Mercury (Hobart)

Acting on raw instinct

GUGU’S PSYCHOLOGI­CAL THRILLER ON SCREEN AND IN THE REAL WORLD

- JAMES WIGNEY

UK actor Gugu Mbatha-Raw has a theory as to why psychologi­cal thrillers are so popular right now – we’ve all been living one in the past few years.

It’s a perenniall­y popular genre on the printed page as well as the big and small screen, but the star of The Morning Show and Belle says they are particular­ly resonant at the moment, both for her personally and for the wider world.

After making her first psychologi­cal thriller last year – The Girl Before – she’s now backed up with Surface, a twistyturn­y tale about a San Francisco woman who loses her memory in an accident and then has to piece together the elusive elements of her former life.

“I think there is a heightened element to psychologi­cal thrillers and in many ways, the last couple of years in the pandemic have almost felt like we’ve been living in a psychologi­cal thriller in the real world,” Mbatha-Raw says via Zoom call from England, where she’s just about to start shooting season two of the Marvel hit Loki.

“So many unexpected things have happened in our culture and twists and turns of what’s going on with the human race and the world at large. Maybe that’s why there are more being made at the moment because people really resonate with the idea of the world turning on its head.”

Mbatha-Raw says it’s natural for actors to be fascinated with psychology and “analysing what

makes us all tick”, but she was particular­ly intrigued by the prospect of playing a character who didn’t know who she was.

Under normal circumstan­ces, she’d create an elaborate backstory for any given role and that imagined past would inform how she played the present that the audiences see. But in Surface, her well-heeled socialite Sophie, who is fished from the water after supposedly falling from a ferry and with no memory of how she got there, only rediscover­s her past at the same time the audience does.

“That was an interestin­g process,” she says, “because that’s not normally the way that you would work and, in a way, I built Sophie as the audience sees her. As we go through, Sophie herself is the mystery and she’s trying to solve the mystery of herself as we go through the show.

“But also, there’s the really fundamenta­l question … if you do have a blank slate, are we destined to make the same mistakes, are our fundamenta­l character traits innate or can we make better choices or change? Is there really such a thing as a fresh start, or will you essentiall­y always become the same type of person?”

The writer and creator of Surface, Veronica West, arranged for Mbatha-Raw and director Sam Miller (I May Destroy You, Luther) to meet with a memoryloss expert to delve deeper into the condition and how and when flashbacks may occur.

They also devoured medical articles that discussed new therapies – including the use of psychedeli­c drugs – and the effect

memory loss can have on families and loved ones.

“From a lot of the things that I read, it’s also very difficult for the people in that person’s life as well,” says Mbatha-Raw. “Not just from an injury, but if you’re dealing with different types of dementia or other types of memory loss. They’re all very specific.”

Mbatha-Raw’s first forays into psychologi­cal thrillers with The Girl Before and Surface also marked her first steps into the world of producing. One of her producing partners on Surface was her Morning Show co-star Reese Witherspoo­n, whose production company Hello Sunshine has been behind recent hits including Big

Little Lies, Little Fires Everywhere and the acclaimed movie adaptation of Where the Crawdads Sing, which opened in cinemas here last week.

“She’s just such an inspiratio­n,” Mbatha-Raw says of Witherspoo­n. “Seeing what she’s built with Hello

Sunshine and their ethos of empowering women. She was instrument­al in championin­g this project in terms of the pitch to Apple and bringing me on board to pitch with Hello Sunshine and Veronica for this show.

“Reese is very smart in that she’s also surrounded herself with some incredible people at Hello Sunshine. She’s definitely the pioneer and the leader of the company, but there’s many great people that keep it going.”

Mbatha-Raw says stepping up as a producer has been a huge learning curve, but having acted on stage and screen for nearly two decades, she relished the chance to have a bigger voice in her projects, from pre-production and choosing collaborat­ors right through to the editing room and post-production.

“Obviously, you always have opinions as an actor, but as a producer, you actually have a place to put them and a place to really be heard,” she says. “I think that’s probably the difference. It’s been really

inspiring as a woman to be surrounded by female producers in a femalefocu­sed story like Surface. I’m excited to continue with it.”

But first there’s the opportunit­y to reprise the mysterious and menacing Ravonna Renslayer opposite Tom Hiddleston’s time-travelling, universe-hopping title character in Loki. Filming began in the UK last month and once again the Marvel cone of silence has descended.

“I really can’t say much but I’m excited to get back into that world,” she says with a laugh. “But there are lots of new adventures in store.”

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 ?? ?? Gugu Mbatha-Raw in a scene from the Apple TV+ thriller Surface; and (below) with Reese Witherspoo­n. Picture: Dimitrios Kambouris/Getty
Gugu Mbatha-Raw in a scene from the Apple TV+ thriller Surface; and (below) with Reese Witherspoo­n. Picture: Dimitrios Kambouris/Getty

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