Genre: | Drama |
Developer: | Sophia Al Maria |
Director: | Stacie Passon |
Country: | United Kingdom |
Num Series: | 1 |
Num Episodes: | 6 |
Composer: | Anne Nikitin |
Cinematography: | Ed Rutherford |
Editor: | Celia Haining |
Language: | English |
Runtime: | 49–50 minutes |
Company: | Warp Films |
Network: | Sky Atlantic |
Little Birds is a British drama television series starring Juno Temple and produced by Warp Films. Based on the homonymous work of erotica by Anaïs Nin, the six-episode series was released on Sky Atlantic and Now TV on 4 August 2020.[1] In Australia, it is available on Stan.
Inspired by Anaïs Nin's posthumously published 1979 collection of erotic short stories of the same name, Little Birds weaves stories of love and desire together with personal drama and political intrigue, set against a uniquely distinctive backdrop of hedonism and conflict. The series was filmed in Andalucia with studio elements in Manchester.
The series made its US premiere on the Starz channel on 6 June 2021.
Little Birds is set in Tangier International Zone in 1955, one of the last outposts of colonial decadence, and a culture shock in more ways than one for American debutante Lucy Savage (Juno Temple). Lucy desires an unconventional life free from the societal cage she's been kept in and, along with Tangier itself, finds herself on the cusp of achieving a painful yet necessary independence.
In February 2019, it was announced Juno Temple, Yumna Marwan and Raphael Acloque had joined the cast of the series, with Stacie Passon directing from a screenplay by Sophia Al-Maria, Warp Films produced the series. The series aired on Sky Atlantic in the United Kingdom and Sky in Spain.[2] In April 2019, Hugh Skinner, Jean-Marc Barr, Rossy de Palma and Nina Sosanya joined the cast of the series.[3] In June 2019, Dave Constabile, Amy Landecker and Matt Lauria joined the cast of the series.[4] Anne Nikitin composed the series score.[5]
Principal photography began in March 2019.[6] Production on the series took place in Tarifa, Spain and Manchester, England.[7] Production concluded in June 2019.[8]