• W
    • Celebrities

Tessa Ross at Film4's London headquarters

Tessa Ross: The Highbrow Hitmaker

Camera-shy Tessa Ross, of scrappy Film4, is the British film world's secret weapon.

March 2010

If it’s true that you can gauge a person’s power by the size of his or her office, then Tessa Ross wouldn’t seem to be wielding much influence these days. Her workspace—a book-strewn cubicle in a row of several others at the London headquarters of Film4—is barely worthy of an entry-level Holly­wood D-girl. Yet Ross, the 48-year-old who runs the production company, is often described as the queen of the British movie industry. Last year Film4’s projects, including Slumdog Millionaire, which Ross developed and executive produced, were up for 12 Academy Awards; her current slate includes Peter Jackson’s The Lovely Bones.

More surprising than Ross’s modest cubicle, perhaps, is her minuscule budget: Film4 (a division of the government-owned Channel 4) has just $13 million with which to put together eight films annually. As a result, Ross will sometimes nurture projects for years and then cofinance them with deep-pocketed studios, only to watch much of the profits (and the credit) go elsewhere. On Slumdog, Film4 earned back about $9 million—triple what it spent on the project, which isn’t bad, until you consider that the film’s worldwide gross was more than $370 million. Fox Searchlight got most of the rest. Ross insists she doesn’t mind at all.

“My job is to make the films happen,” says Ross, who demurely stayed in her seat at last year’s Oscars while the other Slumdog producers rushed to the stage with director Danny Boyle (he thanked Ross in his acceptance speech). “Commercial success is not what I’m most aiming at.”

A married mother of three who studied Chinese at Oxford and previously worked at the BBC, Ross is bright and chatty but endlessly self-effacing in that British don’t-mind-me sort of way. She says she feels sorry for anyone reading a magazine profile of someone as dull as herself, and offsets any discussions of her hits with references to her flops. But although she enjoys nurturing talent and playing behind-the-scenes “mom” to filmmakers and writers, it’s clear that she can get scrappy when necessary.

“Have I got balls of steel underneath? Yes,” says Ross with a sly smile. “But what’s brilliant is that I’m not usually fighting for me—I’m fighting for something else.”

One current battle is to protect Film4’s budget, which has been hit hard as Channel 4 suffers from a drop in TV advertising revenue. Ironically, Slumdog’s success may have made Ross’s job more difficult, increasing expectations that she’ll churn out more hits. “The idea that [a film like Slumdog] is deliverable very often is a horrible pressure,” she says. “I must say I feel it.”

Keywords
Who,
producers
Subscribe to Wmagazine.com
Give the Gift of Wmagazine.com

W Newsletter

Sign up to receive the latest on fashion, art and style delivered to your email inbox.

Features
daily w ipad app
Your daily dose of W magazine—featuring celebrity video interviews, exclusive fashion content, designer giveaways, beauty and travel advice, in-app shopping, and more.
jessica biel
Don’t let her all-American good looks fool you—Jessica Biel is bringing sexy back.
kim kardashian
Kim Kardashian can’t sing, act, or dance, but she’s found the role of a lifetime in the fine art of playing herself.
lady gaga
Lady Gaga shakes things up with catchy songs and loads of underwear.
Subscribe to Wmagazine.com

W Newsletter

Sign up to receive the latest on fashion, art and style delivered to your email inbox.

Kim Kardashian: The Art Of Reality

Kim Kardashian can’t sing, act, or dance, but she’s found the role of a lifetime in the fine art of playing herself. Behind the scenes with the Queen of Reality TV. (November 2010)

The Daily W iPad App

Your daily dose of W magazine—featuring celebrity video interviews, exclusive fashion content, designer giveaways, beauty and travel advice, in-app shopping, and more.
Brad Pitt and Angelina Jolie

Domestic Bliss

The Steven Klein shoot that started it all: Mr. and Mrs. Smith costars Brad Pitt and Angelina Jolie play house in Palm Springs. (July 2005)