![]() I like looking at the merchandise that we can do and the books we can do. Even if we had all the money in the world, we still couldn’t make more than we’re making now, because of availabilities, really. VERTUE: It feels about right, and actually, the money’s not the. ![]() Would you be happier if you made fewer episodes and got to concentrate more on each one, or if there were some more money and you got to make more episodes? We keep it that way now, because they know the show so well, it’s quite good that I can actually look at is from a viewer and say, “I don’t understand that,” or, “Why are they saying ‘seven percent solution?’ So I can see it more as a fan.ĪX: The New Year’s SHERLOCK special is unusual in that it’s a single episode, but your seasons are normally three episodes each. Isn’t that awful? Funnily enough, I still haven’t read that many stories. However, she says there is something special for her about SHERLOCK.ĪSSIGNMENT X: Were you a Sherlock Holmes fan before you started producing SHERLOCK? Sue Vertue, SHERLOCK’s series producer (who is also married to Moffat), has previously produced/executive produced other British series, including THE CUP, SUPERNOVA, CARRIE & BARRY and COUPLING. It is, as the English are wont to say, a one-off. On Friday, January 1, PBS will present SHERLOCK: THE ABOMINABLE BRIDE, which sees Benedict Cumberbatch’s Holmes and Martin Freeman’s Watson actually existing and solving a case in the late nineteenth century. SHERLOCK, the present-day adaptation by Steven Moffat and Mark Gatiss of Arthur Conan Doyle’s classic Victorian-era character, is doing something very different for New Year’s. Martin Freeman and Benedict Cumberbatch in SHERLOCK: THE ABOMINABLE BRIDE | ©2015 PBS/Robert Viglasky/Hartswood Films and BBC One and MASTERPIECE
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