Richard Gadd Transforms for New BBC Drama Half Man Exploring Masculinity and Repression
Six-part series follows three decades of brotherhood between Niall and Ruben in Glasgow
Quick Look
- Richard Gadd has transformed himself physically and emotionally for his role as Ruben in new BBC series Half Man, a six-part drama exploring the breakdown of a brotherhood over three decades.
- The show, written by and starring Gadd, follows two men forced to live together as teens whose mothers are in a relationship, with one struggling to accept his sexuality and the other grappling with past trauma.
- Gadd underwent significant physical changes including growing a beard and bulking up to embody the hard-man character, far removed from his previous role in Emmy-winning Baby Reindeer.
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Why It Matters
Richard Gadd starred in and wrote Baby Reindeer, which won an Emmy in 2024. He played comedian Donny Dunn in that series. Half Man marks his return to writing and acting in a leading role.
Playing Ruben in his new BBC series Half Man was "so far away from me and anything I'd done before", says Richard Gadd. "It terrified me." The six-part drama, written by and starring Gadd, follows three decades in the lives of self-conscious Niall and volatile Ruben, who were once inseparable as teens. Half Man explores the breakdown of their brotherhood and sees Niall struggle to accept his sexuality, while Ruben grapples with a trauma from his past. Gadd explains he didn't initially see himself acting in the series after his "intense" experience with 2024 Emmy-winning show Baby Reindeer, in which he played comedian Donny Dunn. The actor says that if he were to fail in the role he would "look like a fool" - but he didn't want to let the fear of what people might think stop him. He had to "change everything" about himself for the role, from growing an "awful beard" to changing his hair and bulking up his muscles. "I just knew if people were going to buy the guy from Baby Reindeer as this hard-man epitome of sort of masculinity, I needed to really transform," he explains. A violent altercation at Niall's wedding kick-starts the new series, which cuts between the 1980s and the present day to explore how their relationship fell apart. Gadd says he was interested in exploring family dysfunction. To do this, he initially establishes Niall and Ruben's bond as "unbreakable, unshakable, for better or for worse". The pair are forced to live in the same house as teens because their mothers are in a relationship. Ruben solves his problems by fighting while Niall hides parts of himself - and they form an unlikely bond. But secrets and shame start to splinter their relationship which violently unravels. Both grapple with shame and repression throughout the series - Niall from his sexuality and Ruben from his trauma. "I think sometimes the things people are most scared of is themselves," Gadd says. "I certainly think in my life I've experienced challenges that have come from repression." Gadd explains he thought it was interesting to show the two repressed men living in Glasgow, a city that has gone through so much change. "This city is progressing around [Niall], becoming more vibrant, more colourful, more accepting, and yet he still can't get past his own demons." Gadd notes that when he was growing up in a small Scottish village, there was an attitude that Glasgow was a "scary" place but that isn't really the case. Now it's become a "cultural capital of the world" and a "really progressive" place, he says, with a prominent gay community. While Gadd says he never writes with actors in mind, he couldn't shake the idea of Jamie Bell, who starred in Billy Elliot and Rocketman, playing Niall. "He's a very celebrated actor, but in my mind, still underrated," he says, adding he felt Bell, set to star in the upcoming Peaky Blinders series, "looked right" for the part.
Open Questions
- What specific trauma does Ruben experience?
- How exactly does the violent altercation at the wedding unfold?
- What happens to break their brotherhood permanently?






