|
Home
Latest
News
About
The Series
Episode
Guides
Character
Profiles
Cracker
Top Ten
Casting
Fitz
Fitz
& Panhandle
Interviews/Articles
Jimmy
McGovern
The
US Version
Images
Since
Cracker
Cast
List
Awards
Cracker
FAQ's
Cracker
To Buy
Cracker
Links
About
This Site
Message
Board
Sign
Guestbook
View
Guestbook


|
Best
Viewed in
Microsoft
Explorer |
|
|
Various
Interviews with Geraldine Somerville
Rape
obsessed me .. it began to take over my life
FEAR
IS THE PRICE OF GERALDINE'S CRACKING ROLE
Tale
of terror was a real-life trauma for TV cop (Published 19/11/94)
FILMING
her latest role gave Geraldine Somerville nightmares. She knew
it would be tough when she first picked up the script for this
week's episode of Cracker - and she was right. The flame-haired
actress, who plays ice-cool Detective Sergeant Jane Penhaligon,
was so troubled by the harrowing scenes she had to film that she
couldn't switch off when she went home. Penhaligon - half of a
strikingly successful crime-busting duo along with flamboyant
psychologist Fitz (Robbie Coltrane) - is raped as she
investigates a string of assaults. The episode brought
Geraldine, 27, face to face with the fear she has always had
about being attacked. She says: "When I first read the
script I felt I was on a roller-coaster. It was both frightening
and gripping. It was like your biggest nightmare coming true. I
was a bit apprehensive at first but I realised it would be
well-handled and well-written."
But
Geraldine, who lives in South London, was not prepared for the
emotional toll the role would take on her. She admits: "I
wanted to give a portrayal that was as honest and as fair as
possible, so I soaked myself in information. I read everything I
could find, watched TV programmes about rape and spoke to
someone at the Rape Crisis Centre. But before long I realised it
was taking over my life. I started becoming obsessed by it all.
In the end I had to force myself not to do any more research. I
couldn't switch off at the end of the day's filming - I would
take it home with me and have nightmares. It was a very
frightening time. It really brought home to me what it must be
like to go through something like that." One thing
Geraldine discovered was that few attacks get reported to the
police. As a result, only a small number of rapists are brought
to justice. "It doesn't surprise me, because a woman is
often victimised again in court," she says. "I think
the law fails a lot of rape victims, and that certainly comes
across in Cracker. Penhaligon knows the process a rape victim
goes through, so it's doubly worse for her." She decides to
take revenge on her attacker, and Geraldine says she would
probably react in the same way. But she admits: "I'm not as
brave as she is, and I don't know whether I would go as far as
she does."
During
her most fraught moments on set Geraldine relies on the
unwavering support of the rest of the team, especially co-star
Coltrane. She says: "He is wonderful. Those scenes were not
easy to do, but he and everyone else was very supportive to me.
I was so excited about working with him. He is very good at the
job and can always make me laugh, even after an incredibly
intense scene. It makes it all a lot easier." The BAFTA
award- winning thriller was Geraldine's first big TV break. The
daughter of a retired financial expert and an antique dealer,
she spent three years at drama school, where she always seemed
to play old ladies. "I didn't think I'd work until I
was 60!" she says. She later did some stage work and
appeared in episodes of Poirot and Casualty before landing the
role of Penhaligon - or Panhandle, as Fitz playfully calls her.
Geraldine reckons that she and her character don't have a lot in
common. "We are both determined and quite stubborn, but
that's where similarities end," she says. "She's not
into fashion and I'm certainly not like her in that respect - I
love clothes. She is desperate to be taken seriously. She is
strong and tough, and there aren't too many of those roles
around for women. I consider myself very lucky - it's a
wonderful part."
And
she's back in Robbie's TV life (Published 18/09/1994)
Robbie
Coltrane is poised to hit our screens next month in a new series
of Cracker. Alongside him once again will be luscious redhead
Geraldine Somerville. And the oddest will-they-won't-they
forbidden romance on TV is definitely back ON. The first
series ended with Coltrane's criminal psychologist, Fitz,
dumping Geraldine's character, Detective Sergeant Penhaligon, at
the airport as they were about to leave together for a romantic
holiday. In ITV's new series, he's back with his wife, played by
Barbara Flynn - and trying to patch things up with spurned
Penhaligon . . . in between helping track down a serial killer.
Geraldine says Robbie is great fun to work with - and,
off-camera, constantly plays the joker. She says: "He's a
very funny man, a real performer in that respect. He is just an
extremely witty person with a quick brain. There is a lot of
pressure on the set to make some moments really work
emotionally. So if you get somebody coming in with a gag now and
again, it's wonderful. This is where somebody like Robbie, an
actor who has his roots in comedy, can help defuse a situation.
Not only that, he is an extremely accomplished actor. I have
learned a lot from him. He comes in every day on time and he is
extremely well prepared for what he has to do."
Before
Cracker came along Geraldine, born in Co. Meath, Ireland, was
virtually unknown as an actress. And whether she likes it or
not, this publicity-shy actress, 25, may be about to break out.
She sighs: "About my work, I'm hypercritical. It's
terrible, really. "I'm not very comfortable with this
interview stuff. But I regard Cracker as a breakthrough. I
certainly see it as a great opportunity. It's got so many good
things about it, the writing, directing, the other actors.
"It's definitely a great thrill. The chance also to work
for five and a half months on film is quite rare in this
country." For the time being, flame-haired Geraldine is a
straightforward reality check inside the oh-so-luvvy world of
precious dahling thespians. Wearing a vintage blue top
over a black dress with high neckline, she goes unnoticed while
posing for photographs in a busy London street. With her, that's
fine and dandy. "I just want to be left alone do good
work," she says. The first Cracker earned her rave reviews
for her portrayal of a hard-assed cop with a marshmallow heart.
She says: "That's a nice contrast to work on. I would
imagine anyone who works in such a predominantly male
environment as the police force kind of creates those barriers.
She certainly does, and she is quite good at it, you know, being
really tough and together. That's the crux of the relationship
with Fitz - he brings the vulnerable side out of her. He can
pinpoint what you are thinking, knows who you are, and you can't
fool him. And she finds that very attractive, because it's
somebody who is saying: 'I know you and I like you' - that's
just what he ultimately is saying to her."
To
prepare for Penhaligon, she had many sessions with a real woman
copper. "There's a detective I regularly speak to in
Manchester," she says. "She is about the same age as
Penhaligon. She works at the Ansen Road police station that our
one is based on. I talk to her a lot on the phone. A lot of it
is just to do with how you approach certain situations - such as
how you interview people.'' SHE goes on: "But we are not
trying to say in Cracker this is how the police are, this is how
they work. This is a drama and there is obviously poetic license
within that." All she will divulge about her personal life
is she was born in Ireland, and moved to London via the Isle of
Man. But, unlike that of Penhaligon, Geraldine's own romantic
life is stable - right? "No comment," she replies
frostily.
The
Unofficial Guide To Cracker 1999-2006
(http://www.crackertv.co.uk)
|
|
|