Scoop Movie 2024: Cast, Release Date, Plot of Rufus Sewell Prince Andrew Film

“An hour of television can change everything,” Billie Piper says in the trailer for Scoop, the movie about Prince Andrew’s 2019 BBC Newsnight interview. The whole country watched as Emily Maitlis questioned him about Jeffrey Epstein, and soon after, Prince Andrew said he was stepping back from his public roles. Scoop has even been nominated for an Emmy.

But how did a royal end up in such a predicament? Directed by Philip Martin, Piper portrays Sam McAlister, who secured this high-stakes interview. Based on McAlister’s own memoir and adapted by Peter Moffat and Geoff Bussetil, the movie spotlights the women working behind the scenes to make it happen. The story follows McAlister, Maitlis, and Esme Wren as they navigate royal protocols, tricky negotiations with Prince Andrew’s aide Amanda Thirsk, and intense prep work leading up to the interview.

“The interview is so significant, but it’s 5% of the story,” McAlister tells Tudum. “What we do is we take you on the journey to how this all began.”

What is Scoop about?

This film gives you a behind-the-scenes look at the clash between Buckingham Palace and the BBC over a major news story. “I want to put the audience inside the breathtaking sequence of events that led to the interview with Prince Andrew — to tell a story about a search for answers, in a world of speculation and varying recollections,” Martin told Netflix. “It’s a film about power, privilege, and differing perspectives and how — whether in glittering palaces or high-tech newsrooms — we judge what’s true.”

For Piper, this was an opportunity to understand a story that had long intrigued her. “It was something I cared about tremendously,” she tells Tudum. “When you watch that interview, you think, ‘How did this get onto the screens? How was this signed off on? Who was part of this?’ Getting this close to a royal? That level of exposure — don’t know that I’ll ever see anything like it again. In my lifetime, I’ve never seen an interview like it. And there are a number of incredible women behind this moment, and telling their story is a gift as an actor, to be honest.”

Fans can’t wait to see this film!

McAlister is our guide into the world of the BBC, where her snakeskin stiletto boots and upfront tenacity mark her as a bit of an outsider. “I was a maverick in an organization that does have quite rigid ways of doing things,” McAlister says. A single mom from a working-class background, she feels like she has something to prove at a time when the journalism industry is in crisis. With the BBC facing ever-increasing competition, Newsnight’s continued existence is in question and the pressure to bolster ratings with audience-grabbing interview subjects is at an all-time high.

Piper latched onto those details as she crafted her performance, learning McAlister’s body language, voice intonations, and even her distinctive walk. “You don’t expect someone with that life-affirming warmth and steeliness combined,” Piper says.

“Billie really encapsulated that mix between seriousness and the lighter side of my character,” McAlister says. “To watch her literally transform, change her voice, [and wear] the extraordinary wig, my nails, the makeup, the roster of black clothing — it’s exactly the same. So meta and surreal.”

Is Scoop based on a true story?

Yes, Scoop is grounded in real events, using Scoops: Behind the Scenes of the Most Shocking Interviews, McAlister’s insider account as its primary source. The film’s producers also did thorough research on the happenings at the BBC and Buckingham Palace during this period. While some dramatization exists, McAlister spent 13 months building a relationship with Thirsk, turning nos into maybes, and maybes into that final yes. “Imagine going on a hundred first dates and only getting one second date,” McAlister says. “That is effectively my job.”

Re-creating the interview was surreal for McAlister, who witnessed both the actual event and its reenactment for the film. “It was like being there all over again,” she says, praising Anderson’s and Sewell’s performances. “The level of detail, putting together exactly the same room, the camera angles, the lighting, the specifics of the table, the cables, the types of cameras, the carpet — everything is so ridiculously close.”

“It was weirdly moving,” Piper adds. “They were doing such a convincing job, and the whole thing felt like we’d geared towards this moment. It felt like, ‘OK, this is a job worth doing.’”

Who’s in the cast of Scoop?

Billie Piper

as Sam McAlister

Sam is a unique member of the BBC’s Newsnight team with her Chanel jacket, leopard-print heels, and bleached-blonde hair. She prefers doing things her own way, making her feel like an outsider. As a booking agent, she builds relationships outside the office and uses her warmth and kindness to negotiate deals. Her persistence secured the exclusive interview with Prince Andrew.

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Gillian Anderson

as Emily Maitlis

Emily is the BBC journalist who conducts the bombshell interview with Prince Andrew. She’s tough, but never sensational.

“These women exist in real life, and they are women in a field that has been traditionally male-dominated,” Anderson told Netflix. “Having a story about their experience and having journalists like Emily Maitlis represented in film is important. What I love about this film is that all of the women sit prominently in the story; you see them all working together to bring this interview to light.”

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Keeley Hawes

as Amanda Thirsk

As Prince Andrew’s top aide and private secretary, Amanda works tirelessly to manage the scandal he finds himself at the center of. Amanda feels like she is part of the royal family because she’s been with them for so long, and does her best to look out for the prince — but she can only do so much.

“She was pivotal in the decision that Prince Andrew should do this interview with Newsnight,” Hawes told Netflix. “And so we meet her at a very early stage where she goes and agrees to have a meeting with Sam McAlister. The wheels start turning and Amanda Thirsk thinks that this could be a really good idea in terms of PR for Prince Andrew.”

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Romola Garai

as Esme Wren

Newsnight editor Esme oversees the team of capable producers and researchers working around the clock to bring the interview together. Once she realizes how big the story has become, Esme is diligent about getting it right. From planning Emily’s interview outfit to asking the right questions, Esme knows what makes good TV.

“[Esme] has a complex bunch of people to work with, some of whom don’t get on with each other,” Martin told Netflix. “Romola is just fantastic at that. She brought a gravitas to it — you know that she needs this interview really badly, you know that it’ll turn things around for Newsnight, but she’s able to bring that all off amazingly.”

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Rufus Sewell

as Prince Andrew

Prince Andrew, the second son of Queen Elizabeth II, finds himself in the middle of a scandal and must prove his integrity to the British people in a sit-down interview with Newsnight.

“I don’t have that natural gift as a mimic that some people have, so I had a lot of work to do,” Sewell told Netflix about prepping for his performance. “I spent hours and hours just obsessing on this interview and what I thought was going on behind each measure, each movement, each counter movement.”

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Who is Gillian Anderson’s character, Emily Maitlis?

Piper tells Tudum that she became emotional watching Anderson step into the shoes of respected newsreader Maitlis. “[It’s an incredible] responsibility that Gillian has, playing someone who is very much part of our British fabric. We know Emily Maitlis. We’ve seen her deliver really hard-hitting interviews. She is a big deal in our country, and she’s very public facing. But Gillian absolutely nailed it.”

By following a reporter and her colleagues in hot pursuit of a major story, the film fits into a long tradition of movies about journalists holding powerful institutions accountable. But its peers — films like All the President’s Men, Spotlight, The Post, Good Night, and Good Luck, and Frost/Nixon, to name just a few –– overwhelmingly center on men as the truth-tellers. As Anderson’s Maitlis elegantly sums up in the trailer: “Three women and a whippet. You wouldn’t have seen that in a BBC studio when I started.”

What makes Scoop stand out is its focus on the women behind the news. “It’s a really rare opportunity to see women in their 40s and 50s depicted in a professional setting, going about their jobs to the best of their abilities with an extraordinary outcome,” McAlister says. “That’s what makes this content relatable, and also important and significant.”

Listen to Gillian Anderson on Skip Intro

“It was like a piece of theater, it was like a first act of a play, it was incredible to have that experience,” Anderson tells Krista Smith about recreating Maitlis’ interview with Prince Andrew. “That’s what you want as an actor, right?” Listen to their full conversation on Skip Intro below.

What is BBC’s Newsnight?

Newsnight is the pinnacle, the gold standard of BBC news journalism,” Martin told Netflix. “It’s a nightly news show and it’s where the toughest journalism takes place: It’s the most detailed investigations, the hardest interviews. It’s been going for about 40 years and if you work in news at the BBC, it’s where you want to end up.”

When is the release date for Scoop?

Scoop is now streaming on Netflix. Piper hopes that audiences will take note of the staggering amount of work and dedication that goes into producing the gold standard of news. “I hope that people walk away with some gratitude for that type of journalism. It feels like a dying thing now,” she says.

“There are real crucial moments in the history of journalism that remind you of the difference that these kinds of interviews can make,” McAlister adds. “Journalism at its best does something quite profoundly extraordinary that nothing else can do, and this movie is in honor of that.”

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