The Graham Norton Show
- TV chat show
- BBC One / BBC Two
- 2007 - 2024
- 514 episodes (32 series)
Comic chat show presented by Graham Norton. The biggest names in showbiz join the host on his sofa.
- Continues on Tuesday 31st December on BBC1 at 10:25pm with Series 32, New Year Special
- Catch-up on Series 32, Episode 12
Episode menu
Series 30, Episode 6 - Paul Mescal, Michaela Coel, Winston Duke, Emma Corrin, Richard Ayoade, Loyle Carner
Further details
Winston Duke and Michaela Coel join Graham to chat about the hotly anticipated Marvel sequel Black Panther: Wakanda Forever.
Asked about the film without Chadwick Boseman, Winston says, "It was really just melancholic to step back into the shoes of it all. I was glad to get back with the rest of the cast but Chadwick left this huge gaping hole, which was really hard to fill and you really felt it.
"Visiting his grave to say goodbye formally and ask his blessing was really great to help deal with it because it was such a surprise - none of us knew that he was sick and we were only weeks away from shooting when we heard of his passing. The movie is deeply about grief and how hard and messy it is, there is no pretty perfect way through it, and you are changed for ever by it."
Michaela adds, "For me visiting the graveside allowed me to not just see Chadwick from a Marvel perspective but to understand this was a friend to this cast and it was a real human loss."
Winston, talking about his role, says, "I'm doing a lot more - a lot more noise and a lot more humour. I was inspired by Brian Blessed. I loved him in Flash Gordon - his character's function is so like mine and I liked how he did it."
Revealing his character's barking follows him wherever he goes, he says, "I don't know what they think will happen or why they don't just say, 'Hey Winston, I love your work,' and it's always in the most awkward places like public bathrooms." Asked if he barks back at them, he says, "Of course, who am I not to respond to the call!"
Michaela, talking about the physical side of her kick-ass character, says, "I just assumed that there would be someone else to do all the fighting, that there would be people for that. Then they said about boot camp starting and I was like, 'Boot who?' And training was every day. I had never done anything like that in my life."
Paul Mescal, talking about his critically acclaimed father-and-daughter drama Aftersun, and asked about working with his 11-year-old co-star Frankie Corio, says, "We got incredibly close, it was essentially just the two of us for the entire film, but it is a weird position to be thrust into. Her parents weren't there during the day when we were filming and I was her fake dad so it became a thing where I was responsible for this other human being. There was a day when we had to evacuate our accommodation because of a fire and I told her to pack a bag and she had three minutes to do it - I think a parent would do that!"
Talking about his upcoming role of Stanley Kowalski in A Streetcar Named Desire in the West End, and asked about following in the footsteps of Marlon Brando, Paul says, "It's scary and am trying not to think about that - it is wild."
Emma Corrin, talking about her new film, a new adaptation of Lady Chatterley's Lover, and asked why she wanted the role, says, "When I got the script Laure [de Clermont-Tonnerre] our director was already attached and she is incredible, and there was a crazy scene where they both dance naked in the rain. For some reason I was like, 'Yes, sign me up!'"
Talking more about that scene, she says, "I think certainly that it was the most exhilarating thing I have ever done in my life. In film making it is pretend so it's rare that you are actually in a situation where you are literally thinking and feeling exactly as your character would be. Being completely naked in the Welsh countryside meant you didn't have to fake anything, you were just feeling it and it was quite amazing."
Asked if her family has seen the film, she says, "They all sat through it and all coped - weirdly I felt more sorry for my flatmates having to sit next to my family while they watched it. But, they are all still talking to me!"
Richard Ayoade, talking about his new children's book The Book That No One Wanted To Read, and asked what had inspired him, says, "I was going to the library with my wife and saw all the books that have never been taken out and I began to feel sorry for them and that's where the idea came from." Adding jokingly, "It's not autobiographical, I had to imagine what it is like to not be popular!"
Asked if his own children have read it, he says, "They have been very accommodating and kind. I think they prefer it to speaking to me!"
Loyle Carner performs Nobody Knows (Ladas Road) live in the studio, before joining Graham for a chat.
Broadcast details
- Date
- Friday 4th November 2022
- Time
- 10:40pm
- Channel
- BBC One
- Length
- 50 minutes
Cast & crew
Graham Norton | Host / Presenter |
Richard Ayoade | Guest |
Paul Mescal | Guest |
Michaela Coel | Guest |
Emma Corrin | Guest |
Winston Duke | Guest |
Loyle Carner | Guest |
Rob Colley | Writer |
Toby Baker | Director |
Jon Magnusson | Series Producer |
Pete Snell | Producer |
Graham Stuart | Executive Producer |
Catherine Strauss | Line Producer |
Perry Widdowson | Editor |
Chris Webster | Production Designer |
Mandy Furlonger | Make-up Designer |
Chris Rigby | Lighting Designer |
Jonathan Whitehead (as Trellis) | Composer |
Kerry Hussain | Graphics |
Videos
Richard Ayoade refuses to apologise to Paul Mescal
Paul Mescal and Richard Ayoade remember the BAFTA Awards.
Featuring: Graham Norton, Paul Mescal & Richard Ayoade.
Paul Mescal on his Normal People shorts
Paul Mescal talks about signing a pair of shorts for a charity.
Featuring: Graham Norton & Paul Mescal.
Emma Corrin talks fashion
Emma Corrin discusses a love for weird fashion.
Featuring: Graham Norton & Emma Corrin.