![]() His two series have deeply impressed the most brilliant of Australia's comic minds, not least because his edgy work reaches such a massive audience. It seemed to get more and more out of hand and when the cameras stopped the cast would have a shell-shocked, embarrassed laugh, as in, 'What did we just do then?' " ![]() ![]() "He kept at them," McDonald says, "throwing grenades, winding them up, no one was going to back down. He pushed and provoked, wanting reactions from the girls that were more and more heated, volatile and "real".Īs the girls kept copping it from Ja'mie, the cameras rolled for 20 minutes, with McDonald reluctant to call a halt. Lilley, playing Ja'mie, told the cast the basic structure of the scene and then encouraged them to go wild within that. In the scene, Ja'mie has posted a nasty message about another girl on a website and has been instructed by her school to attend mediation. STUART McDONALD remembers directing Chris Lilley in a scene for We Can Be Heroes featuring Ja'mie (pronounced "Jah-may") King, the pratty, self-indulgent year 11 girl from a private school on Sydney's North Shore who does the 40 Hour Famine twice a week because it "keeps me looking hot".
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