Close working relationships have been a recurring feature of Jones’ career. “A lot of writers can’t stand any control or interference, but I love collaboration,” he says. “With Jimmy, we would sit around and discuss endlessly what could be done with a subject, and then we’d work out the series arc and the characters, and we’d talk about those endlessly too. Then we’d go away and write our own episodes.”
Another key collaborator is Kath Mattock, who Jones worked with on The Cops, Buried and Murder. “I haven’t got a huge amount of confidence in my own ideas, I’m always happy to work with a producer like Kath. We sit around and talk about ideas and then work them up. That always makes me feel much more comfortable than coming up with ideas on my own.”
“It’s worth cultivating really good relationships because they can be so productive,” offers Jones as a tip for new writers. “It’s very hard to give advice. I haven’t done any courses, although I’m sure they’re a good thing. I just think if you’re good enough and persistent, that should be enough. Just get it down on paper, keep sending it off and don’t be downhearted.”
Looking to the future, Jones fancies writing for the cinema: “In some ways making Murder was like a film experience in that it had a strong vision, an influential director and a very close knit team of director, producer, writer and editor.”
Lennon Naked, Jones’s 2010 single drama about the turbulent life of the Beatle in the late 60s, provided another taster of making movies. “I don’t suppose there’s much difference between Lennon Naked and a feature film, but there’s some intangible thing that means one gets shown on BBC4 and the other at Muswell Hill Odeon.”