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Interview: Deborah Moggach

New year, new Anne Frank

December 30, 2008 16:17
Deborah Moggach adapted the diary: “We didn’t want Anne to appear angelic”

By

Simon Round,

Simon Round

3 min read

When novelist and screenwriter Deborah Moggach was approached to adapt Anne Frank’s diary for a BBC drama series, she was daunted by the idea.

The diary — written before and during the two years that Frank and her family were in hiding from the Nazis in a house in Amsterdam — has already been adapted and performed a number of times on stage and on screen, so Moggach realised she had to come up with something fresh. And she had the difficult job of extrapolating conversations from the text which might well never have happened.

In one way her task was made easier: “We were very privileged to be able to use the actual text of the diary itself [rather than an edited version], which is rare for an adaptation,” says the London-based writer.

“So I took a lot from that. Of course, Anne writes so well — far better than I could done it. But I had to invent conversations for the sake of the story. For example I had Anne’s sister, Margot, who is a quiet presence in the book, tell Anne: ‘It’s difficult for me too.’ Whether she actually ever said that, I don’t know.”

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