobiographical book, changing storylines and character names and traits. For instance, in the series Dolly has become Maggie, as played by Emma Appleton.

At an event attended by RadioTimes.com and other press, Alderton explained that changing the series to be semi-fictional was “the most freeing thing that happened”, and that she chose to do so after hearing producers having a debate about “Dolly’s character”.

Alderton explained: “I just thought, ‘This is going to be too much of a head-f**k’. So I just decided to change the names and then I decided to kind of open up the world, because the really s**t thing about writing a memoir – other than all the exposure and the therapy you have to do – is you’re limited by what happened in real life, and real life can be very unsatisfying and one note.

“It’s my favourite thing when I see a one-star review on Amazon – people say, ‘The plot wasn’t satisfying’. I’m like, ‘Try living it’. So the minute that I kind of decided to open that up and take the essence of the show, which is this kind of grand romantic story about female friendship, and a coming of age story for the protagonist, and a girl gang show with this group of girls who have just moved to London, then the rest of it was as imagined as I wanted it to be.”