The Big Issue: Alfred has been played by so many actors over the years but obviously in a different time. What have you taken from people like Michael Caine, Alan Napier, Michael Gough and so on?
Jack Bannon: It was Michael Caine [who played Alfred in the three Christian Bale-era Batman movies between 2005 and 2012]. Apparently he said, “If I have to be a butler then he has to be ex-SAS, there has to be a bit of something about him.” He gave us that back story and obviously our show explores that, so it would feel wrong really to not give him a nod. And it’s set in the Sixties and he was the film star of the Sixties, he exuded that style and cool with the Harry Palmer films that were points of research for us as well. So his Alfred, him as a person and also how he was in Alfie was an inspiration for us.
I dare say there is a bit of influence from Bond as well. What’s it like to be the person who gets to bring Bond and Batman together?
It’s really cool. I think if you give an English bloke slicked hair and a gun then that connotation is sort of made for you. It’s not something we spoke about going into it but I can see how it plays out. It’s fantastic – I think the Bond franchise is absolutely brilliant but it’s lacked the wry smile that Pennyworth has, it doesn’t take itself too seriously and it knows what it is and I think Bond at its best is like that. I know they’ve got Phoebe Waller-Bridge in to write for the new one and that is what it needs. It’s a great connotation to be made and I’ll happily take it.
I suppose if this ended up as an audition for Bond it wouldn’t be a bad thing?