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The return of Sara Sugarman

After a gap of nine years, the director is releasing a new movie, inspired by a real-life pop chart hoax

March 14, 2013 11:44
Growing up Jewish in Rhyl, Sugarman says she 'felt special and different'. Photo;Getty Images

ByStephen Applebaum, Stephen Applebaum

4 min read

‘I love making films,’ says Sara Sugarman. “I don’t get to do it that often, just because it’s so hard to make a film, and it breaks your heart. You fall in love with each project and they often don’t come to fruition. But when you get the privilege of shouting ‘Action’, it’s fantastic.”

It has been nine years since the Welsh film-maker’s last film, Confessions of a Teenage Drama Queen, starring Lindsay Lohan. Now she is back with Vinyl, a lively comedy about the middle-aged members of a disbanded punk group who plot to use a younger band as a Trojan horse to smuggle a new song into the charts, after being told that they’re too old to have a hit. Incredibly, the film is based on a real-life hoax pulled off by Mike Peters and his band, The Alarm, in 2004.

“Mike, being Mike, wasn’t having it,” laughs Sugarman. “So he got four kids to mime the song and it went straight into the charts. Brilliant!”

Made with very little money, a lot of love, and a ton of goodwill, Vinyl took Sugarman back to her home town of Rhyl, north Wales, where, as a young teenager, she had played in a punk outfit called The Fractures. Peters, coincidentally, was their manager. Despite this personal connection, the film was not her idea, but the brainchild of writer Jim Cooper.