One film project that has had a huge impact on me is the Up Series. The Up
Series is an ongoing British series of documentary films that began in 1964
and followed 14 children from different socio-economic backgrounds in
England. Every 7 years director Michael Apted meets up with the kids, who
are now 64 years old, and talks about what has happened in their careers,
mindsets, families and so on. The project packs an emotional wallop, and
the longer it continues, the more compellingly humanist it becomes. The
latest episode, 63Up, came out in 2019. I started to watch the series in my
early teens and I’m now 35, so these individuals have accompanied me in
some way for more than half my life. With all this in mind, you can imagine
how happy I was when I got the chance to speak to Tony, the very
charismatic London cabbie and former jockey, the “cheeky chappie” as he
calls himself, who is one of the protagonists of the film series. We talk
about his life, his priorities, and of course, we talk about the Up Series.