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Convicted drug smuggler Billy Hayes is making a new film in Birmingham

“I enjoyed prison. I enjoyed living in the moment. I had my act down in jail.
Billy Hayes (right) author of Midnight Express is making a film in Birmingham directed and written by Tony Clarke

“I enjoyed prison. I enjoyed living in the moment. I had my act down in jail. Friends in jail is ‘you don’t f**k with me and I don’t f**k with you’.

The notion that being banged up in prison could ever be perceived as a pleasurable experience is a staggering one. Particularly when it is a prison as grim as the one that Billy Hayes found himself trapped in following his brazen and ill-conceived attempt to fly out of Turkey with four pounds of hashish strapped under his armpits.

This wasn’t the comfy confinement of modern prisons where the privileged can enjoy gyms, TVs in their rooms and the freedom to protest if they feel their human rights are being violated.

This was a brutal place. Prisoners were kept cowed by actual beatings or the threat of them and a legal system so arbitrary that it saw Billy’s four year sentence suddenly changed to life only weeks before he was due to get out.

When a factionalised version of his experiences and eventual escape, written by Oliver Stone and directed by Alan Parker, was portrayed in the now infamous film Midnight Express, it so terrified the audiences that Turkey’s desirability as a tourist destination plummeted faster than Billy’s heart when security started frisking him at the airport.It may be nearly 40 years since he spent those five years in jail, but they have moulded the rest of Billy’s life.

They also led him onto a path to become an actor, director and writer, which in turn has led to our meeting today, in a living room in Hollywood (Birmingham). He is in the Midlands for a few days to shoot a small but meaningful part in The Truth, an independent movie being made by local producer/writer/director Tony Clarke – whose living room it is.

Although Tony is using mostly local talent in the film, he was introduced to Billy by a mutual friend in California. Billy and his wife were due to come to the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ for the premiere of Midnight Express The Ballet and Tony persuaded them to come up to Birmingham to take this pivotal role in his project, tweaking it so it could be played by an American.

“I read the script and loved it. It has so much heart. I said I’d love to get involved in this and next thing you know we’re here,” enthuses Billy. Now 66, he is a live wire of barely contained energy. The only thing that helps to keep him calm is yoga which he used to do every day when he was in prison.