Chips Hardy
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About Chips Hardy
Paradox, dysfunction and the quest for redemption are ever-present themes in his work. Culminating in the hit BBC1 and FX drama series “Taboo”, which he co-created, wrote and produced with his son Tom Hardy. Taboo won him the Writers Guild of Great Britain award for best long form drama. His latest novel “Seaton’s Orchid” is a powerful and provocative portrait of a man haunted by a crime against nature, confronted by polite society, and forced to reconcile memories of a self he can no longer recognise. A previous novel “Each Day A Small Victory”, plots the unyielding quest for survival amongst the wildlife inhabitants of a lay-by on an English country road.
He won a British Comedy Award for work with comedian Dave Allen. His darkly comic play about disability and dislocation – Blue On Blue - was showcased at the Latchmere 503 and revived at the Tristan Bates. His one-woman show about eating disorders “There’s something in the Fridge that wants to kill me” ran notably in the Edinburgh Festival.
Hardy has survived machetes in Guadalupe, bombs in Gaza, local hospitality up the Orinoco, all manner of dangerous social transactions across four continents and many of life’s more dysfunctional behaviour patterns.
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Books By Chips Hardy
Maxim Jakubowski, Crimetime
“A finely-paced and haunting story of a man – himself haunted and unsettled by the events of his past – coming to terms with the growing disorder of a world between the wars starting to fracture around him and already drawing towards its own unhappy conclusion. Part Joseph Conrad, part L.P.Hartley, Seaton’s Orchid will appeal to fans of both.”
Robert Edric, prizewinning author
SEATON’S ORCHID from Chips Hardy, co-creator with his son Tom Hardy of the acclaimed TV series “Taboo,” is a powerful, provocative and emotionally raw character portrait of a man haunted by a crime against nature, denied redemption, confronted by polite society, and forced to reconcile memories of a self he can no longer recognise.
Set between WW1 and WW2, SEATON’S ORCHID tells the story of the enigmatic Captain Ainsley Seaton – a retired, much decorated professional solider, amateur explorer and artist living a reclusive life in Highleigh, a charming English village in West Sussex.
Seaton’s quiet existence is shattered when his well-buried past is unexpectedly resurrected over dinner by a shadowy Church diplomat, who seems to know more about Seaton’s history than he does. Forced to re-open chapters of his life that he has been at such pains to forget – from the phantasmal, savage events that unfolded in the deep jungle of the North-West Amazon to the horrors of the Western Front – Seaton withdraws into characteristic seclusion. But the diplomat refuses to let matters lie, and for his own secret purpose will stop at nothing to get to the truth; a truth which reverberates through the village itself, and beyond, with devastating results.
Chips Hardy has written successfully for television, theatre, film and publication. SEATON’S ORCHID reflects upon many of the preoccupations he developed in the acclaimed TV series “TABOO,” which he co-created, wrote and produced with his son, Tom Hardy, and which earned him the Writers Guild of Great Britain award for Best Long Form TV Drama. Here he expands upon his investigation into dislocation and social dysfunction, the dark processes of Empires and their institutions, and the quest for personal redemption for those who have crossed a line of no return.
What the critics said about ‘Taboo':
Dark, brooding and consistently brilliant.
The Observer
Taboo is a work of Wicker Man genius. Taboo might be full of grime and torment but it’s also dry-witted, shot through with sharp and knowing one-liners.
The Guardian
The best thing on television…Taboo has a strong plot at its dark heart. You want to know what will happen next, which is refreshing.
The Sunday Times
Dark, compelling and often haunting... one of the more unique and thoughtful offerings of the new year.
Los Angeles Times
A swaggering brute of a costume drama.
Daily Telegraph
One of the most extraordinary, subversive, dramas British television has ever produced.
Daily Mail
Taboo takes the grim and distant world of 19th century London to extremes of darkness and wonder….