New interview with Olivia Colman

Olivia+Colman+Summer+TCA+Tour+Day+2+X-yvFAMhDa9lIt’s been a busy year for Olivia Colman. Next on screen in an adaptation of The Thirteenth Tale, the acclaimed actress talks to Phil Penfold.

It was a bit a hectic for Olivia Colman in the run-up to the New Year. She’d quite cheerfully agreed to be interviewed, and then turned up just a little late at the agreed venue, which was the BFI on the South Bank in London, and yes, more than a little breathless, and full of genuine apologies.

“I’m off to a wrap party for the new series of Rev,” she explained, and then grinned: “the twinkly silver top I’m wearing is because the theme is ‘Christmas’.” Olivia plays the much-put-upon clergyman’s wife Alex Smallbone in the hit BBC series, which returns in the New Year. And if you can’t get enough of Olivia (and frankly, who can?) there’s a new series of Broadchurch scheduled for the spring, and then a further two dramas for the New Year.

There’s 7.39, which looks at the effect that an affair that develops on a morning commute has on a family’s life, and The Thirteenth Tale, a chilling seasonal ghost yarn shot entirely in Yorkshire during the balmy summer of 2013 which screens over Christmas. Colman, 39, stars opposite screen legend Vanessa Redgrave in a powerful script by Christopher (Les Liaisons Dangereuse) Hampton. It is Hampton’s first TV screenplay in 20 years, and is based on the powerful, and best-selling, novel by Dianne Setterfield, who wrote it while working as a part-time French teacher at Harrogate College. As Olivia draws breath and settles down, the first question has to be why she was first interested in the role. After all, “ghost stories” are notoriously hard to make even slightly credible. Or even scary.

She thinks for a nano-second and smiles: “Look, I could have been offered a co-reading of the phone book with Miss Redgrave and I’d have done it, she’s such a legend and an inspirational actress, but with a script by Mr Hampton, it was a foregone conclusion, a no-brainer. Thinking about it, however, it was an extremely physical – in the emotional sense – part to do. I seem to have been doing a lot of crying in all my recent pieces for TV, because I’ve been playing a lot of unhappy women.

“I’ve got the feeling that when the people who cast films and plays see that you can ‘do crying’, you get a lot of jobs offered on the back of it. But I don’t resort to any trickery, believe me. No onions hidden in hankies or Tiger Balm rubbed under the eyes at the last moment. I just let my emotions come out. And if you’ve got a really five star script, and you find it moving, you can cry.”

Colman plays Margaret, a journalist who is asked by Redgrave’s character, Vida Winter, to come to her home near Ribblehead in North Yorkshire to make notes for a biography. The part struck a particular chord for Colman.

“My mother used to be a nurse in a home for the elderly, and when I was a teenager I’d often go along with her to work and watch as she encouraged the old people to recall their personal stories. The tales that they came out with were wonderful. So many vivid memories and recollections. I found it all so gripping. You’d hear a dear old souls saying things like ‘I went to school in a horse and cart’, and they’d re-live their wonderful lives.

“Margaret arrives to tease out the stories from Vida. What happens, of course, is that she finds them tangled, intriguing, and revelatory. It’s a thriller mixed with a spooky tale, and – I know this is me saying it, but it is true – it becomes more and more compelling”.

Not least, she admits, because of some of the atmospheric places in which the drama was shot.

“How can you film up in North Yorkshire, and not let the surroundings seep into everything that you do? One of the very first scenes is of Margaret getting off the train to Carlisle, and standing there alone at the station….there’s nothing else there. Just the wind and the sky and the moors. And I loved it – it was a magical time.”

The Thirteenth Tale is directed by York-born and Bootham School educated James Kent and the four-week shoot was intense.

“Margaret is a bit confused at first as to why this hugely popular author has asked her to even attempt her life story, but as the story progresses, it all becomes clear. There is a strange bond that both women have. It’s about twins. Twins are fascinating – being flippant, if I may, I always wanted to be a twin, and to be able to dress the other one up and say to her ‘You really do not look good in that’ – isn’t that terrible? There is a strange, almost uncanny bond between twins, and Thirteenth Tale taps so beautifully into that strange little mystery.”

Shot on location at various country estates, including Burton Agnes Hall, Brodsworth Hall and Duncombe Park, The Thirteenth Tale is also something of a showcase for Yorkshire.

“When I looked at the locations where we’d be shooting I thought ‘what a sublime treat this is going to be!’,” says Colman. “I have nothing but complete admiration for their owners and keepers (Brodsworth is in the care of National Heritage) of these houses for what they allowed us to do within their walls. I think it was Mr Cunliffe-Lister at Burton Agnes who said that it came as a bit of a surprise to be ‘taken over’, and to discover that his sublime and priceless Red Drawing Room when we’d finished dressing it up looked as if someone else had moved into his historic home. It was all down to the props department, of course. And we left it completely as we found it when we made our farewells.”

Working with Redgrave, she says, “was inspirational. You sometimes get the opportunity to be in the presence of some great ‘names’ in this industry, and you wonder if they are going to be ‘acting’ or doing it honestly and looking in to your eyes. And The Big V was the latter. She is very tall, very beautiful, very quick, and quite remarkable. And even more admirable because in most of our scenes she is laying down on a couch, or in bed. Now think about it – could you ‘act’ from a prone position?”

Is she a fan of supernatural thrillers herself? “Well, that all depends on how they are done. If they leave something to the audience’s imagination, then yes, I am. But there are so many which are totally bloody obvious, and you think ‘You stupid creature….you’ve just heard a hideous scream from the cellar or the attic for from behind that locked door…..and you are actually going to go towards it, rather than to make the quickest exit that you can?’ That’s just not rational, is it?

“I am a bit of a chicken. I remember watching the original film version of Carrie all those years ago and being totally terrified, but at the same time, loving it.”

Only days after Thirteenth Tale (“Oh God, people will be sick of the sight of me on the box, won’t they?”) comes 7.39, which also stars Yorkshire’s Sheridan Smith.

Colman says: “I’m playing a mum of two – as I am in real-life – whose husband has his head turned by a woman he sees on his way into work. I’m sure that there are a lot of people who regularly commute, same time, same carriage, same bus or train every day, who see the same faces, and who fantasise, but this goes a lot deeper. And Maggie hasn’t got a clue about what is unfolding, and cannot make sense in the changes in her husband.

“I found that so interesting – what happens to the person that you love, and whom you think you know, when they leave the house? The lesson from this one is ‘Let’s appreciate each other more’.”

And, she confides that while she may be one of the most in-demand actors around at the moment, it wasn’t always the case.

“A good few years ago, work was very sparse indeed, and I almost gave up. In fact, just to keep body and soul together, I got another job, and I used to do the dreaded commute myself. I hated it completely. For a start, I am not a morning person and it seems to take ages for my eyes to ‘unglue’.

“When you finally squeeze onto the train, there were fists in your back every day. People treading on your toes. And BO at 8am. Don’t people know how to wash? I hated every second of it, the sheer monotony. It used to make me very, very angry. Being wound up like a two-dollar watch, angry, tense, that’s not a good way to start your day.”

Then she pauses, thinks and chuckles: “Being picked up by a car, however, to drive a few miles to work opposite Vanessa Redgrave, in a lovely house like Burton Agnes…well, now, how jammy, completely, totally, five-star jammy, is that?”

The Thirteenth Tale is on BBC2 on December 30 at 9.30pm.
Source: yorkshirepost.co.uk – The big interview: Olivia Colman

Olivia Colman takes part in Holocaust Memorial Day

capt.029db440212d45cfb37f19a6b9cb5c2d-cd39c7e78721475f863db38316589abd-0smDouble BAFTA-winning actor Olivia Colman has lent her support to Holocaust Memorial Day 2014 by recording a poem about the Auschwitz extermination camp.

Olivia Colman – famous for her roles in Broadchurch, Twenty Twelve, Tyrannosaur and Peep Show – has recorded a new poem written by HMD activity organiser Charles Whittaker about the transportation of people to Auschwitz.

The poem Auschwitz has a rhythm which evokes the trains used to forcibly transport people on Journeys to death camps and concentration camps during the Holocaust.

The recording will be played at HMD commemoration events, school assemblies and lessons, and is also available online for individuals to listen to and reflect upon.

Olivia Colman said:

‘It’s really important that more people are aware of the importance of commemorating Holocaust Memorial Day, and I hope this recording of the poem will provide encouragement and ideas for people’s HMD events.’

Olivia Marks-Woldman, Chief Executive of the Holocaust Memorial Day Trust, said:

‘We’re delighted that Olivia has lent her support to HMD. This recording will raise awareness of HMD, provide a new resource for HMD activity organisers, and inspire people to think and reflect about the horrors of the Holocaust.’

The recording is available to listen to and download in the podcasts section of our website.

Double BAFTA-winning actor Olivia Colman has lent her support to Holocaust Memorial Day 2014 by recording a poem about the Auschwitz extermination camp.

Olivia Colman – famous for her roles in Broadchurch, Twenty Twelve, Tyrannosaur and Peep Show – has recorded a new poem written by HMD activity organiser Charles Whittaker about the transportation of people to Auschwitz.

The poem Auschwitz has a rhythm which evokes the trains used to forcibly transport people on Journeys to death camps and concentration camps during the Holocaust.

The recording will be played at HMD commemoration events, school assemblies and lessons, and is also available online for individuals to listen to and reflect upon.

Olivia Colman said:

‘It’s really important that more people are aware of the importance of commemorating Holocaust Memorial Day, and I hope this recording of the poem will provide encouragement and ideas for people’s HMD events.’

Olivia Marks-Woldman, Chief Executive of the Holocaust Memorial Day Trust, said:

‘We’re delighted that Olivia has lent her support to HMD. This recording will raise awareness of HMD, provide a new resource for HMD activity organisers, and inspire people to think and reflect about the horrors of the Holocaust.’

The recording is available to listen to and download in the podcasts section of our website.

Source: hmd.org.uk – Double BAFTA winner Olivia Colman lends her support to Holocaust Memorial Day

Source: hmd.org.uk – Double BAFTA winner Olivia Colman lends her support to Holocaust Memorial Day

Thirteenth Tale interview with Olivia Colman

Olivia+Colman+Summer+TCA+Tour+Day+2+X-yvFAMhDa9lOlivia Colman, best known for her successful and vastly differing roles in Peep Show and Broadchurch, is proving herself as one of the country’s most versatile actresses.

Colman is about to take on another drama role, in the gothic BBC2 adaptation of best-selling novel The Thirteenth Tale – in which she plays Margaret, a reclusive literature lover who gets sucked into the mysterious world and dark past of writer Vida Winter (Vanessa Redgrave.)

Here she talks about the project.

What’s The Thirteenth Tale about and who do you play?

It’s quite difficult to describe, there are lots of pieces to it; flashbacks and modern day – a thriller and ghost story. It’s very exciting, it looks into this fascinating woman’s life and you see everything that’s happened, but it’s not necessary clear and you have to piece it together as you go along.

I play Margaret, who is a writer and she is asked by Vida to go and write her life story. She’s a little confused as to why she’s been asked in particular but that becomes clear later on, as Margaret has something in her background that Vida is interested in.

What attracted you to the project?

Is it too shallow to say that Vanessa Redgrave was in it and I wanted to work with her? That was a big part of it, but it’s also a beautiful story – one that you read for the first time and want to re-read it, to put in what you know into all the scenes you’ve enjoyed along the way. It was gripping.

You have some intense two-hander scenes with Vanessa. How was the experience?

The days running up to the Big V coming in were quite exiting and she is an incredible, charismatic, very tall, very beautiful, very, very bright, quick woman. She’s an extraordinary person and when you’re acting with her it’s really present and a really enjoyable experience. You never know beforehand if an actor is going to be really ‘acting’ or if they’re going to be looking in your eyes and doing it honestly and she is the second kind of actor. So it’s easy, you just play off each other and look at each other and she’s a consummate professional so it was really nice.

Was the location as you expected?

The location aspect was one of the most enjoyable parts of the whole film. I’d filmed in urban parts of that area before, but we were about an hour and a half out of Leeds to the North East and North West. It was unbelievably beautiful – my phone is full of videos of stunning countryside and I really want to go back and take my kids. It was an honour to go to film in those lovely houses.

I had a pre-conception of going to the moors: I thought it would be very bleak and dour but we were very lucky with the weather and it was beautiful. You can see why it has inspired so much literary beauty and depth and you can see why, if you’re a writer, you might go there. It was amazing – quite hard to come back to London.

Do you enjoy supernatural fiction?

I love darkness in stories but I am a bit of a chicken. I do remember watching Carrie as a child and being terrified, but loving it. I would rather go on the tea pot ride than the rollercoaster!

Did you read the novel before starting filming?

I know that because of time restraints you can’t show a whole novel in a film, so I didn’t want to read it in case I’d think that it was a shame we’d missed a certain bit. You just have to commit to the script that you’ve got and afterwards go back to the book for enjoyment purposes. My character just knows that story.

What kind of audience do you think that The Thirteenth Tale will appeal to?

I think that it’s got very broad appeal because it’s not heart attack material; it’s a gripping story, and the past of someone who’s led an exciting life and a long life is fascinating. I’ve always enjoyed hearing people’s stories from older generations and what it was like then and this shows you all of that. Also, it’s an extraordinary tale of children who are unloved and left but have each other… there is love there. It’s interesting and will appeal to any age group.

The Thirteenth Tale will premiere on BBC2. An air date has not yet been set.

Source: thenationalstudent.com – Interview with Olivia Colman

Scott Mills & Olivia Colman to host 20th Mind Media Awards

134859904gMind, the mental health charity has announced Scott Mills from BBC Radio 1 will host their Mind Media Awards 2013.

Actress Olivia Colman will also guest present an award at the event, which honours the best portrayals and reporting of mental health problems across broadcast, print and digital media.

The media has amazing power to inform and to inspire. It has a duty to tell the truth about mental health problems and in doing so, challenge the painfully outdated opinions that many people still hold.

This is why I’m so proud to host this year’s Mind Media Awards, sponsored by Virgin Money Giving, to celebrate those in the industry who have stepped up to the plate, recognised the stand they can take to crush stereotypes, and told the real story of mental health. – Scott Mills

Through candid press interviews and his autobiography Love You Bye, Scott has detailed his own battles with anxiety and panic attacks from a young age. His unguarded honesty has given confidence to many others, to in turn speak out and seek help for their own experiences.

I believe authenticity is at the heart of any drama worth its salt – it’s as true for costume design as a character’s accent, but it’s vital that programme makers understand there’s no exception when it comes to the portrayal of mental health problems. The media industry has huge influence and with that comes a responsibility to contest the stigma that sadly still exists, through accurate representation. – Olivia Colman

This year marks 20 years of the awards and the charity’s ongoing work to challenge sensationalism and misinformation about mental health problems in the media. The 2013 shortlist has been announced, to include Stacey Solomon’s documentary for BBC Three Depression, Teen Mums & Me, Channel 4’s My Mad Fat Diary and Glamour magazine’s print campaign Hey, It’s OK. For the full Mind Media Awards shortlist, click here.

The gong show is sponsored by Virgin Money Giving. The event will be held at The British Film Institute on Monday the 18th of November.

Source: atvtoday.co.uk – Scott Mills and Olivia Colman to host the 20th Mind Media Awards

Stephen Fry, Olivia Colman and Sir Derek Jacobi to appear in This Is Jinsy

Olivia+Colman+Summer+TCA+Tour+Day+2+X-yvFAMhDa9l Stephen Fry, Olivia Colman and Sir Derek Jacobi are among the stars set to appear in the second series of comedy series This Is Jinsy.

The brainchild of Chris Bran and Justin Chubb, This Is Jinsy follows the struggle of Arbiter Maven (Chubb) and Sporall (Bran) to control the knitwear-loving residents of an extraordinary island, combining colourful adventures, musical madness and surreal invention.

The second series, consisting of eight episodes, will head back to the island to find Maven and Sporall with a host of new characters, some returning favourites and plenty of songs in the finest Jinsy tradition. And just like the first series, which saw appearances from stars such as David Tennant and Catherine Tate, there are a raft of new guests making their way to the island this year.

Episode One will see a guest spot from Stephen Fry as Dr. Bevelspepp, who uses his encyclopaedic knowledge of Jinsy to help save the island from an invasion of rampaging hair.

Others to drop in for a guest role include Katy Brand as Madame Astralina, a flamboyant psychic who obtains her readings from a pen of rats, Ben Miller as the Chief Accountant of Jinsy, and his daughter Berpetta, a drunk, hefty, buck-toothed accountant, Dame Eileen Atkins as Miss Penny, a school-mistress with a massive dome of pinned hair who teaches Extreme Etiquette for Girls and Sir Derek Jacobi as Robunce Barnatty, the eldest resident of Jinsy island, at 98 cycles old to name only a few.

The guest stars join returning series regulars Alice Lowe as Soosan Noop, Janine Duvitskias Mrs Goadion and Geoff McGivern as Trince.

This Is Jinsy will return to Sky Atlantic HD in late January 2014.

Source: atvtoday.co.uk – Stephen Fry, Olivia Colman and Sir Derek Jacobi to appear in This Is Jinsy

Olivia Colman confirmed to return for Broadchurch 2

Olivia+Colman+Summer+TCA+Tour+Day+2+X-yvFAMhDa9lOlivia Colman has confirmed she will be returning in the sequel to ITV’s critically-acclaimed crime drama Broadchurch.

Speaking at the launch of new BBC One Christmas drama The 7.39, written by One Day author David Nicholls, Colman checked with her agent in the audience before confirming her return for a second series.

“Yes, I will be doing it,” she said, admitting she had been thoroughly enjoying four months off over the summer with her family.

“I was nervous thinking about what to do with myself but it turns out I am more than happy doing nothing,” she confessed with a laugh.

Screenwriter Chris Chibnall, who wrote the popular ‘whodunit’ earlier this year, has been guarded about revealing any plans for the sequel, refusing to say even where the drama would be set.

The series enjoyed widespread popularity earlier this year as audiences tried to guess the identity of a missing boy’s murderer, drawing peak ratings of 8.9m viewers.

Colman played Ellie Miller, a detective sergeant who discovers her husband killed 11-year old Danny Latimer, a case she had been investigating with co-star David Tennant.

Unlike Tennant, who played the troubled inspector Alec Hardy, Colman will not be appearing in the US remake of the show.

Chibnall, who is executive producer of the American remake Gracepoint, is currently co-writing an accompanying Broadchurch novel with author Erin Kelly.

Due for release next August, it promises to “delve deeper into the lives of each character from the show”.

Source: independent.co.uk – Olivia Colman confirmed to return for Broadchurch 2

Olivia Colman says thought of husband having an affair fired her fury for The 7.39 role

olivia_colman-6542256Olivia Colman says the thought of her husband having an affair was enough to fire her fury for her latest role as a spurned wife.

The Broadchurch star plays Maggie in new BBC1 drama The 7.39, whose husband Carl embarks on an affair with a fellow commuter after hitting a mid-life crisis.

In the script Maggie and Carl, played by David Morrissey, are happily married and have been together for years, after first meeting at university.

But his head is turned by gym manager Sally, played by Sheridan Smith.

Like her character Olivia, 39, met her real-life husband Ed Sinclair when she was just 20 and describes him as her “best friend” who she “still fancies”.

Asked what she drew on to get angry as Maggie, she said: “I’m playing someone who’s married to someone who’s gone off and f****d someone else. I can imagine what that would be like, to be cross.”

In the two-part drama, to be screened later this winter, mum-of-two Olivia said she identified with how her character was feeling. “Maggie is an innocent. She doesn’t know what’s unfolding and is trying to make sense of her husband changing. I found that interesting – what happens when the person you love leaves the house.”

Writer David Nicholl hopes the themes of his drama strike a chord with the audience. “You don’t want people to sit on the sofa and glare at each other but you hope that a viewer will draw something from it that isn’t suspicion and anxiety,” he said.

Olivia said it might bring couples together: “When you’ve got kids, it’s easy to keep a tally of who got up in the night. Let that go and appreciate each other more.”

Much of the action takes place on a train into London.

Olivia experienced rush hour travelling when her acting work dried up in the early years and she worked as a temp.

“I hated the commute so much. I’m terrible in the mornings so was still struggling with gluey eyes on the train. The fists in each other’s backs used to drive me nuts. And people who have BO at 8 in the morning! Extraordinary. I used to hate it. And the monotony of it. It used to make me feel angry.”

The 7.39 will be screened on BBC1 this winter. Olivia is currently filming the third series of Rev and will make the second Broadchurch next year.

Source: mirror.co.uk – Broadchurch star Olivia Colman says thought of husband having an affair fired her fury for the 7.39 role

Rev sitcom starts filming third series

446olivia_colmanFilming has begun on the third series of Rev, the BBC Two sitcom about the mishaps of an inner-city vicar.

Tom Hollander returns as Reverend Adam Smallbone, who will be seen facing up to the pressures of parenthood with his wife Alex (Olivia Colman).

Actor and director Dexter Fletcher and Fonejacker star Kayvan Novak will join the cast as an award-winning modern artist and local Imam respectively.

Six new episodes of Rev will be made for broadcast next spring.

Simon McBurney and Miles Jupp are among other regulars who will be back for the new series.

So will Downton Abbey star Hugh Bonneville, reprising his role as Adam’s arch rival Roland Wise.

Created by Hollander and James Wood, Rev was crowned best situation comedy at the 2011 Baftas.

Series two was screened in 2012 but producers had to delay filming another series because of the blossoming careers of its stars Hollander and Colman.

It was confirmed last year that an American version of the show, to be set in a deprived neighbourhood of Chicago, was in development.

Source:bbc.co.uk – Rev sitcom starts filming third series