Bernadine Evaristo on her book becoming a BBC drama

BBC Bernardine Evaristo sitting on a brown leather sofa wearing a green jacket, blue jeans and a pink shirt in a living roomBBC
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Bernardine Evaristo on the set of Mr Loverman: “Everything in here is absolutely perfect”

Bernardine Evaristo’s ground-breaking novel Mr Loverman was released in 2013, telling the story of a married 74-year-old Antiguan-born Londoner who has been having a secret love affair with his best friend for the past 60 years.

More than a decade on, the lives of Barrington Jedidiah Walker, his wife Carmel and his lover Morris De La Roux are being brought to the screen for a new eight-part BBC drama starring Line of Duty’s Lennie James.

“I love it. Everything in here is absolutely perfect,” says Evaristo as she sits back on the brown leather sofa.

The Booker Prize-winner is on a visit to the set in a Neasden studio where the Walkers’ Stoke Newington home has been recreated.

The living room she sits in is filled with knick-knacks and family photos, amid a garish clash of of geometric beige wallpaper, turquoise walls and a patterned red carpet.

“It’s such a wonderful experience seeing a book that I wrote come to life visually.”

BBC/Fable Pictures/Des Willie Six characters from Mr Loverman in a kitchen with Morris, Barry and Carmel sitting at a table which has a mug, a newspaper, a bowl of fruit and a pint glass of Guinness upon itBBC/Fable Pictures/Des Willie

(L-R, sitting at the table) Ariyon Bakare, Lennie James and Sharon D Clarke star in the new production

Finding herself inside a world she originally created on paper appears to suit a person who says her favourite thing about writing is being able to “inhabit” her characters.

“When I was writing Mr Loverman, I was Barrington and my husband would come home and I would say [putting on Barrington’s voice]: ‘Oh hello darling, you want something to eat?’

“He’d be like, ‘Why are you talking like that? Are you OK?’” she laughs.

Protagonist Barrington – or Barry – is a husband, father and grandfather who moved with his highly religious wife Carmel from Antigua to Hackney in east London in the 1960s.

He has been living there ever since but throughout that time has been continuing a secret affair he started with Morris back in the Caribbean.

A bedroom with a double bed with gold sheets and green cushions on it, with a dressing table by a window on one side and patterned green wallpaper around the walls

The house is spread over two floors with living rooms, kitchen, bathroom and bedrooms all being built by set designers

Evaristo, 64, says she chose the subject because while “everybody knows about the Windrush generation now… we don’t really hear stories about that generation being gay”.

The writer says she wasn’t daunted to take on such a story, being a woman born in London and of Nigerian descent, because “I’m not a complete stranger to that world”.

“As a writer, I’m absorbing people all the time,” she explains.

“I’m very curious, even nosy… I’ve been around enough Caribbean people of an older generation to feel comfortable to write those kinds of characters.”

Plastic trees and flowers around a small fake green lawn with white chairs and tables in the middle and wooden fences around the sides

There’s even a small garden at the studio

Hackney, where the book is based, is also somewhere Evaristo knows very well.

Having grown up in London, she has featured different parts of the city in many of her stories, including Hello Mum, The Emperor’s Babe, and Girl, Woman, Other – for which she jointly won the Booker Prize in 2019.

“I have known Hackney since 1979 and I’ve had family living there, friends living there, I’ve worked there.

“So I have seen it transition from an area that was quite poor, quite working class… to an area that’s now very expensive and is a bit of a hipster heaven,” she says.

As such, Evaristo says she wanted Mr Loverman “to capture the Hackney that I remember when you would see these old Caribbean people hanging out, walking down the street – some of these old Caribbean men were very flamboyant dressers”.

BBC/Fable Pictures/Des Willie Morris De La Roux, played by Ariyon Bakare and Barry Walker, played by Lennie James, lying in bed looking at one anotherBBC/Fable Pictures/Des Willie

In the story Morris (l) and Barrington have been secret lovers since they were teenagers

Hackney has continued to change in the 11 years since the book was published, but the novelist believes little would be different about Barrington, Carmel and Morris if she had written the novel now, given they live “in a bubble”.

“Hackney’s changing around them but their worlds, their network, their social circle, where they live, hasn’t changed that much so I don’t think that 2024 will really see a different world to the one they’re living in at the moment.

“I don’t think Barrington will have a mobile phone,” she adds, before noting with some surprise there is a computer sitting in the living room.

The suit jacket, shirt and hat worn by Lennie James for Mr Loverman along with close-up images of a cufflink and his hat

One of the suits worn by Lennie James was so detailed the tie clip and cufflinks were engraved with Barrington’s name

Two bottles of alcohol, a jug with birds on it, a plastic pineapple and a black metal ice box with people painted on it sitting together on a surface counter

Fans of the book will know Barrington’s love for a drink; his bar is located in the living room

Evaristo says that when the book was published, there were questions about whether it could ever be adapted for TV.

“I believed that the work would transfer to the screen – that wasn’t an issue for me. It was maybe an issue for other people who didn’t think, perhaps, that there’d be a market for it.

“Somebody said to me it was ‘triple niche’, because he was black, old and gay,” she continues.

“They wouldn’t say that now… but times have changed. We are so much more inclusive, so much more progressive, and long may it last.”

Text from two pages of Mr Loverman with parts highlighted in orange marker and with notes and lines written on the paper

Designers working on the series used passages from the text to help them create the set where filming took place

Feeling so close to the characters she created, the author considers it “an adventure” to see how they have been developed for the first adaption of her work for the screen.

As for what she’s hoping will be the reaction to the series, Evaristo says she wants people to “love it, clearly”, but also “to feel that they’ve never seen anything like it before”.

“I want people to feel that they have somehow been enlightened about people living lives that they may not be familiar with.”

All episodes of Mr Loverman will be available on BBC iPlayer from 06:00 BST on 14 October, with the first two parts of the series being shown later that evening on BBC One

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