Lost Boys and Fairies writer's pride over 'queer' adoption drama (2024)

Nicola Bryan,BBC News

Lost Boys and Fairies writer's pride over 'queer' adoption drama (1)Lost Boys and Fairies writer's pride over 'queer' adoption drama (2)BBC

When Daf James and his husband adopted two young children, he found the experience so profound he "couldn’t not write about it".

"It felt very dramatic, it felt insane, it felt beautiful, extraordinary, remarkable… it was such a complex well of emotions," he said.

The result is three-part BBC One drama Lost Boys and Fairies.

The fictional tale inspired by his real-life experience is billed as a tender, glittering story of "queer" club performer Gabriel and his partner Andy’s journey to adoption.

Lost Boys and Fairies writer's pride over 'queer' adoption drama (3)Lost Boys and Fairies writer's pride over 'queer' adoption drama (4)Kirsten McTernan

Filmed in and around Cardiff with some characters speaking both English and Welsh, the drama could not mean more to James, a Welsh speaker.

"It’s not only a queer story... it is a bilingual show on primetime BBC One," he said.

"That's a massive triumph not just for me personally but also for the BBC."

Eight years ago James and his husband adopted two children under the age of six and have since adopted a third.

"When anyone becomes a parent their life changes drastically and dramatically, but when you're a parent to adopted children and two arrive at the same time and they have lived through early life trauma… it's parenting plus,” he said.

James's mother had died less than a year before he became a parent and he found himself dealing with a wave of emotions.

"Even though I felt like I'd done my grieving, when you become a parent you suddenly see who your parents were through a completely different prism."

For James, writing became a form of therapy.

"I thought it would make for a beautiful story but I also write in order to process my emotions and what I'm going through," he said.

He went on to develop the drama with Duck Soup Films as part of BBC Writersroom’s TV Drama Writers’ Programme 2019 - the scheme now known as Pilot.

Lost Boys and Fairies writer's pride over 'queer' adoption drama (5)Lost Boys and Fairies writer's pride over 'queer' adoption drama (6)

Writing the dialogue in both Welsh and English simply felt natural.

"It's just the way that we live, I speak Welsh, I speak English, I jump between the two of them," said James.

According to the latest census, James is one of 538,000 Welsh speakers in Wales, or 17.8% of the population.

The Welsh government aims to reach a million Welsh speakers by 2050.

"You can tell I'm passionate [about the Welsh language] but it is also my life," said James.

"I find it crazy that we are in 2024 and we’re still having to defend the language.

"I mean, how often do I hear the jokes like ‘oh, it just looks like somebody's fallen on a keyboard and pressed some letters together’ and I find it so shocking that within this brilliantly multicultural island with many languages and many cultures the Welsh language can still be the butt of a joke."

Lost Boys and Fairies writer's pride over 'queer' adoption drama (7)Lost Boys and Fairies writer's pride over 'queer' adoption drama (8)

The opening episode sees the character Gabriel, played by Cardiff-born actorSion Daniel Young, reticent to open up to his social worker about his upbringing and the shame he felt over his sexuality.

To what extent is this James's experience?

"Everything I write is personally inspired… I've taken the themes of my life and the emotions of my life," said James, who grew up in Cowbridge, Vale of Glamorgan.

"If I think of my life as a song with notes, structure and a rhythm, I've taken all those notes so the song sounds similar, but I swap them all around so that it is essentially still a work of fiction to protect myself and to protect my family and everyone around me as well."

Lost Boys and Fairies writer's pride over 'queer' adoption drama (9)Lost Boys and Fairies writer's pride over 'queer' adoption drama (10)

James laughed as he remembered playing dress-up at nursery and being desperate to wear a beautiful pink dress.

But as he got older, like the character Gabriel, his school years were overshadowed by a "deep-rooted shame".

"You're categorically told that the love that you feel towards people is wrong," he said.

"I was constantly made to feel that I was abnormal, that I was subhuman, that I didn't deserve to live and breathe and be, and that's an incredibly traumatic space to exist as a child and a teenager and to internalise all of those emotions."

Between the ages of 11 and 13 he faced the "horrific experience" of daily bullying on the school bus.

"It was often a very lonely place in little Daf's head," he said.

"To keep myself sane I would sit and imagine stories in my head, like films where I was playing the lead part... it was only years and years later I've realised ‘what you were doing was writing your own stories, you were writing your own films'."

Lost Boys and Fairies writer's pride over 'queer' adoption drama (11)Lost Boys and Fairies writer's pride over 'queer' adoption drama (12)

James said when he began writing the drama, his first original screenplay for the BBC, he was simply using his lived experiences and was not trying to create something that made a statement about the representation of LGBTQ+ people or the Welsh language.

"Although politically I do want to have this out there... representation is so, so important," he said.

"This drama is about inclusion and breaking down those binaries, shifting the world into somewhere more inclusive, where people can live and breathe and feel safe in their own identities."

So how would young Daf on the school bus feel about having a three-part bilingual drama on BBC One inspired by his and his husband's journey to adopt?

"This show in particular has such personal and political and cultural resonance for me," said James.

"Little Daf would be dancing and singing his heart out with delight - in a lovely pink dress."

  • All episodes of Lost Boys and Fairies are available on BBC iPlayer and it airs on BBC One weekly from from Monday 3 June at 21:00

Wales

Cowbridge

Cardiff

Welsh language

LGBT

Adoption

Lost Boys and Fairies writer's pride over 'queer' adoption drama (2024)

FAQs

Is Lost Boys and Fairies a true story? ›

The drama draws inspiration from the real-life experience of writer Daf James and his husband.

Who plays Jake in Lost Boys and fairies? ›

Mike said he was also touched by the milestones portrayed in the series, such as when Gabriel drives his son Jake - played by Leo Harris - home for the first time.

Who plays Andy in Lost Boys and fairies? ›

Cardiff-born actor Sion Daniel Young (The Left Behind, Deceit) and star of stage and screen Fra Fee (Cabaret, Hawkeye) appear in lead roles as Gabriel and Andy, respectively.”

Who wrote Lost Boys and fairies? ›

After the success of BBC drama Lost Boys and Fairies, series writer Daf James shares his own experience with adoption - and fans say how the series reflects the real-life issues they've faced in building a family.

What is the true story of The Lost Boys? ›

They were known as the Lost Boys. In 1987, civil war drove an estimated 20,000 young boys from their families and villages in southern Sudan. Most just six or seven years old, they fled to Ethiopia to escape death or induction into the northern army.

Were there girls in The Lost Boys? ›

There are no "lost girls" because as Peter explains, girls are far too clever to fall out of their prams. This was retconned for the 2023 reboot film Peter Pan & Wendy where the Lost Boys (still named as such) now include girls.

What happens to Andy in Lost Boys and Fairies? ›

However, just before finalising the adoption, Andy is accidentally killed while trying to break up a fight, leaving a devastated Gabriel to decide whether to proceed with adopting Jake.

What breed is Nanook from Lost Boys? ›

Nanook is a Alaskan Malamute that belongs to Sam Emerson. He is protective of Sam, which is shown when he bites Michael on the hand in order to stop him from attacking Sam.

What kind of dog is Thorn in the Lost Boys? ›

In popular culture

The 1987 motion picture The Lost Boys features a White Shepherd called Thorn, owned by the character Max.

Who is the blonde guy in The Lost Boys? ›

David is a fictional character from the 1987 film The Lost Boys portrayed by Kiefer Sutherland. In the film David is the head of a gang of vampires in the fictional town of Santa Carla.

Who plays Lucy in The Lost Boys? ›

The Lost Boys (1987) - Dianne Wiest as Lucy - IMDb.

Who played the Frog Brothers in The Lost Boys? ›

Jamison Bret Newlander is best known for playing Alan Frog, one of the two vampire-hunting brothers, in The Lost Boys (1987), alongside Corey Feldman.

Is Lost Boys and Fairies based on a true story? ›

Though the show is full of emotional truth, James insists that Lost Boys & Fairies is not a “true story” per se. Characters such as Gabriel's difficult father, Emrys, his partner, Andy, or the young boy the couple hope to adopt, Jake, are all “works of fiction”.

Who wrote the script for Lost Boys? ›

The Lost Boys is based on a script by American screenwriters Janice Fischer, James Jeremias, and Jeffrey Boam. The movie was subsequently novelized by American author Craig Shaw Gardner.

Who wrote the song Lost Boys? ›

Is The Lost Boys of Montauk Based on a true story? ›

The Lost Boys of Montauk: The True Story of the Wind Blown, Four Men Who Vanished at Sea, and the Survivors They Left Behind will be published on May 25 from Gallery Books. I like that this book could be pitched as an unsolved mystery, to find out what happened when the boat went down.

Is The Lost Boy by Dave Pelzer based on a true story? ›

The Lost Boy (1997) is the second installment of a trilogy of books which depict the life of David Pelzer, who as a young boy was physically, emotionally, mentally, and psychologically abused by his obsessive mother.

Is fairy Tale Based on a true story? ›

Some fairy tales are based on legends that incorporated a spiritual belief of the culture in which they originated, and were meant to emulate truth. Numerous fairy tales, and the legends behind them, are actually watered-down versions of uncomfortable historical events.

Is Santa Carla from Lost Boys a real place? ›

Fictional Santa Carla is based on Santa Cruz where much of the movie The Lost Boys was filmed (although the name, itself, is an anagram of Santa Clara). Santa Cruz is located on the north end of Monterey Bay, CA. The Lost Boys: The Tribe was set in the fictional town of Luna Bay, CA (filmed in Vancouver, BC).

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