Mark Billingham
Mark Philip David Billingham is an English novelist, actor, television screenwriter and comedian whose series of "Tom Thorne" crime novels are best-sellers in that genre.
Early years
Mark Billingham was born in Solihull, West Midlands and grew up in Moseley, Birmingham. He attended the King Edward VI Camp Hill School for Boys grammar school in nearby King's Heath, and lived in that general area "right the way through university".After graduating with a degree in drama, he stayed in Birmingham and helped form a socialist theatre company. Bread & Circuses toured with a number of shows in schools, colleges, arts centres and the street. In the mid-1980s he moved from Birmingham to London as a "jobbing actor", taking minor roles in episodes of TV shows Dempsey and Makepeace, Juliet Bravo, Boon, and The Bill. After finding himself playing a variety of "bad guy roles such as a soccer hooligan, drug addict, a nasty copper, a racist copper or a bent copper", he became somewhat disenchanted with acting, perceiving that the emphasis was not on talent, but on looks.
Around 1987 he decided to pursue a career in comedy, in part because:
At the time, breaking into stand-up was not as difficult as it would later become, nor was there the modern infrastructure and chain businesses. Billingham cites his own route as a simple progression from 5-minute, unpaid "try-out" spots to 10-, 20- and 30-minute paid slots. As he stated, "within a year, you could be playing the Comedy Store". Indeed, Billingham has headlined at the Comedy Store on many occasions, where he also appears regularly as a Master of Ceremonies.
Despite feeling rather ambivalent towards "serious" roles, Billingham still found considerable success by merging his careers as actor and comic to work in comedy shows. He was the human face on the puppet-representation-of-celebrities series Spitting Image, and "the taller half" of top double act the "Tracy Brothers" with Mike Mole from Bread & Circuses days, appearing regularly on the radio version of The Mary Whitehouse Experience. In 1988, he was seen in the children's comedy series News at Twelve, in which the central character "broadcasts his own TV news bulletin every evening".
Maid Marian and her Merry Men
Maid Marian and her Merry Men saw Billingham cast as Gary, a dim-but-lovable guard in the employ of the Sheriff of Nottingham, charged with keeping the peace in the village of Worksop, and hunting down Maid Marian and her band of "freedom fighters". As part of a double-act with Graeme, Billingham was ostensibly one of the "baddies", but was nonetheless deeply sympathetic and well-liked.After three successful award-winning series, both Billingham and Lloyd were helping creator-writer Robinson with plot and script ideas, both gaining co-writer credits on the first episode of series 4 – "Tunnel Vision". The episode produced spoofs of a number of cultural icons, including passing references to Sonic the Hedgehog and Dungeons & Dragons, as well as a Richard O'Brien stand-in named "Robin O'Hood" who in the episode leads Gary and Graeme through the Merry Men's version of The Crystal Maze.
Tony Robinson, David Lloyd and Mark Billingham remain friends, after having worked so closely together for four-to-five years, and Robinson can be seen taking partial credit for Billingham's literary career on the DVD release of Maid Marian, in which the three discuss writing, both for the series and in general. The three announced in 2018 that they were working on a stage production of Maid Marian and her Merry Men.
Writing
As he has stated in a number of interviews, Billingham treats comedy – and his stand-up in particular – and writing as parts of a whole, seeing the two as complementary, using as they do:He also cites the big ending, and "pullback and reveal", whereby the audience is led along a specific path and lulled into thinking that they can guess the twist, before: "boom! it hits them from over there." In comedy, he says, it is a punchline; in crime "something a whole lot darker... essentially it's a similar kind of technique."
It is no surprise then that Billingham turned his hand to writing comedy scripts for television, as well as continuing to act and appear in front of the camera at various points. He joined with David Lloyd to write episodes and act in the children's TV series Harry's Mad, and wrote and presented two series of BBC's What's That Noise?. Between 1997 and 1998, he wrote and co-starred in Granada TV's Knight School, for which the two also produced a novelisation.
He is however, clearly less enamoured by scriptwriting than by novel-writing, noting that:
In 2002, he was "in the middle of writing a screenplay for an Andrew Lloyd Webber musical and about to write a screenplay for a cult children's show," an original sci-fi drama for the BBC, but his prime consideration turned to writing novels.
Novels
In 2001, Billingham's first crime novel, Sleepyhead, was published in the UK by Little, Brown and Company. He is a self-confessed fan of crime fiction, "as well as a really serious collector" and has alleged that the expense of collecting books inspired him to get into interviewing and reviewing books, partly for the complimentary copies. Starting with a local newspaper, he progressed to providing reviews and interviews for , and then to magazines, including Time Out, where he found himself interviewing people such as Michael Connelly, talking and learning from other writers.Mark Billingham became the first crime writer to win the Theakston's Old Peculier Crime Novel of the Year Award twice when his novel Death Message won in 2009. He won this prestigious award against strong opposition including Reginald Hill, Val McDermid, Ian Rankin and Lee Child.
Early writing
From an early age, Billingham can remember writing, often "funny" stories for purposes of popularity and enjoyment. As he grew older, and his interests moved towards crime fiction, he began to skew his writing that way, setting an early novel in his native Birmingham. Inspired by the comic-crime work of Carl Hiaasen and other authors, he attempted to use his experience as a stand-up comedian and crime fan to write a similarly comic novel. Ultimately he abandoned his unfinished novel and the comic-crime genre to focus on his other idea—a book that would become Sleepyhead.Tom Thorne
Billingham created Detective Inspector Tom Thorne for his 2001 debut novel Sleepyhead, where a case of "Locked-In syndrome" reveals the dark depths of a twisted mind, as adept at toying with the DI as with the victims. This central character has since featured in the vast majority of his works, except In the Dark, released in August 2008, Rush of Blood, released in August, 2012, and Die of Shame in which Thorne has only very minor roles. The author writes that, "if writers want their readers to care about a character, they have to care themselves" and, as such, has imbued Thorne with a lot of his personal characteristics. The two share a birthday, a locale and musical interests.In talking about the creation and development of his central character, Billingham notes the difficulty and worry involved in trying to create a personality different from those in other existing, familiar and popular works:
worry that you will be entering that world of the strange cliche-ed cop, but you soon realise that you have to get comfortable in that world. You think "Hang on, some of the clichés are part of that territory". It would like writing a Western and going "Oh no I've given him a horse! What a terrible cliché!" It's not a cliché – It's part and parcel of the genre – cowboys have six-guns, horses and stetsons and detectives have past... problems flaws, because if they don't, then there is nothing to read about.
Billingham's own website says that the underlying determination of Tom Thorne's character was that he would evolve as the series progressed, and remain unpredictable. While noting that many authors compile "thick dossiers" and "complex biographies" about their characters, noting every quirk and minor detail, Billingham shies away from such minutiae, calling it "limiting"—preferring instead to discover something anew about his own hero with each book, and to pass that novelty on to the reader:
The day a character becomes predictable is the day a writer should think about moving on, because the reader certainly will.
Thorne's internal continuity is important to his author—it is important that the events in his past affect who is in the present, although this very aspect of his character causes Billingham great difficulty in describing him without giving away plot twists. Suffice to say that "e works on the Metropolitan Police Murder Squad the time of the first book, he is forty-one years old". Thorne's surname comes from fellow Comedy Store stand-up Paul Thorne, and the names of other comics and comedians are liberally peppered throughout the series.
Sleepyhead was released in August 2001, and made it onto the Sunday Times "Top Ten Bestseller" list, becoming "the biggest selling debut novel of that Summer". In December 2009 it was listed as one of the 100 novels that shaped the decade and was chosen as one of the titles for World Book Night in 2011.
''Scaredy Cat'' inspiration
In 1997, Billingham became a crime victim, as he and his writing partner Peter Cocks were kidnapped and held hostage in a Manchester hotel room. Turning the event into inspiration for his second Thorne novel, Scaredy Cat, he wrote:The general theme of Scaredy Cat is really the power of fear, and that fear is a very powerful weapon, and if you are prepared to instill it, you have a very powerful weapon that is every bit as dangerous as a gun or a knife. Also what happened to me in that hotel room fed directly into a sub-plot in Scaredy Cat with some very nasty crimes carried out in hotel-rooms.
The two were kept bound and gagged in their hotel room by a trio of masked men who stole items and credit cards from them. Billingham recalls being terrified by the sheer audacity of the criminals, who managed to instill a feeling of menace and fear into their victims, a theme which was later fed into his novels–"that if one person is able to scare someone so much, they can make them do anything". The Scaredy Cat storyline thus presents the scenario of tandem serial killers, two individuals ostensibly working together, creating an added air of terror and expectation whenever one of them strikes.
More Thorne
On the heels of 2001's Sleepyhead and 2002's Scaredy Cat, Thorne returned in 2003's Lazybones, investigating the killing of a convicted rapist, and finding it difficult to become involved in the case, since he has little real sympathy for the victim. A messy contract killer and the past cases of a former colleague blur together in The Burning Girl as the past meets the present in a symphony of violence. Thorne's involvement in a previous case affects his ability to investigate an increasing death toll among the homeless of London in Lifeless, while a kidnapping case forms the backbone of 2006's Buried. Death Message, the Thorne novel published in August 2007 sees him haunted by a psychopath he has already put behind bars, but who is reaching out from prison to manipulate the world outside. After resting Thorne for the standalone thriller In The Dark, Billingham returned to his perennial character in 2009 with Bloodline, in the 2010 novel From The Dead and in 2011 with "Good As Dead". After a break for a second standalone thriller, "Rush Of Blood", Thorne returned in 2013 in "The Dying Hours". Five more Thorne novels have since been published.The first chapter of each of Billingham's Tom Thorne books can be downloaded from his website.
Television adaptations
started broadcast in October 2010, with acclaimed actor David Morrissey starring as Tom Thorne. The first three episodes were an adaptation of Sleepyhead and were directed by Stephen Hopkins. The final three episodes were an adaptation of Scaredy Cat, and guest starred Canadian actress Sandra Oh.His standalone novel In The Dark was adapted as a miniseries of the same name by the BBC in 2017. An adaptation of another standalone novel, Rush Of Blood, is currently being developed for US television.
Awards and nominations
TV
Billingham has received nominations and awards related to all aspects of his various careers. What's That Noise, won the 1995 Royal Television Society award for "Best Entertainment Programme", while Knight School was nominated for the RTS's "Best Children's Drama" award two years running.Novels
Scaredy Cat won the Sherlock Award for "Best Detective Novel Created by a UK Author", and was also nominated for the Crime Writers Association Gold Dagger for "Best Crime Novel of the Year".Lifeless was nominated for in 2006.
Mark Billingham's novel "Lazybones" won the Theakston's Old Peculiar Crime Novel of the Year Award 2004 and he won the same award in 2009 for his novel "Death Message". In The Dark was nominated for the Crime Writers Association Gold Dagger at the 2009 Crime Thriller Awards. In 2011, Billingham was inducted into the ITV3 Crime Thriller Awards Hall Of Fame.
2015 Dagger in the Library UK Crime Writers' Association award for an author's body of work in British libraries Mark Billingham shortlisted
Recreation
In-between writing, acting and stand-up, Billingham finds time to support Wolverhampton Wanderers, although his protagonist Thorne supports Tottenham Hotspur.The Other Half
Billingham has recently collaborated on a musical project called 'The Other Half' with My Darling Clementine, reading an original story alongside a soundtrack by the Americana band.Podcasts
In September 2015 Billingham and co-host Michael Carlson released the six-part podcast The Crime Vault Live, with the last episode released in January 2016.Billingham currently hosts UKTV's crime podcast A Stab In The Dark. Each episode includes a discussion on a particular theme from crime fiction and crime drama, and has featured guests including David Morrissey, Val McDermid, Michael Connelly and Ann Cleeves.
Personal life
Mark lives in North London with his wife Claire and their two children.As "Will Peterson" (with Peter Cocks)
- Triskellion
- Triskellion 2: The Burning
- Triskellion 3: The Gathering
Tom Thorne
- Sleepyhead William Morrow US
- Scaredy Cat Time Warner UK William Morrow US
- Lazybones ; William Morrow US
- The Burning Girl William Morrow US
- Lifeless Scorpion Press William Morrow US
- Buried Orbit
- Death Message
- Bloodline
- From the Dead
- Good as Dead Retitled US The Demands
- The Dying Hours
- The Bones Beneath
- Time of Death
- Love Like Blood
- The Killing Habit
- Their Little Secret
- Cry Baby
Other Crime
- In the Dark
- * In the Dark includes Tom Thorne as a minor character.
- "Dancing Towards The Blade" in Men From Boys by John Harvey
- *Other contributors include: Dennis Lehane • Michael Connelly • George Pelecanos • Jeffery Deaver • Lawrence Block
- "Stroke of Luck" in Like A Charm by Karin Slaughter
- *Other contributors include: Laura Lippman • Lee Child • John Connolly • Lynda La Plante • John Harvey • Peter Robinson • Fidelis Morgan • Val McDermid • Karin Slaughter• Emma Donoghue• Denise Mina • Kelley Armstrong • Jane Haddam
- "Introduction" in The High Window by Raymond Chandler
- Rush of Blood
- * Rush of Blood contains Tom Thorne as a minor character.
- Die Of Shame
- * Die Of Shame contains Tom Thorne as a minor character.
Partial screenography
Writer
- Maid Marian and Her Merry Men
- *"Tunnel Vision"
- Harry's Mad
- *various episodes
- Knight School
- *various episodes
Actor
- Dempsey and Makepeace – Steve
- Juliet Bravo – Doyle
- Boon – Policeman
- News at Twelve – Wayne Harris
- The Bill – Pete
- Birds of a Feather – Phil the Plumber
- Maid Marian and her Merry Men – Gary
- The Upper Hand – Philly Fingers
- Harry's Mad – Terry Crumm
- Knight School – Scrubbe