Authors: Jane Lythell
StoryWorld is the nation’s favourite morning show, and producer Liz Lyon wants to keep it that way. Her job is to turn real-life stories into thrilling TV – and keep a lid on the scandals and backbiting that happen off-stage.
But then simmering tensions erupt at the station, trapping Liz in a game of one-upmanship where she doesn’t know the rules. As the power struggle intensifies, can Liz keep her cool and keep her job? Does she even want to?
In this gripping novel of power, rivalry and betrayal, Jane Lythell draws on her own experiences of working in the glamorous, pressurised world of live TV.
To my daughter Amelia Trevette, my rosebud
Comfort Recipes for the Stressed Out
An Invitation from the Publisher
SEPTEMBER
StoryWorld TV station, London Bridge
‘It’s not true, is it?’
Simon was standing by my door and I beckoned him in. I know you shouldn’t have favourites but Simon is the best researcher I’ve ever worked with. He’s a finisher, never overlooks any detail and is great both with members of the public and presenters. He closed the door behind him.
‘There’s an ugly rumour circulating that the new job’s gone to a daughter of the great and the good,’ he said.
You can’t keep anything secret in a TV station. It’s the leakiest place on earth. I sighed but said nothing.
‘Liz?’ he persisted.
‘I’m afraid so. Thumbscrews were applied.’
I was being indiscreet saying that. I should have held the management line and pretended that I had given the researcher role to Harriet Dodd on merit. But I was fed up about it too. Harriet is the daughter of Edward Dodd who edits a national newspaper and is a friend of our MD Saul Relph. What I didn’t tell Simon was that Saul had called me into his office and told me that his friend Edward Dodd was worried about his daughter and he wanted her to be taught the meaning of hard work. It would be a major favour if we would take her on and train her up. I had resisted but Saul had added that my taking her on would help the whole station. Simon was giving me an old-fashioned look.
‘It’s a three month attachment. I’ve made it clear that if she doesn’t make the grade she’s out,’ I said.
Simon leaned forward and picked up the glass paperweight that Ben, my ex-husband, bought me on our falling-in-love trip to Venice. We had gone over to Murano to choose it. Simon gazed at the colourful swirls that orbited inside the glass sphere.
‘How do you bear it?’ he said.
‘Because I have to.’
He put the glass globe down delicately.
‘OK.’
I knew Simon wouldn’t shop me to the others. Given the amount of TV we have to produce, I have a ridiculously small team of three researchers and a runner. I used to have three experienced researchers and we could manage our output, although we were working at full stretch. But Roomana had left recently to work at a rival company as an assistant producer. I had expected to appoint a seasoned researcher in her place. Instead, we were going to have to train up Harriet, a complete novice, and I knew this would put a strain on us all. My team is small because most of what we produce is sofa television. This entails getting a range of guests into the studio to be interviewed by Fizzy Wentworth, our star presenter. We also run pre-recorded stories on our show, but many of these are supplied by independent production companies; hence my tiny team. The phone on my desk rang and it was Henry, the floor manager.
‘You’d better get down here quick. Dianne Lucas won’t come out of make-up. Says her hair looks a fright,’ he said.
I hurried downstairs to the make-up room on the ground floor. I had booked the actor Dianne Lucas as our interview of the day. She’s no longer an A-lister but she is still a name and she’s written this steamy memoir about a love affair she had with a much younger man at the height of her fame. She kept the affair secret at the time. Maybe she needs the money now because she’s been extremely graphic about the affair and it is being serialised in one of the tabloids. I slipped into make-up and the moment I saw Dianne’s fraught face in the mirror I knew this was a woman on the edge. Her eyes moved up and met mine in the mirror. I saw anger in her eyes, an anger she was barely containing. Why the hell had the publishers put her up for this interview? Live television is a tough gig and I’ve noticed before how actors can go to pieces when they don’t have their scripts to hide behind.
‘I can’t go on with my hair like this,’ she said, making a tragic grimace which made me think of one of those theatre masks with the lips turned down dramatically.
Make-up mirrors can be unforgiving with all the light they throw on the face and Dianne’s hair, which had been over-dyed, hung limply around her cheeks and drained her face of colour. Ellen, our head of make-up, was applying blusher to her cheekbones.
‘Maybe if we pinned your hair up?’ Ellen suggested.
She and I both made soothing, complimentary noises as Dianne’s hair was teased up into a bun and false hair was added to give it more body. I slipped into flattery mode. I hate the way I am able to do this so easily.
‘Now we can see your lovely cheekbones much better,’ I said.
I watched Ellen working fast and expertly and tried not to panic as I thought of Fizzy sitting on the sofa with no one to talk to. Fizzy could only spend so much time going through the newspapers.
‘Your book was such a revelation; so authentic. I’d hate our viewers to miss the chance of hearing from you,’ I said, touching her on the arm and helping her to her feet. I knew I was laying it on thick but if it got Dianne Lucas out of make-up and into the studio I was doing my job. She gave a parting look at the mirror, pulled her shoulders back and raised her chin; I could imagine her doing that as she stood backstage in a theatre just before she made an entrance. I hoped her professionalism as an actor would carry her through as I walked with her to the studio door. Henry the floor manager took her in to be miked up. I hurried to the gallery to watch the interview. We are in voice contact with Fizzy from the gallery via an earpiece and I whispered to her to take this gently as Dianne was fragile. Fizzy gave a tiny nod to show that she had got my message. As Dianne sat down on the sofa Fizzy leaned towards her, holding her book face out to camera, and said in a warm voice:
‘Welcome to StoryWorld, Dianne, and thank you so much for coming in this morning. What a great read this is. I found it a very honest account of love.’
‘Love!’ Dianne Lucas hissed at her. ‘What does that word even mean?’
Fizzy did not react to Dianne’s aggression and ploughed on.
‘Well, I agree that there are many different types of love, but what you seem to be talking about here, very candidly I thought, is a deep physical attraction between two people, an attraction that transcended the age difference.’
‘No! That is prurient nonsense. It was a meeting of souls,’ Dianne said very coldly.
I thought that was a bit rich as the book describes their first kiss and their first shag with relish and later goes on about how rejuvenating it was to have a much younger lover.
‘Ask her what her happiest memory of the relationship is,’ I whispered to Fizzy who was now flicking through the book to give herself a moment.
‘I was wondering what your happiest memory is of the relationship, Dianne, as clearly there were deep emotions.’
Dianne narrowed her eyes and I felt sorry for Fizzy.
‘Did you read the book?’
‘Yes indeed, wonderful.’
She hadn’t. We had summarised it for her.
‘The relationship was torment from beginning to end,’ Dianne Lucas said, putting on the tragic face for which she is famous.
It was a car crash of an interview and I asked the director to come out of it early. He shot me a sympathetic look. He knew I was in for a mauling from Julius.
Every morning there is a post-mortem meeting on that day’s show chaired by Julius Jones who is our director of programmes. He makes notes on each item and the show is pulled apart, and occasionally praised, in front of assembled senior colleagues. We have all come to expect more shredding than praise at these meetings. I knew Julius would have a go at me for booking Dianne Lucas because it had been one of the most uncomfortable interviews we’d broadcast in ages. I got myself a coffee from the staff café and joined the others in the conference room. Julius kept us waiting. Fizzy was already in there and I sat down next to her. One thing I’ve learned over the years is to be careful how you treat presenters when they’ve just come off air. For all their apparent confidence in front of the camera most presenters are deeply insecure and needy people. They need the love of the viewers to make them feel alive. When they come off air they are still full of adrenalin and cannot take any criticism. It is best to praise them and take it up later if an interview has gone wrong.
‘Well done for handling Dianne. I know she was a nightmare,’ I said.
‘She’s aged very badly,’ Fizzy replied with a slight shudder.
Fizzy is a woman who sets great store by how people look. She is thirty-eight but she looks younger. She is pretty rather than beautiful, with her strawberry-blonde hair and pointed chin, more of a girl-next-door type who viewers can relate to, rather than drop-dead gorgeous. Julius entered the room and there was a palpable change in the atmosphere. No one says anything until they’ve had an indication of which way he is going to jump. Sometimes you can tell what his mood is going to be simply by the way he sits down and spreads his arms on the table.
Julius is handsome, though in a rather bland way. He’s got light brown hair cut short, hazel eyes, a straight nose and full lips. He looks clean-cut and preppy but he is unpredictable, a chameleon, and his face can change from pleasant to menacing in a moment. Even his name is a sham. He was born and raised Nigel Jones but changed his name to Julius Jones when he started working in television. He’s the man who spotted Fizzy when she was a PA and he has moulded her into the queen of live TV. He is a difficult man but I have learned a great deal from him about how to produce hit shows. He has a genuine talent for popular TV and knows what issues and personalities will connect with the audience. Now his full lips were stretching in a humourless line as he looked directly at me.