He is stoical about these stinkers 'because you'd go nuts otherwise', and has no desire to follow the actor-producer route that would give him control over rewrites, not least because of his experience on the one Natural Nylon project for which he did assume that dual role - a biopic about legendary British war photographer Don McCullin. 'We had Don on board and a really good script, with me playing Don, but we just couldn't raise the finance. I found that very disappointing, and thought, "I don't want to play this game."' Last year, the prolonged losing streak finally ended with the closure of Natural Nylon and two superb performances in BBC dramas as 'a really nasty piece of work' in The Pardoner's Tale, one of the modernised Canterbury Tales, and in the title role of the two-part costume drama Byron, which rescued the poet from the 'mad, bad and dangerous to know' cliche. Like Regeneration, it showed that Lee Miller excels playing thoughtful men of obvious charm who are uncomfortable with their lot. This gift explains why Festen director Rufus Norris chose him to play Christian, the restaurateur who decides to disrupt his father's 60th birthday dinner with shocking revelations of childhood abuse.