The legendary political satirist shares his wisdom on writing and directing comedies.
Armando Iannucci has made strides as a writer and director in the political comedy sphere. Having worked on shows such as The Thick of It and Veep and made films including In the Loop and The Death of Stalin, Iannucci has become a true comedy legend of our time.
In recent years, he has been giving back, sharing advice to help guide a new generation of political satirists toward success. We’ve collected some of his tips over the years and hope they can be helpful to you whether you’re a writer, director, or comedian.
Leave Your Ego at the Door
Writing is not always a solo job. If you’re a TV writer especially, you’ll have to work with a team, and the best way to adapt to that environment, according to Iannucci, is to keep your ego in check. He told Prolifiko in 2017:
“To be a good team writer, you have to be a team player. So no ego. You have to be non-proprietorial about your writing. The way we work is, each writer will have an episode to take charge of, I’ll bat back and forward with that writer on the storyline, and ask them to go away and produce a script very quickly.”
Consider the Medium
When tackling a film adaptation that you really admire, it can be tempting to replicate the original piece exactly. However, Iannucci advises focusing on creating your own work, even if that means changing up some things about the original. He told Senses in 2018:
“I think you have to be confident. I think sometimes adaptations fail if they’re too reverential to the original. If they’re just trying to replicate the original on screen. And you know, film is a whole new medium, and therefore, you have to think in that whole new medium. You have to think about the music and the color and the movement and the performance. And I think you’ll actually get an inferior work if you’re too reverential, if the process is just about taking this page, and turning it into that scene. And taking that page and turning it into that scene. We’re doing another adaptation at the moment. I am about to shoot in the summer, a film adaptation of the Charles Dickens novel ‘David Copperfield,’ and again, I’m trying to be as authentic as possible to the book. But at the same time I’m having to change stories really to make it work as a film, you know with a beginning, middle, and an end because you know Dickens wrote very episodically. He published in monthly installments.”
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