Kelly Marcel

Screenwriter

Birthday January 10, 1974

Birth Sign Capricorn

Birthplace London, England

Age 50 years old

Nationality United Kingdom

#6318 Most Popular

1967

Marcel was nominated for Outstanding Debut by a British Writer, Director or Producer at the 67th Annual BAFTA Awards.

1974

Kelly Marcel (born 10 January 1974) is a British screenwriter.

1994

She had a largely non-speaking role as Young Vera in the 1994 television film adaptation of A Dark-Adapted Eye.

Marcel eventually quit acting to pursue writing, while working part-time in Prime Time Video, a video rental shop in Battersea, London.

Around the corner from the video shop was the Latchmere pub, where Tom Hardy hosted an acting workshop.

2006

Marcel, who had just seen Al Gore's 2006 global warming documentary An Inconvenient Truth, combined these three influences into the script.

Gondwanaland Highway was almost picked up by Carnival Films, the UK production company behind Downton Abbey, when producer Aaron Kaplan persuaded Marcel to bring the show to America instead.

She sold a script about death row, titled Westbridge, to Showtime.

She worked on the script with director Thomas Schlamme.

Though the script went unmade, it became a calling card for Marcel in Hollywood.

After her two-week trip to Los Angeles and her decision not to continue working on Terra Nova, Marcel returned to the London video shop.

She was approached by Ruby Films' Alison Owen to work on a project about Mary Poppins author P. L. Travers and her relationship with Walt Disney for BBC Films, based on an earlier draft by Sue Smith.

2008

Marcel and Hardy became friends, and he subsequently brought Marcel in to do uncredited rewrites on his 2008 film Bronson, directed by Nicolas Winding Refn, after it ran into trouble.

One of Hardy's tattoos says 'Skribe' in tribute to Marcel.

While working at the video shop, she wrote a script for a TV show called Gondwanaland Highway.

She wrote it for her dad, who had been telling her about the supercontinent Gondwanaland and reading a Stephen Hawking book on time travel.

2011

She also created and served as executive producer of the television series Terra Nova (2011).

Marcel is the daughter of director Terry Marcel and actress Lindsey Brook, and the older sister of actress Rosie Marcel.

Marcel has played minor roles in television series such as The Bill, Holby City, and Casualty.

The script, Saving Mr. Banks, landed on the 2011 Black List, and was acquired by Disney.

2012

Marcel was hired in 2012 to adapt E. L. James' bestselling erotic novel Fifty Shades of Grey, with Sam Taylor-Johnson directing, after Universal Pictures and Focus Features won the rights to the Fifty Shades trilogy for $5 million in a bidding war.

Though the film was financially successful, grossing $571.1 million worldwide on a $40 million budget and spawning two sequels, both Marcel and Johnson expressed unhappiness with the finished film, with Marcel describing it as too painful to watch.

Of particular issue was James' insistence that the film preserve her original dialogue in its entirety, and threatening to boycott the film if the dialogue was rewritten.

She was one of the writers on Sony's Venom adaptation, alongside Scott Rosenberg and Jeff Pinkner.

Directed by Ruben Fleischer, the film stars Marcel's friend and frequent collaborator Tom Hardy in the title role.

She returned to write the script for the sequel.

In October 2022, it was announced that Marcel would serve as director for Venom 3 (her directorial debut), in addition to writing and producing it.

Script editor

Story author

2013

She wrote the films Saving Mr. Banks (2013), Fifty Shades of Grey (2015), Venom (2018), its sequels Let There Be Carnage (2021) and the upcoming third film.

She will make her directorial debut with the latter film.

The film was released in 2013, directed by John Lee Hancock, and starring Tom Hanks as Walt Disney and Emma Thompson as P. L. Travers.

Marcel and Smith shared writing credit.