Todd Graff wrote the screenplay, whose focus is not a
story about The Beatles from Epstein’s point of view but the story of
Epstein himself.
Sometimes called the "fifth Beatle," Epstein signed the band in 1961
-- before Beatlemania hit -- and died in 1967 from an accidental drug
overdose. He was a closet homosexual and suffered from gambling and drug
addictions -- and was many times the glue that held the band together.
The producers describe the project as the story of “the man who threw
the biggest party of the 1960s but ultimately forgot to invite himself.”
UTA is arranging the financing and will represent the film for sale.
The casting news arrives as another Brian Epstein project, dubbed The Fifth Beatle, is coming together from author Vivek J. Tiwary,
who will write and produce a big-screen adaptation of his graphic
novel. That project has secured the rights to inlude Beatles songs from
Sony/ATV, which controls the John Lennon/Paul McCartney music catalogue.
McGuigan is the main director of Sherlock, having directed
four out of the six episodes of the hit BBC show (which has sold to more
than 160 countries) and that earned Cumberbatch an Emmy nomination this
year.
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