Hey ! ā¤ļø sorry to bother you but I can't find the post where there was a list of all the scenes that were improvised in Good Omens. If you happen to find the post, or to know the few scenes that were not in the script, I will be so grateful š„¹
Hiya! :) Improvised scenes (haven't seen the post I'm afraid :)<3):
In the First Season:
The end of the bench scene in the dinosaur park
Shadwell's "Sergeant Pepper" when he meets Crowley
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I noticed that the wooden cobra in magic shop seems kind of familiar! :) I mean, it is there in the modern times as well so Crowley couldn't steal/buy it, but he could have miracled the same one as another memento from 1941 (together with getting the eagle statue? :))
āI was asked at the last minute to read the stage directions at the tableread on Zoom, and Douglas [Mackinnon] the director called me up to
Ooh! A wonderful interview with Rich Keeble who played Mr. Arnold (the one with the Doctor Who Annual :)) in S2! :)ā¤
Q: In Good Omens 2 you play Mr. Arnold, who runs the music shop on Whickber Street. Were you a fan of Good Omens before joining the cast, and is it challenging to take on such an iconic story which is already loved by a huge fanbase?
A: āThereās always pressure if youāre working on something with an existing fanbase and people might have an idea already as to how you should be approaching something. To be honest I was aware of the show but I hadnāt actually seen it before I was asked to get involved. I knew it was something special though! I remember talking to Tim DownieĀ [Mr. Brown]Ā about how when you tape for certain things you know if somethingās a āgood oneā. Of course by the time I was on set Iād watched Season 1 and read the book.Ā
I had an interesting route into the show actually: I was asked at the last minute to read the stage directions at the tableread on Zoom, and DouglasĀ [Mackinnon]Ā the director called me up to discuss pronunciations of the character names etc. To prepare further I quickly watched the first episode on Prime Video, and I was very quickly drawn into it. A couple of hours later I was on a Zoom call with DavidĀ [Tennant], MichaelĀ [Sheen]Ā (with his bleached hair), NeilĀ [Gaiman], Douglas and the whole team, including SuzanneĀ [Smith]Ā and GlendaĀ [Mariani]Ā in casting. After that readthrough I asked my agent to try and see if she could shoehorn me in and she came back with a tape for Mr. Arnold saying āyou play the piano donāt youā¦?ā They wanted me to demonstrate my musical playing ability, so I rented a rehearsal studio room in Brixton for an hour and filmed myself playing piano (and drums just in case), then I did my scenes a couple of different ways and I guess it wasnāt too terrible!ā
Q: During episode five you mimed to music written by series composer David Arnold alongside a real string quartet ā this must have been very immersive! How did it feel to work with David, and bring the ball to life?
A: āI actually didnāt meet David Arnold sadly, but I did work with Catherine Grimes, the music supervisor who is lovely. David was at the London screening but I missed an opportunity to go and say hello to him which I kicked myself about.Ā
I remember before I was in Scotland there was a bit of uncertainty as to whether I would need to play anything for real or not, so I practised every day playing loads of Bach and other music I thought was era-appropriate just in case they asked me to do anything on the fly. So yes, it was very immersive as you say! They sent me three pieces of music to learn which I practised in my Edinburgh apartment on a portable folding keyboard thing I bought. They introduced me to the string quartet (John, Sarah, Alison and Stephanie) and I tried to hang out with them when I could. On the day we all had earpieces to mime to. I had to mime while listening out for a cue from NinaĀ [Sosanya]Ā from across the room, then deliver my dialogue and carry on playing, which was tricky! The quartet and I helped each other out actually: Douglas would say something like āletās go from a minute into the second piece of musicā, Iād look at the sheet music and whisper āwhere the hell is that?ā and one of the quartet would say āwe think thatās bar 90ā or something. Hereās a little bit of trivia: the shooting overran and the string quartet couldnāt make the last day, so they found some incredible lookalikes to replace them for the scene when we get lead out of the bookshop through all the demons, although I think they also kept them deliberately off camera.āĀ
Q: What did you think of your music shop when you first saw the set? Did you have a favourite poster or prop?
A: āI thought it was incredible! It couldāve been an actual music shop with all the instruments hanging up with the āArnoldāsā price tags on. The attention to detail was incredible, well IS incredible as I understand itās all still there. Itās hard to pick a favourite to be honest. I did a little video walkaround on my phone at the time so maybe Iāll post that if I wonāt get in trouble. Interestingly the shop interior itself was elsewhere on the set to the shop entrance you see from the street. You walk out of Aziraphaleās shop, over the road, through the door of the music shop and⦠thereās nothing.āĀ
Q: Mr. Arnold is tempted into the ball by a Doctor Who Annual and is playing the theme in the music shop scene ā are you a fan of Doctor Who in real life? And what was it like making those jokes and references in front of the Tenth Doctor David Tennant?
A: āIāve always dipped in and out of Doctor Who over the years since Sylvestor McCoy, who was doing it when I first became aware of it when I was growing up. Even if youāre not a fan itās one of those shows you canāt really get away from, so doing that particular scene in front of David was really fun, and of course Douglas had directed Doctor Who as well. Apart from the amusing situation of two supposed Doctor Who fans talking about Doctor Who without realising theyāre in the company of a Doctor Who, I also seem to remember Michael being the one to suggest that he would deliver his ādue to problems at the BBCā line directly to David.
Oh, and I think it was actually my idea to grab the annual off the harpsichord before joining the queue behind Crowley at the end of the ballroom scene (which weād shot weeks earlier at this point). When we were blocking it out and rehearsing I knew I had to leave my position and get to the front for my āsurrender the angleā line, and then later it just felt like I wouldnāt leave without the annual so I ran back through everyone to grab it. Nobody seemed to have a problem with me doing that so I just carried on doing it when we shot it! I do remember it being a fun set with Douglas and the team being very open to suggestions.ā
Q: How did you balance filming both Good Omens and BBC Ghosts at the same time?
A: āLuckily both shows were a joy to work on, and everyone seems to know about both of them. We were shooting them in early 2022 and I also had a little part in an ITV drama called āStonehouseā, starring Matthew Macfadyen. I usually never know when Iām working next so to have three great TV jobs at once was very unusual. There was all this date juggling and I actually almost had to turn down Ghosts due to clashes. Luckily both shows had to move some dates so it worked out. But yes, I spent two weeks up in Scotland shooting all that Good Omens ballroom stuff, then I came back down to London to do Ghosts, knowing Iād be back up to shoot my scenes in the music shop in a couple of weeks. Now, when I found out who was playing my wife in Ghosts I couldnāt believe it: Caroline Sheen ā Michael Sheenās cousin! She was amazing and that was another great set in general. I say āsetā, but itās all filmed in that house which surprised me. Iād worked with KiellĀ [Smith-Bynoe]Ā and JimĀ [Howick]Ā before, and CharlotteĀ [Ritchie]Ā was in the Good Omens radio play a few years ago and a big fan of the book. Charlotteās very musical of course and we got talking about my folding keyboard I had for practising my Good Omens stuff, and she ended up setting it up in the house for us to have a play on!
Now, when weād shot all our internal scenes there was this big storm forecast, and our external scenes were scheduled for the day of the storm, so that had to be moved into the next week. It meant I ended up shooting those scenes outside the house, then going straight back up to Scotland to shoot the Good Omens music shop scene the next day! When I mentioned to Michael Iād just worked with Caroline he said āooh sheās in Ghosts is she!ā and revealed that sheād texted him about me which was rather surreal. Then later after the Ghosts wrap party Kiell gave me a part in his Channel 4 Blap, so at the time I felt like I was killing it career wise, but the industry quietened a bit after that and my workload eased off over the year so I was in my overdraft by November.ā
Q: What are your plans for the future ā can we expect to see you in something else soon?
A: āThis year, after a bit of a quiet start, I was very fortunate to work on a Disney+ show called Rivals which stars⦠David Tennant! I think Iām allowed to say my character is called Brian, and I shot five episodes so that was another really amazing job, and great to work with David again (I told him he must be my good luck charm, although I hope heās not sick of me). That should be out at some point in late 2024. Other than that Iāve filmed a few other bits I presume will be out next year, one of which is called Truelove on Channel 4 which actually looks really good. That starts early January. Of course now Season 3 of Good Omens has been greenlit, I would love Neil and the gang to have me back on that⦠but I can only keep my fingers crossed!ā