Before joining renowned documentary production company Windfall Films as a receptionist, Asquith had received no formal film training. “As a child I went to a Saturday film club,” she recalls. “We had an old, slightly working 16mm camera but we couldn’t afford the film. We pretended we were filming things.”
A stint working behind a bar, however, proved useful in developing social skills – a must for a filmmaker specialising in intimate documentaries. “Once I got to Windfall there were some fascinating, highly educated, quite geeky people there who found it more difficult than I did to communicate. They started to make a series [The Decision] about social services and wanted to show the child’s point of view – it was a good decision for them to send me. They were brilliant at nurturing people at Windfall – they gave people of my age a chance,” recalls Asquith.
The Decision took the Royal Television Society award for best documentary series. More success followed with Fifteen (2001), for which Asquith was BAFTA-nominated along with fellow director Nichola Koratjitis and producer Oliver Morse. The three-part C4 series was filmed in Stockwell, south London, where Asquith was living at the time, and opened a window to the lives of a group of inner-city teenagers. One of the 15-year-olds was the subject of a later Asquith film for C4, Kimberley: Young Mum 10 Years On (2009).
Over the past decade, Asquith’s films have been varied, taking in arranged marriage (2002’s Marrying A Stranger), teenage gangs (2004’s Whatever), children’s entertainers (2008’s Clowns) and gay dads (2010’s My Weird and Wonderful Family).
But do they have anything in common? “I suppose I’m interested in people’s relationships,” says Asquith. “I’m trying to see the world through someone else’s eyes.”
“My films are made in a personal way but I hope they have a political nature. The politics should come in the back door without [the viewer] noticing. If you’re having fun with [it], people don’t feel lectured. Everyone wants their documentary to change the world.”