The Curse of Daniel Morgan, Part One
Time, I think, for a Christmas ghost story.
During the winter of 1996, Conrad Media began filming a television series and documentary based on various pieces of Daniel Morgan’s short fiction. The BBC had subcontracted the work to them following the acquisition of the licence from Harry Grant.
Conrad were a dependable firm made up of veteran film and television producers, and were seen as a safe and budget-conscious option for a production with an already disastrous history. Filming was almost stopped due to the somewhat superstitious views widepsread at the BBC. Corporate gossip had tagged the endeavour as doomed from the outset.
Bad luck was one thing, the prospect of financial failure another. Not one of the naysayers came close to predicting the extent of the tragic events that followed.
Principle photography started on December 9th, and was to continue until the weekend of the 21st. Various locations had been chosen in and around the Rhondda and Rhymney Valleys, not far from the colliery where Morgan had once worked. Particularly convenient for the production was an extensive plot of land that sported a disused textile factory in surprisingly good order and various buildings, including a modestly-sized farmhouse. The land had once been owned by an industrialist who had made his fortune in the area, before losing it all following the Second World War. The reason it had remained relatively untouched by local vandals soon became apparent.
Filming proceeded to plan during the first week, despite several significant technical glitches. Equipment malfunctioned on-set, and a number of different vehicles were unable to be restarted after parking outside the factory. Despite the hitches, the crew were just about able to keep schedule. A forecast of poor weather in the following week convinced Adam Winfield, the director and one of the main stockholders in Conrad, to bring the night shoots they had planned to do during the final couple of days forward to that weekend.
Delyth Agosto, the actress playing the main character in the series, was the first person to report seeing strange activity on set. Within minutes of beginning the first scene, outside the ground floor of the factory, she complained of seeing people inside staring out through the windows at her. Winfield sent several people inside, but they found nothing. Throughout the first couple of hours, Agosto became more and more agitated, certain at first that the crew were playing a practical joke. Matters became worse after the production manager convinced her it wasn’t their doing, as it was at this point that she started to believe that the events were of unnatural origin. The shoot ended when the portable generator that powered the camera set-up shorted out.
The next day Agosto told Winfield of her intention to quit. She had endured a restless sleep during what was left of the night, convinced that a presence had followed her back from the set to the holiday letting that had been provided for her, an old miner’s cottage not far from the shoot. Winfield was able to talk her round by agreeing to limit the rest of the filming she would have to do at night, and putting it back to the end of the following week.
On the Sunday night, the crew had prepared to shoot without Agosto at the old farmhouse. Whether provoked by her previous behaviour or due to an actual increase in unexplainable activity, this time others reported seeing movement within the house, and in the surrounding area. Winfield struggled to keep order during the long night, as piece after piece of equipment failed and more people claimed to see figures watching them. Winfield was able to cap the rising levels of panic until the end of the scheduled shoot, an achievement made all the more impressive following his admission the next day to his DoP that not only had he too been seeing indistinct figures throughout the site, but had also heared someone whispering behind his shoulder more than once during the night, when there was no one there to be making a noise.

on December 30th, 2008 at 6:53 pm
I really hope you keep these going forever.
on January 3rd, 2009 at 12:48 pm
I won’t lie, they are a whole lot of fun.