Benedict Cumberbatch to play Vote Leave supremo in Channel 4 Brexit drama

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Benedict CumberbatchImage source, Getty Images
Image caption,

Benedict Cumberbatch will star as Vote Leave director Dominic Cummings

Benedict Cumberbatch is to play the man who masterminded the Vote Leave campaign during the Brexit referendum in a new Channel 4 docudrama.

The actor will play Vote Leave's campaign director Dominic Cummings.

The two-hour drama, which has a working title of Brexit, has been written by political dramatist James Graham.

Channel 4 said it would "explore the myriad tactics employed to swing one of the most surprising referendum results in living memory".

Vote Leave was the official "out" campaign during the 2016 EU referendum and was backed by cabinet ministers including Boris Johnson and Michael Gove.

Most of the drama's action will take place during the build-up to the vote and "will explore the anatomy of a modern data-driven election campaign, and the divisive figures driving it from the shadows", Channel 4 said.

The broadcaster said the drama would set out "not to be an analysis of who was right and who was wrong, but rather is the story of how it happened, and why".

During the campaign, Cumberbatch himself signed a letter saying Brexit would "damage" the creative industry.

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Dominic Cummings appeared before MPs in April 2016

Mr Cummings was one of the referendum's leading strategists, and has said the "out" campaign probably would not have won without the famous bus pledging an extra £350m a week for the NHS.

He hasn't commented on Channel 4's plans, but he has been at loggerheads with Channel 4 News over their reporting of Vote Leave's spending during the referendum.

The group's spending is currently being investigated by the Electoral Commission. Vote Leave has also come under scrutiny for its Facebook campaign after it enlisted a data firm that may have improperly received users' data. Vote Leave has denied any wrongdoing.

Dramatist Graham penned the script for Coalition, a 2015 Channel 4 docudrama about the aftermath of the 2010 general election. He also created political stage dramas including This House, Labour of Love and Privacy.

Image source, Getty Images
Image caption,

James Graham won an Olivier Award earlier this year

Graham said: "I'm so excited - not to mention a little nervous - to have this chance to try and get under the skin of what happened during that historic vote.

"I hope by going behind the scenes of the campaign, we're able to interrogate the consequences of what happened during these eight weeks that have changed the country forever."

Graham's retelling of the EU referendum is likely to prove contentious, partly because disputes about how the campaign was conducted are still raging.

Mr Cummings has been summoned to appear in front of the House of Commons Digital, Culture, Media and Sport committee on Tuesday to answer questions about Vote Leave's spending, use of personal data and co-ordination with other pro-Brexit groups.

But he has accused the MPs, external of being more interested in grandstanding than uncovering the truth, and has said he will not give evidence to the committee "under any circumstances".

More new Channel 4 shows

Alongside the Cumberbatch-led drama, Channel 4 has announced more new programmes. They include a late-night entertainment show hosted by grime star Big Narstie and stand-up comedian Mo Gilligan, and filmed in front of a live studio audience.

The pair will be joined by celebrity guests to dissect popular culture and trends.

Channel 4's new director of programmes Ian Katz described the series, given the working title The Big Narstie Show, as "frankly bonkers".

Set to air at 11pm, it fills a slot earmarked by Katz as a space space for "outlandish ideas".

Meanwhile, a new reality show, The Circle, will ask "provocative questions" about interaction in the age of social media.

Contestants will live in separate apartments and only be able to communicate anonymously online through The Circle - a voice-activated social media platform.

"It is only when someone is 'blocked' that the others will learn about who they have really been interacting with," the broadcaster said.

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