Filming has commenced on the upcoming Shane Warne biopic and despite his family recently objecting to the project, they have now reportedly “offered their support”.
Although sports fans may be eager to see the late King of Spin’s life immortalised on the screen his family has held different views. Shane Warne’s eldest daughter, Brooke, recently took to Instagram to vent her frustration regarding the proposed telemovie.
Brooke questioned whether the broadcaster has “any respect” for her late father when a conversation between Nine presenter Jo Hall and radio personality Dee Dee Dunleavy turned to the upcoming movie on radio station 3AW.
“Do any of you have any respect for Dad? Or his family? Who did so much for Channel 9 and now you want to dramatise his life and our families life 6 months after he passed away? You are beyond disrespectful,” she wrote on her Instagram story.
Despite the backlash, Nine issued a statement on Wednesday, November 9 that revealed Warne’s family had given the broadcaster their tick of approval for the upcoming telemovie.
“During pre-production, the 9Network and Screentime have met with the Warne family who have offered their support for the series,” Nine said.
“The 9Network looks forward to collaborating with the family as filming continues.”
Warne’s former manager James Erskine recently discussed the biopic with Nine executives who assured him the story would be made up of narratives from interviews with Warne, which may have helped to bring the Warne family on board with the project.
“The perception of a dramatisation is that it is going to be sex, sizzle, and sensationalism, rather than a wholesome story,” Erskine told The Herald Sun.
“Now we know Shane was a colourful character, you can’t get away from that. You can’t sanitise it and suddenly say he is a clergyman.
“But they have assured me it will be done appropriately. At the end of the day if they do a hatchet job, then the whole world will be watching.”
Regarding what fans can expect from the biopic, Nine’s head of drama, Andy Ryan, told The Sydney Morning Herald earier this year that the proposed biopic about Warne “will be larger than life – entertaining, confronting, thought-provoking”.
“Warnie’s life was so full of drama, like the man himself,” Ryan told the publication.
“We want to explore what made Warnie so special, and why he had such a powerful effect on people. He was a sporting legend, a national treasure, international kind of icon, but he was also a larrikin, a rogue and a charmer and a flawed man.
“The national outpouring of grief over his passing had shown us – if we needed telling – just what a sort of impact he’s had on the national conversation.”
Warne died of a suspected heart attack, age 52, while holidaying on the island of Koh Samui in Thailand on March 4.
Warne’s management released a statement shortly after his passing acknowledging the tragedy.
“Shane was found unresponsive in his villa and despite the best efforts of medical staff, he could not be revived,” the statement said.
Tributes poured in from across the globe from fellow cricketers, celebrities and politicians alike following the news of his passing.