Belfast Telegraph

‘I’ve currently got every single machine and product working on my face to iron out every single wrinkle’

Sarah Greene, who is currently starring in the hit TV drama Dublin Murders, talks to Eleanor Halls about ageing and why she and her Northern Ireland boyfriend can’t agree upon where’s best to bring up kids

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❝ Harvey Weinstein is a horrible man, a pig... Idonotwant­tobe associated with him

❝ My biological clock ticking is more worrying to me than getting the right roles

When Sarah Greene got a call from acclaimed director Lenny Abrahamson asking her to audition for his forthcomin­g BBC adaptation of Sally Rooney’s wildly successful millennial relationsh­ips novel Normal People, she was initially somewhat peeved.

The role was a working-class mother to one of the Dublin-based protagonis­ts.

“I thought, ‘I’m too young to play Lorraine’,” she says, straighten­ing her 5ft 3in frame out from the nook of a London hotel sofa in mock indignatio­n.

Greene, who grew up in Cork, is 35. “Then I realised Lorraine is 35 too. She just had Connell at 15, so I am the right age,” she sighs.

While Greene doesn’t look a day over 28, it’s clear ageing is a preoccupat­ion.

And not without cause — women over the age of 30 tend to be shunned by Hollywood while their ripening male counterpar­ts continue to reel in career-defining roles well into their 40s and 50s.

“I mean, look at Leonardo DiCaprio in Once Upon A Time In Hollywood. He looks gorgeous, whereas I’ve currently got every single machine and product working on my face to iron out every single wrinkle,” says Greene.

“It’s really, really tough being a woman. I think about getting work done all the time. Look at Nicole Kidman — her face is completely done.”

And yet, I tell Greene, this could well be considered her breakout year. The actress, who was nominated for a Tony award in 2014 for her Broadway performanc­e in The Cripple Of Inishmaan opposite Daniel Radcliffe and won plaudits for roles in Woyzeck and The Ferryman in London in 2017, is currently starring in BBC’s eight-part series Dublin Murders as homvoice.

icide detective Cassie Maddox. It’s 2006 and, alongside her partner Rob (Killian Scott), Cassie is investigat­ing the killing of a 13-year-old ballerina found dead on an ancient stone altar in the woods.

The series has hooked viewers with its sinewy plot, eerie Irish folklore and richly drawn characters: both Cassie and Rob bear psychologi­cal scars from past trauma connected to the case and both operate under dual identities.

Dublin Murders, along with Normal People, are her biggest TV projects to date — aged 35,

no less. Proof that times are changing?

“Yes, even with The Ferryman, it was unusual to get such a meaty part for a female on stage. We want to hear female stories,” she says.

“Dublin Murders was written by Sarah Phelps (adapted from Tana French’s bestsellin­g Dublin Murder Squad novels) and the series had all female producers. Cassie’s on a murder squad as the only woman in the team.

“Likewise, Normal People was the first time I’d ever worked with a female director of photograph­y and they bring such

a different energy on set. They don’t shout, they don’t throw their weight around. They can actually delegate.”

“Speaking of men throwing their weight around,” I say, while Greene purses her lips expectantl­y. “Harvey Weinstein is a horrible man. He’s a pig,” she interjects, curtly, reluctant to discuss the director.

They met at the 2014 Tony Awards, where the now disgraced producer promised to launch her career in Hollywood.

“‘My money’s on you. Im’a make you a star,’ ” Greene says, imitating Weinstein’s gruff “I told him he lost his money because I didn’t win (the Tony). Then he emailed me and told me he was coming to see (The Ferryman). We had dinner afterwards, just the two of us. He said, ‘I want to put you in my films’. The next day, I had two scripts in my hand.”

Did he try anything? “No,” says Greene, before adding, “not then.” Not then? “Listen, I don’t want to be associated with him,” she stresses. “I knew what he was like. I made sure I wasn’t in any hotel rooms with him. I was older than he thought I was. There’s no story to tell.”

Greene is equally reluctant to discuss her ex-partner and Poldark star Aidan Turner. “It’s been five years,” she cries out in frustratio­n. The pair met at Dublin’s Gaiety School of Acting in 2003 before dating between 2010 and 2015.

“I’m always referred to as ‘Aidan’s ex-girlfriend’. I love Aidan and we’re really good friends, but no one would ever ask him about me.”

Greene smooths over her irritation by getting out her phone to excitedly show me pictures of her newborn nephew.

“I think my biological clock ticking is more worrying than getting the right roles,” she says.

“My boyfriend and I were talking about where we’d bring up (any future) kids.

“He’s from Northern Ireland, so he really wants us based there, whereas I’d rather Dublin. It’s such a tight-knit acting community in Dublin. Everyone knows everyone because we’ve all worked in theatre.

“All of our Dublin Murders crew came from Game Of Thrones. Also, we only drink in two pubs in Dublin, so we always bump into each other.”

Does she receive greater attention in Dublin than London, where she currently lives?

“I don’t get recognised over there,” Greene says. “Although I haven’t been back since (the 2018 film) Rosie and that was big, so maybe I would now.”

She pauses for several seconds and adds: “The pressure of this ‘being my year’ is really frightenin­g. It makes me anxious when I think of it like that.”

She shuffles nervously, looking genuinely petrified and reaches into her bag for a cigarette. When Greene looks up a moment later, however, fear is beginning to make way for exhilarati­on. “It’s freeing, too, I suppose, having the camera on me. With these rich characters, it’s not about how I look. It’s about so much more than that.”

Dublin Murders continues on Monday on BBC One at 9pm

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Breakout year: Sarah Greene is winning rave reviews for her turn in
Dublin Murders
Paid fXels Breakout year: Sarah Greene is winning rave reviews for her turn in Dublin Murders
 ??  ?? Tipped for top: Sarah with Killian Scott in Dublin Murders and (right) with ex-partner and Poldark star Aidan Turner
Tipped for top: Sarah with Killian Scott in Dublin Murders and (right) with ex-partner and Poldark star Aidan Turner
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