Prøve GULL - Gratis

It's A Love Letter to Teachers

Birmingham Mail

|

September 19, 2025

STARS CILLIAN MURPHY AND JAY LYCURGO SPEAK WITH LYNN RUSK ABOUT THE IMPORTANCE OF SHOWING LOVE TO TROUBLED YOUTHS IN NEW REFORM SCHOOL DRAMA, STEVE

OSCAR winner Cillian Murphy has reached dizzying heights in his career, from starring in Christopher Nolan’s Oppenheimer, to playing Thomas Shelby in Peaky Blinders.

Although he has achieved remarkable success on his own, the Irish actor credits a former teacher with sparking his love of literature, poetry, and theatre.

In his latest film Steve, which he describes as a love letter to teachers, Cillian portrays an impassioned headteacher working in a last-chance reform school.

Set in the mid-Nineties and directed by Tim Mielants, the movie follows a pivotal day in the life of headteacher Steve and his students, who exist in a world that has abandoned them.

The drama is a reimagining of Max Porter's bestselling book Shy, named after its protagonist, a teenager who boards at the school with a programme for troubled youths.

The movie follows Shy’s relationship with Steve, who in turn is grappling with his own mental health as he fights to protect the school from closure.

Cillian, 49, who also is also a producer on the film, says he had no fixed template for his character but pays tribute to a teacher who inspired him.

“I had a teacher in secondary school. He wasn’t necessarily an inspiration for this character, but he was an inspiration to me personally,’ says the Cork-born actor.

“He was one of those teachers who reached out, connected, and saw something in me. His name’s Bill Wall, for the record, and he’s a poet and a novelist, but at the time he was teaching English. He kind of unlocked literature, poetry, and theatre for me.

FLERE HISTORIER FRA Birmingham Mail

Birmingham Mail

Celebs back a worthy cause

CLARE Balding, Adam Hills, Hannah Fry and Vicky Pattison kick off an unmissable night of comedy, entertainment and fundraising for Stand Up To Cancer.

time to read

1 min

December 12, 2025

Birmingham Mail

Jones backs Addicks to arrest slump

NATHAN Jones believes Charlton can get a result against Blues tomorrow - even with the Addicks’ growing injury list.

time to read

1 min

December 12, 2025

Birmingham Mail

Birmingham Mail

Edwards hails Silva return as 'big coup'

ROB Edwards believes new assistant head coach Rui Pedro Silva will be a “huge addition” at Wolves as the club attempts to stop the rot in the Premier League.

time to read

2 mins

December 12, 2025

Birmingham Mail

Birmingham Mail

Car wash to demolish building put up without permission

A MIDLAND car wash will have to demolish a building which was put up without permission.

time to read

1 mins

December 12, 2025

Birmingham Mail

EASY FEAST

The trick to entertaining is choosing dishes that look impressive but require minimal faff.

time to read

1 min

December 12, 2025

Birmingham Mail

New waste recycling scheme introduced

DUDLEY council is planning on introducing a new waste and recycling service from April 6, which will see two new caddies for food waste.

time to read

1 min

December 12, 2025

Birmingham Mail

Bulgaria leaders quit after demos

GLOBAL BRIEFING

time to read

1 min

December 12, 2025

Birmingham Mail

I've set myself a very high bar

Comedian Jessica Fostekew chats to MARION MCMULLEN about Gladiators, podcasts and life as a soccer mum

time to read

4 mins

December 12, 2025

Birmingham Mail

Major change called for at key planning meetings

OPPOSITION councillors are calling for a major change at a key meeting which regularly decides which planning applications are successful in Solihull.

time to read

1 min

December 12, 2025

Birmingham Mail

BOOTCAMP LEG UP FOR ARTISTS

THE art world is notoriously hard to get into, particularly for regional, working-class artists. But a new, fully-funded bootcamp at Solihull College & University Centre has been changing that story for local creatives.

time to read

1 min

December 12, 2025

Listen

Translate

Share

-
+

Change font size