Oliver Colman admits Tyrannosaur helped her face the brutality of domestic violence

olivia_colman-6542256 All actors love scripts like the one I received for Paddy Considine’s 2011 film Tyrannosaur. It was complete – it contained everything I needed to know about my character and the story. It did my work for me. I just needed to turn up and say the lines. But I couldn’t. The suffering my character, Hannah, went through had a real world analogue that couldn’t be ignored.

Tyrannosaur is not an ”issues” film. It is not about domestic violence, or poverty, or alcoholism. It is the blistering, heart-rending story of two people finding each other and trying to heal themselves through love. I don’t think I will ever be prouder of any job. But it is not always possible, or responsible, to separate fact from fiction, and Hannah’s story is rooted horribly in a real-world nightmare: that of domestic violence.

I had not previously had much cause to dwell on the issue. I have never suffered domestic violence, unlike the 25% of women in the UK who at some point in their lives have. Nor have any of my close family or friends, as far as I am aware. (That caveat is necessary – a 25% incidence of domestic violence means it’s quite possible that I am wrong about what people I love have faced. It’s quite possible that some people I love, and some people you love, have not told the truth about what is happening to them behind closed doors.)

Now I had to dwell on it. The most satisfying experience of my professional career would involve me confecting the kind of suffering that millions of women, and many men, suffer in reality every day. I knew the chances were high that someone who had been through it, or was still going through it, would see the film. What duty did I owe those people, between whose lives and mine was such an extraordinary gulf? I decided that I needed, at the very least, to know something about them. They deserved that respect. So I asked Paddy to put me in touch with someone at domestic violence charity Refuge.

What I wanted to know, more than anything – what I wanted to be sure about, notwithstanding the internal truths of Paddy’s script – was that Hannah’s story was credible. The brutality, the depravity, the seeming hopelessness … was it credible? The answer I got astonished me. My contact at Refuge told me that Hannah’s experience wasn’t only credible, it was nothing compared to the suffering some women and men endured. She gave me a couple of examples – just two of the many hundreds of which she had recent experience – and I could scarcely bear to hear them. Then she offered to set up a meeting with one or two of them for me.

I am afraid I declined. I knew I would just cry, and that wouldn’t help anyone. And for what? To achieve some questionable incremental improvement in my performance? To do justice to the cause of people who weren’t having enormous fun making films? Actors have a reputation for vaingloriousness, but no…

Anyway, I’d had my moment of insight. I had knowledge, where previously I’d had just my imagination and Paddy’s brilliant script. Knowledge enabled me to turn up and say my lines. It also brought me to become a patron of a domestic violence charity.

As soon as I heard about Tender, I knew it would be a good fit for me. Tender is a little different from charities like Refuge (which, in a time of reduced funding, also need all the support we can give them, because of the brilliant, life-saving support they give to people who are currently suffering the horrors of domestic abuse). Tender operates at the other end of the time line – before abuse has occurred. Tender is involved in prevention. My cowardice, my tearfulness, means I am not the best person to have around in an environment where there is real, existing suffering. Tender operates in a world where there is not – yet – any suffering; where the stakes are just as high, but they are deferred.

I have two young boys. I hope, of course, that I and my husband, and everyone else who loves them, will give them the sort of knowledge and experience that will make them, and those around them, happy. But I am aware that I will never be able to – nor should – control everything they are exposed to, or the conclusions they draw from those experiences. Nor can I always know what they are thinking, or feeling; any parent will know how hard it can sometimes be just to get a child to tell them something about their school day.

So it is vital that children and young adults have spaces – mental and physical spaces – in which it is safe for them to explore and practice strategies for dealing with real world difficulties, and build confidence to communicate and be heard. This is what Tender offers them. It works primarily with young people and runs prevention projects, which raise awareness of the issue of violence in teenage romantic relationships. It uses drama and the arts – a world that I understand as being a safe space indeed for the exploration of ideas – to give young people the skills to identify the early warning signs of abusive relationships, so that they can avoid or leave them.

These projects are a powerful tool, and worth supporting in themselves. But Tender wants more, and I want to help them achieve it. Tender wants sex and relationship education to be made mandatory in all schools, so that all young people can learn how to negotiate healthy relationships.

As I mentioned at the beginning of this piece, 25% of women will suffer domestic violence at some time in their life. Please think about that in relation to your young daughters. Think about it in relation to your young sons. Hopefully, they have not yet become part of that 25% – or become abusers themselves. But think ahead to the next 10, 15 … 40 years. You will dearly want their lives to be wonderful over these years, but it is more likely that they will be some combination of wonderful and difficult. There will certainly be a degree of suffering. Ask yourself this: what shape will that suffering take? Will it involve domestic violence? Current statistics say there’s a good chance it will. Let’s do our best to ensure it won’t.

This article is written by British actor Olivia Colman and Ed Sinclair.

Olivia will be presenting the annual awards at Tender’s upcoming event on the 10th December. For information on how to book tickets to the event, visit their website.

Source: theguardian.co.uk – Olivia Colman: Tyrannosaur made me face the true brutality of domestic violence

Olivia Colman and James D’Arcy star in Bridport torchlight procession

BROADCHURCH stars Olivia Colman and James D’Arcy took part in the annual torchlight procession through Bridport and West Bay last night.

Hundreds of people packed the streets for the procession, which set off just after 9pm, and were left open mouthed as Olivia Colman and James D’Arcy picked up their torches and joined in the fun.

The torchlight procession starts outside Bridport Town Hall in Bucky Doo Square, before the procession leads off and heads towards West Bay. Once at the beach in West Bay, the torches are thrown on to a bonfire.

The pair helped lead the procession of hundreds of people behind the Carnival Princess’ float, and were happy to pose for selfies with fans.

Shaun Fox, Bridport Carnival Chairman, said: “It was nice to see them there and it was nice for them to take part in our community.

“I was in contact with the location manager and he asked if we minded if he took part and he said there was a possibility of a few of the stars coming down, but he didn’t say which ones.

“It was nice that they did turn up, and because the Mayor and Mayoress drove down to West Bay, Olivia Colman and James D’Arcy actually led the procession behind the princess float.

“I think they were a bit over whelmed a little bit and I know a lot of people were gobsmacked to see them there and to see that we had celebrities as part of the procession.

“Broadchurch has been good for Bridport and for West Bay, but the carnival goes on every year and it was nice that it coincided with the filming and it was nice for them to be a part of it.

Filming for the second series is now well underway for the ITV crime drama, and the cameras returned to West Bay last week to film more scenes for the smash-hit show.

Cameras will remain in West Bay until this Thursday, and stars Olivia Colman and David Tennant have both been spotted in the area.

The show is set to be screened in 2015, and the stellar cast has expanded with the additions of Hollywood legend Charlotte Rampling plus household names such as Marianne Jean-Baptiste, James D’Arcy, Eve Myles and Phoebe Waller-Bridge.

Source:dorsetecho.co.uk – Olivia Colman and James D’Arcy star in Bridport torchlight procession

Broadchurch returns to Clevedon as filming starts on second series

article-0-1E5397A300000578-315_470x740 CURTAINS may be twitching a little more than usual in parts of Clevedon this week as people try to catch a glimpse of filming for the new series of award winning crime drama Broadchurch.

More than half a dozen crew trucks, tents covering sound, filming and recording equipment, crew and actors arrived in Lavington Close this week to start filming the second series for the crime drama.

The successful series, written and created by Chris Chibnall, starred a strong ensemble cast led by David Tennant and Olivia Colman and gripped the nation with viewers intrigued by the circumstances surrounding the death of young Danny Latimer.

A private house in Lavington Close was used for the first series as the home of the Latimers, whose son Danny was murdered.

And it seems the same house, which backs onto Marshall’s Field, is featuring in the second series.

Mark Latimer’s blue plumbing van is parked on the drive of the property and when the Bristol Post arrived, a scene where a woman wearing a cream raincoat accompanied by a suited man were knocking on the door, was being filmed.

Jodie Whittaker – who played newly pregnant Beth Latimer in the first series – has also been seen on location sporting rather a larger baby bump.

Local residents have been keeping an eye out in the hope of spotting some of the stars appearing in the new series.

Paul Carey, 54, who lives close to the filming, said: “We keep looking out but we haven’t seen anyone famous.

“We knew they were using this location because the film company wrote to us.

“It’s good to see the drama is coming back as I watched the first series.”

Another neighbour, who did not want to be named, said: “I haven’t seen anyone famous here yet.

“I watched the first series and it was really good and I am looking forward to see how the second series unfolds.”

ITV bosses confirmed earlier this year that the crime drama, which picked up three gongs including the accolade for Best Drama at the British Academy of Film and Television Awards, would be making a return.

Actress Olivia Colman, who played DS Ellie Miller and will be appearing in the second series, won the gong for best actress while co-star David Bradly was named best supporting actor for his role.

Members of the production crew have also been scouring Clevedon for locations for the new series.

It is understood that one of the locations is The Avenue – one of upper Clevedon’s most prestigious tree lined roads.

Production crew were reported to be knocking on doors of large, family homes along The Avenue on Wednesday morning asking if the properties could be used as film locations.

Details of how the second series will unfold are being kept a closely guarded secret, with all the cast and crew being made to sign a non-disclosure agreement by producers, to ensure the plot is kept strictly under wraps.

Even members of the public who happen to glimpse any of the action are being asked to keep it quiet.

In a plea to the locals, writer Mr Chibnall said: “If you’re able to keep our secrets as well as you did last time, we’ll be ever so grateful.”

Source:bristolpost.co.uk – Broadchurch film crew return to Clevedon

The TV Baftas: Olivia Colman, Julie Walters and Cilla Black Lead the Way on TV’s Big Night

Olivia+Colman+Arqiva+British+Academy+Television+kwj3-Q5odkIl It was a night to celebrate the leading ladies, making their mark on the landscape of British TV at the prestigious TV Baftas.

Olivia Colman, Sarah Lancashire, Katherine Parkinson, Julie Walters and Cilla Black were the women of the moment, awarded the coveted prize in recognition of their outstanding TV performances.

Hosted by a characteristically wry Graham Norton, the event saw the biggest names of British TV and beyond gather at the Theatre Royal Drury Lane, to pay tribute to the best in the business.

Broadchurch star Olivia Colman won her third TV Bafta in just two years, winning the award in the leading actress category.

Overwhelmed by the moment, she struggled to speak as she accepted her award. Bursting into tears she said: “Oh sorry, not cool.”

Thanking her family and co-stars she paid tribute to her husband, describing him as “just the best thing in the world.”

Colman faced competition from Kerrie Hayes for her part in The Mill, Helena Bonham Carter for Burton and Taylor and Maxine Peake for The Village.

Colman’s award lead the way for Broadchurch to clean up, winning the Best Drama series award and Best Supporting Actor for David Bradley.

Sarah Lancashire won the award for the Best Supporting actress for her role in Last Tango in Halifax while Katherine Parkinson took home the Best Actress in a Comedy for her long-running role in the Channel Four comedy series The IT Crowd starring Chris O’Dowd and Richard Ayoade.

But it was the veteran stars who received the most rousing reception.

TV veteran Cilla Black was greeted with a standing ovation as she accepted the Bafta Special Award for her services to television and entertainment over the last fifty years, from her friend and fellow Scouser Paul O’Grady.

In a heart felt speech she said: “I’ve lead a charmed life. I’ve worked with incredible people.” The presenter, who has hosted some of TV’s most popular entertainment shows including Blind Date and Surprise Surprise, dedicated her win to her viewers, who she said had made her “feel so welcome over the years.”

Multi-Bafta winning actress Julie Walters, received the night’s top honour when she was presented with the Academy Fellowship. Walters, whose career has spanned nearly four decades, regaled the audience with an anecdote before thanking her peers in the industry for all she had learned from them “about everything other than acting.”

Among the other big winners on the night were Ant and Dec who walked away with two prizes, scooping best entertainment programme for Saturday Night Takeaway and the entertainment performance Bafta.

“We’re so chuffed and this is a really nice cherry on a really big cake,” said a delighted Anthony McPartlin.

“Winning the Bafta for Saturday night with Ant and Dec … this is really great. We brought the show back after a four year break so to win a BAFTA to be even nominated is so great,” he added.

“I’m glad we came now,” joked Declan Donnelly.

The Geordie duo was up against Charlie Brooker’s 10 O’Clock Live, Sarah Millican’s The Sarah Millican Television Programme and the evening’s host Graham Norton’s Friday night chat show.

The Eastenders cast looked despondent losing the battle of the soaps to Coronation Street. The long running soap won their 10th BAFTA in the Soap & Continuing drama category and the award was collected by cast members past and present including Julie Hesmondhalgh, Samia Ghadie, David Neilson, Kate Ford and Jane Danson.

Best International Programme was presented by Jeremy Piven and went to Breaking Bad, with a bearded Aaron Paul collecting the award.

“This is such an incredible honour,” Paul said. “I’d like to congratulate the fellow nominees, I feel so blessed to be in your company.”

He thanked creator Vince Gilligan the cast and the Breaking Bad ‘family’.

While veteran broadcaster Sir David Attenborough’s Natural History Museum Alive 3D scooped the Bafta for specialist factual, ITV News at Ten’s coverage of the murder of soldier Lee Rigby earned the programme the award for news coverage.

A League of Their Own beat Norton’s chat show to the comedy and comedy entertainment programme award while Doctor Who: Day of the Doctor won the Radio Times Audience Award.

Channel Four’s The Murder Trial won Best Single Documentary, while ITV’s Long Last Family won the Best Features Award. Sean Harris won the leading actor prize, for his starring performance in Southcliffe, a drama about the aftermath of a series of shootings in a small town.

In The Flesh, a BBC Three drama, won the mini-series gong, and The Murder Trial was recognised as best single documentary.

Source: ibtimes.co.uk – TV BAFTAS: Olivia Colman, Julie Walters, and Cilla Black lead the way on TVs big night

Broadchurch is back in Clevedon

A SECOND series of the murder mystery that put Clevedon on the map and kept the nation gripped for weeks is to return to North Somerset.

After months of speculation ITV have confirmed that Broadchurch – starring David Tennant and Olivia Colman – will again be filmed in the area.

Creator and acclaimed screenwriter Chris Chibnall told the Bristol Post: “We’re finally able to talk a little about preparations for the next series of Broadchurch and can confirm we’re coming back to film in North Somerset.

“We’re all thrilled about returning, especially given how supportive the whole community was last time.

“We’ll do our best to minimise disruption to your daily lives – forgive us if you’re occasionally inconvenienced.

“And if you’re able to keep our secrets as well as you did last time, we’ll be ever so grateful.”

The first series of Broadchurch was set in a Dorset coastal town – but many of its exterior scenes were shot in Clevedon, where the former Seeley’s Newsagent in Hill Road was adapted, both inside and out, to turn it into the offices of local newspaper the Broadchurch Echo.

The show had a lasting effect on the town after an outdoor market was set up in the vacant Seeley’s building, inspired by a similar market set built for the show which was so convincing, shoppers visiting the town started trying to buy goods from its stalls.

Other scenes for the show were filmed in the Bristol Post’s offices, which doubled as the newsroom of the national Sunday Herald newspaper as well as part of Broadchurch police station.

It was also confirmed this week that David Tennant, Olivia Colman, Jodie Whittaker, Andrew Buchan and Arthur Darvill will all return for the second series.

And it was announced that acclaimed actress Charlotte Rampling (below) will play a “pivotal role”.

The details of her character and how she impacts on the drama and small community are being kept under wraps by ITV and the production companies, Kudos and Imaginary Friends.

In keeping with the first series, secrecy and intrigue surrounds the story of the award winning drama, which begins filming in Dorset shortly.

David Tennant will return as Alec Hardy, while Olivia Colman resumes her role as Ellie Miller.

Jodie Whittaker and Andrew Buchan will also return to their roles, alongside Arthur Darvill as local vicar Paul Coates.

ITV’s Director of Drama Steve November said: “We’re delighted Broadchurch is back in production, but we’re remaining tight-lipped about how the story develops.

“Suffice to say Chris has delivered as always and the scripts are just as exciting as the first series.”

Meanwhile, Victoria Fea, ITV’s controller of drama, added: “The reaction to Broadchurch from UK viewers has been incredible.

“So we’d like viewers to enjoy the new series knowing as little as possible about what’s to come and for the story to unfold in real time.”

Source: bristolpost.co.uk – Broadchurch is back in clevedon – Just when you thought it was safe to go back on the beach

Olivia Colman reveals she is racked with self-doubt

DF32ED9A06A888D54C929BC6D5FD9_h498_w598_m2

Olivia Colman has quite the most expressive face I’ve ever seen. In the space of a minute she goes from gurning and grimacing to Carry On-style saucy. And that’s just when she’s telling me about her summer holiday.

On camera she’s brilliant at weeping or looking tetchy. Sitting opposite me today she’s bright and bubbly, if a little nervy.

It’s only when she’s talking about a role that she comes into her own: she’s passionate and confident and looks you straight in the eye as she speaks. She’s also naturally funny and giggles easily, without affectation.

No wonder she’s regarded as one of the sweetest and most down-to-earth people in the business.

It’s easy to see why she made her name in comedy. But serious drama discovered her. This time last year you may have recognised her face but you’d probably have had no idea of her name. Then came the acclaimed film Tyrannosaur in which she played a charity worker who strikes up a doomed relationship with a self-destructive widower.

That was followed by two BAFTA-winning roles – as doe-eyed secretary Sally Owen in Twenty Twelve and then bereaved mother Sue in Jimmy McGovern’s series of gritty crime dramas Accused – which had her peers hailing her as the new Judi Dench.

And then came parts as Carol Thatcher in The Iron Lady and tragic DS Ellie Miller in the most talked-about TV show of last year, Broadchurch. 

She’s a bona fide star now, and it’s fair to say that if 2013 was the year she broke through, just wait till you see what Olivia’s got coming up in 2014.

But she’s also a mother to two boys, aged six and eight, with actor and writer husband Ed Sinclair. How does she fit it all in? ‘I know it looks like I’m busy but I’ve just had four months off,’ she giggles, covering her mouth as if she’s just said something naughty.

 

‘Yes, I did, really. I wondered what to do with myself but it turns out I’m brilliant at doing very little. Things went a bit quiet around the school summer holidays so I asked my agent to keep it free. Everything slotted in nicely and I had a proper summer with my children. My priority is my family and if that’s all OK, only then can I branch out.’

She’s certainly making up for lost time. Just after being on screen in the spooky thriller The Thirteenth Tale opposite Vanessa Redgrave last week, she’s back playing a cuckolded wife in another TV drama, The 7.39, this week.

Even while doing interviews to promote that she was dashing off to the set of the third series of runaway hit Rev, in which she plays vicar’s wife Alex Smallbone.

This month she’ll start filming Mr Sloane, a bittersweet romantic comedy series in which she’s cast as the estranged wife of Nick Frost’s ‘buttoned-down 1960s man in crisis’. And in March she’ll be making The Lobster, a film by Greek director Yorgos Lanthimos with the interesting premise that single people are ordered to find love or face being turned into animals. ‘It’s a bonkers script,’ she says giggling. ‘But I’m very excited about working on it as it’s completely different to anything I’ve done before.’

Then, all being well, will come Broadchurch 2. Olivia, 40, was clearly not happy when the Fox network announced last month that it was keeping her co-star David Tennant on board for its US remake of the show, but had cast Breaking Bad’s Anna Gunn in the Ellie Miller role.

‘I never got the call, I don’t know why,’ she said at the time. ‘I don’t fit in there really.’ No one knows quite how the new series here will pan out; the first ended with Olivia’s endearing and all too real policewoman discovering that her beloved husband was the child murderer in a crime that had the nation – both on the show and in real life – in a complete tizzy. ‘I am doing it, though,’ says Olivia. ‘I think I’m allowed to tell you that.’

The work’s coming so thick and fast that for the first time in her career she’s having to say no to things. ‘There’s no great theory going on with my career,’ she shrugs. ‘I go on whether I like the story and if I think I could do it well. After Tyrannosaur I got quite a lot of scripts on the trot about women suffering from domestic violence at home; I had to turn a few down because I thought four in a row might be a bit much. I’m still up for crying on screen, though.’

Olivia’s forte is sobbing. It looks so real every time she does it, and that’s because it isn’t acting – she really is crying. ‘I don’t think you can cry if the script is rubbish. I have to feel it; it’s as simple as that. It’s just like if you’re watching something moving and you feel yourself welling up. It’s the same thing.
‘You’re just being carried along with the story. There’s nothing magical about it. I think I’m in touch with my emotions and I can’t help it. If it touches me I cry. I cry a lot.’

There’s rather a lot of crying in The 7.39, but Olivia says she could totally sympathise with her character who – like her – has been with her husband since university. She plays Maggie, an occupational therapist and mother whose life may not be perfect but is ticking along nicely.

Then her husband Carl (David Morrissey) gets into an argument with a young woman called Sally (Sheridan Smith) on a train. That argument leads to friendship and on to an affair. And then Maggie finds out. 

‘Maggie’s an innocent, she doesn’t know what’s unfolding and she’s trying to make sense of it,’ says Olivia. ‘She can see her husband changing and I found that interesting. What happens once the person you love leaves the house? She’s the family’s rock. She’s someone who gets hurt and she doesn’t deserve it. So it wasn’t hard to imagine myself pretty cross and upset. I’m married to him; he’s gone off and slept with someone else. I can imagine quite easily how angry I would be.’

In reality Norfolk-born Olivia appears to have her home life sorted. She met Ed when they were both studying at Cambridge; he was reading law while she was training to be a teacher, and both joined the university’s famous drama club Footlights.

Olivia had always loved stories, but it was with Footlights that she found she was really rather good at acting them out. ‘My mum was a nurse and her passion was geriatric care. I used to love listening to the old people’s stories in her nursing home and picturing myself in their place,’ she says. ‘They’d say, “I went to school in a horse and cart”, and I’d just think “Wow!” I’d picture myself in their place – acting was a natural progression.’

She changed her mind about teaching and went to study at the Old Vic Theatre School, but that was followed by many years of struggle, taking temping jobs to keep her head above water. Salvation came in the shape of David Mitchell and Robert Webb, the comic duo she’d also met at Cambridge and who arguably put her on the map.

She starred as Sophie Chapman, long-suffering girlfriend of Mitchell’s hapless, nerdy Mark in the huge Channel 4 hit Peep Show, then popped up as various characters in their sketch show That Mitchell And Webb Look.

She says she adores the pair of them, but felt she was becoming too closely associated with them. ‘My agent suggested I should be open to different things. There were tears when that decision was taken.’

Slowly she branched out – an appearance in Doctor Who, another in Skins, the drama Exile – and then suddenly everything seemed to collide at the same time to take her to the next level.
Olivia says she has every sympathy with The 7.39’s commuters (the show is so called because the adulterous pair always take the 7.39 train) because she was one herself for many years.
‘I spent all those years working as a temp and I hated the commute so much,’ she recalls. ‘I’m terrible in the mornings and I’d always struggle on the train. The show is beautifully done, particularly the scenes where everyone’s trying to get on the train and they’ve got their fists in each other’s backs. It used to drive me nuts.’

It’s her first time working with David Morrissey who she knows through friends. ‘It’s a treat to be working together; he’s a very nice man,’ she says. ‘The last two days of filming were particularly good. We were filming scenes of Carl getting in and out of bed and I was genuinely fast asleep quite a lot of the time.’

 

But she says that until recently she was still considering giving up acting. ‘I didn’t want to give it up, but I thought it might give me up,’ she says.

‘I’ve always enjoyed my work and felt lucky to be doing it. It’s a lot nicer now I’m doing more of it, though, but there’s still that feeling that it could all go wrong.’

After trying to carve out an acting career himself, Ed now works from home – he’s writing a novel – while Olivia takes advantage of being the most in-demand actress in Britain. She knows how much she depends on him and says that, unlike her character in The 7.39, she’s careful to make sure her husband knows he is appreciated.

‘When you’ve got children it’s easy to do that thing of keeping a tally of who woke up earliest and whose turn it is to put them to bed. But I think the important thing is to appreciate and love each other and to show that appreciation. This story shows how you need to be aware of what you’ve got.’

Stardom hasn’t changed her. She and her family still live in the south London suburb of Peckham – Del Boy’s manor in Only Fools And Horses – only these days she has her two BAFTAs sitting on the mantelpiece. She still regularly takes the train, but that’s a slightly different experience now.

Instead of being elbowed out of the way she’s more likely to be asked for an autograph. ‘People in general are rather sweet,’ she says almost apologetically.

‘You can see what they’re thinking, “Oh, she’s from that Broadchurch thing.” It’s nice to be at the stage I’m at now. I appreciate it very much. I feel lucky.’ And her face lights up.

Source:dailymail.co.uk – Olivia Colman reveals she is racked with self-doubt despite being biggest star of 2013

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

Peep show turns 10

250px-Peep_Show_DVD_front_cover Birthdays are a bit awkward on Peep Show. One of the sitcom’s finest episodes was in series four, when Mark (David Mitchell) and girlfriend Sophie (Olivia Colman) stayed with her parents to celebrate her birthday. As always, it didn’t go as per Mark’s plan. He suddenly decided to propose when he saw her inheritance, but let his future father-in-law overhear him admitting he didn’t love her. There was some unsavoury business involving guns, dead animals and arson. Jez (Robert Webb) slept with Sophie’s mother. The final humiliation was a weird birthday ritual involving a pointy hat and the whole family singing Happy Birthday by Altered Images, while Mark half-heartedly joined in, clutching a glass of Liebfraumilch like his life depended on it. Which, with all those guns around, it might well have done.

Still, we shouldn’t let past history put us off marking the show’s own milestones. So happy birthday, Peep Show. First broadcast on 19 September 2003, it turns the grand old age of 10 today. By stealth, Peep Show has become the longest-running sitcom in Channel 4 history. Indeed, it’s arguably the longest-running sitcom currently on British TV (unless you count Rab C Nesbitt, which returns only sporadically and took almost a decade off).

The secret of Peep Show’s longevity and consistently high quality is really rather simple: superb scripts delivered by a cracking cast. Writing team Sam Bain and Jesse Armstrong cut their teeth on sketch show Smack The Pony before creating the dysfunctional flatmate comedy, partly based on their own experience especially Bain’s. He once apprehended a burglar by sitting on him, as Mark does in series five (“I’m wrestling with the white working class! Morse never did this! I’m better than Morse!”).

The show doesn’t rely on catchphrases or pratfalls for laughs but is completely character-driven and the duo’s dialogue is sharp as a tack (“If text kisses were real kisses, the world would be an orgy”). Bain and Armstrong since turned their talents to coruscating political comedy The Thick Of It, its spin-offs In The Loop and Veep, student-com Fresh Meat, ecclesiastical sitcom Rev, Charlie Brooker’s Black Mirror and jihad satire Four Lions.

They found the perfect people to bring their creations to life in Footlights alumni Mitchell and Webb, who provide additional gags. As uptight history buff Mark Corrigan and workshy wannabe musician Jeremy “Jez” Usborne (together, the tragically self-styled “El Dude brothers”), the pair became so synonymous with their characters that they starred in a series of Apple computer ads, with Mitchell representing the “square” PC and Webb as the “creative” Mac.

The supporting cast is equally strong. Colman has gone onto become one of our most-loved, best-regarded TV actresses. Paterson Joseph (who plays smarmy boss Alan Johnson), Matt King (hedonistic cult hero Super Hans) and Isy Suttie (geeky love interest Dobby) are all gifted enough to carry their own star vehicles. The show has even been graced by minor royalty in Sophie Winkleman, who’s now married to Freddie Windsor but played Jez’s ex Big Suze for five series.

Peep Show’s working title was “POV”, in reference to its unconventional filming style. The cringe-inducing events of Mark and Jez’s lives are seen predominantly from their own points of view, with their unedifying thoughts audible as voiceovers – techniques which film buffs Bain and Armstrong borrowed from Being John Malkovich and Annie Hall. Although these stylistic quirks mark Peep Show out as unique on TV, Armstrong and Bain believe the POV method prevents it from having true mass appeal. Ratings have never topped 2m, although the show has a strong afterlife on DVD, each series shifting around 400,000 copies.

However, fans like it that way – a cult gem rather than a mainstream hit, yet arguably the best Brit-com of the past decade. It’s pulled off the rare trick of getting stronger with each series, en route winning two Baftas and a Rose D’Or. Ricky Gervais, who knows a thing or two about comedy, has hailed Peep Show as “the best sitcom since Father Ted”.

Writing and shooting each run of six episodes takes nine months. With Peep Show’s creators and stars in huge demand, that’s becoming increasingly tricky to squeeze into their schedules. However, rest assured that a ninth series is in the pipeline.

“I’m amazed and grateful the programme’s lasted this long,” said Armstrong recently. “Provided we can find new humiliating things – be it physically, emotionally or relationship-wise – to subject the characters to, then we’ll do it.” There’s even been mention of a possible movie spin-off. That really would make them better than Morse.

Source: telegraph.co.uk – Peep show turns 10

Olivia at Holkham Hall memory walk

Norfolk-born, Bafta-winning actress Olivia Colman, joined more than 300 walkers on Saturday at Holkham Hall for the Alzheimer Society’s Memory Walk. The event is hoped to have raised more than £20,000 to help improve the lives of people with dementia and their carers. This was the first time that Olivia had stepped out to support the Society and did so after starring in the series, Exile, and the Margaret Thatcher biopic, The Iron Lady, both of which featured dementia in the storyline. She attended with her parents and the three of them took part in the 3km walk together. Olivia, pictured above at the event with clown Gavin Orchard, said: “Dementia is something which touches many of us and that’s why I’m keen to lend my support to Alzheimer’s Society and Memory Walk. It’s wonderful that so many people have put on their walking shoes and come along to raise money for this fantastic cause. There has been a really good atmosphere here today with lots of different generations walking together to fight dementia.”

Tracy Wood, from Lynn, took part in the 10km walk with her sister, Debbie, friends, Joanne Long, Teri Adams, Dawn Thirkwell and Dawn’s daughter, Sophie Thirkwell.

She said: ‘Despite the weather, there was a great turnout today and a fantastic atmosphere, especially when we did the zumba warm-up! My friends and I did have a giggle while we walked and more importantly, I have raised quite a lot of money for Alzheimer’s Society.”

Source: lynnews.co.uk – Award winning Olivia at Holkham Hall memory walk