Main content

Intimacy on screen

Indian director Alankrita Shrivastava and British intimacy coordinator Ita O'Brien discuss the best way to make sure actors feel safe on set while filming intimate content.

Whether it鈥檚 a stroke of a cheek or a sex scene, filming intimate content for movies and TV is a delicate business. When badly handled, it can even cause the actors harm. Kim Chakanetsa talks to an Indian movie director and to a pioneering intimacy coordinator about ensuring actors feel safe on set while filming simulated sex scenes. Also: has the #MeToo movement fuelled a demand for better boundaries, and how is the industry responding?

Ita O'Brien is a British movement director and intimacy coordinator for film, TV and theatre. She worked on the set of I May Destroy You, Normal People, Gentleman Jack and Sex Education. She has developed the 'Intimacy on Set' guidelines for those working with intimacy, scenes with sexual content and nudity.

Alankrita Shrivastava is an Indian screenwriter and director. Her 2017 movie, Lipstick Under My Burkha, was initially banned in India for containing 'contagious sexual scenes'. She explains the challenges of shooting sex scenes in Bollywood, where nudity isn't allowed, and how to put women's desire at the centre of the narrative.

Produced by Sarah Kendal and Alice Gioia for the 大象传媒 World Service.

IMAGE DETAILS
Left: Alankrita Shrivastava (credit Komal Gandhi)
Right: Ita O'Brien (credit Nic Dawkes)

Available now

27 minutes

Last on

Mon 8 Feb 2021 23:32GMT

Broadcasts

  • Mon 8 Feb 2021 02:32GMT
  • Mon 8 Feb 2021 06:32GMT
  • Mon 8 Feb 2021 09:32GMT
  • Mon 8 Feb 2021 13:32GMT
  • Mon 8 Feb 2021 21:32GMT
  • Mon 8 Feb 2021 23:32GMT

The best of The Conversation

Enlightening, inspiring, revealing: Some of our favourite Conversations so far

100 Women

Global experience on image, work, relationships, equality, migration and working lives

Podcast