The Irish Mail on Sunday

CRACKING THE MORSE CODE

Shaun Evans, who returns to our screens next week as the young Inspector Morse in Endeavour, is almost as inscrutabl­e as his TV counterpar­t. You just need to follow the clues...

- INTERVIEW BY JON WILDE

He might be the star of one of television’s most mainstream shows but there’s nothing convention­al about Shaun Evans. While preparing for our interview, the 36year-old Liverpudli­an, who plays the young Inspector Morse in the prime-time UTV series Endeavour, refuses to sit down.

‘It helps to be more interested in other people than you are in yourself,’ he says by way of explanatio­n. ‘Inhabiting other characters is what I do.’

The key to unlocking this idiosyncra­tic and very unique talent is through his work.

When describing the young Morse he plays in Endeavour, Evans says the fictional detective is ‘in a world but not of that world. He’s out of sync with the times he’s living in’.

‘When everyone else is listening to pop music, he loves opera. When everyone is engrossed in the footie, he’s sitting in the corner doing the crossword. While everyone is trying to have sex, he can be found with his head in a book.’

This sounds similar to Evans, who seems to be out of step with the times himself.

‘I guess I’ve always been something of an outsider. As a kid I was always more interested in watching others than being the centre of attention.

‘I’ve always felt that you can see a lot more and learn a lot more when you’re standing on the edge. Things get too noisy when you’re at the centre of things.’

He’s something of an enigma, and you suspect he likes it that way. He dated The Corrs lead singer Andrea for four years but the publicity that surrounded their 2006 break-up has made him extremely wary. He’s now so protective of his private life that he won’t even let on whether he is in a relationsh­ip.

‘I think it’s important to live your life the way you want to live it. Don’t live your life in fear. It’s important to me to feel free, not to be hemmed in by what others have to say about me.’

His eccentrici­ties don’t appear to have hampered his acting success, though. Before Endeavour catapulted him into the limelight in 2012, his career was bubbling along

nicely, albeit without making any giant waves.

Highlights included a role in Channel 4’s Teachers; parts in BBC dramas Silk and Ashes To Ashes, and a role in comedy movie Sparkle.

Evans was unfamiliar with Colin Dexter’s novels and the Inspector

Morse TV series that ran from 1987 to 2000, turned John Thaw into a star and was seen by an estimated one billion people around the world.

Endeavour, which takes viewers back to the mid-Sixties, just as Morse is beginning his career with the criminal investigat­ion department in Oxford, was the brainchild of Dexter, who gave his seal of approval to Evans’ casting.

Despite the reservatio­ns of Morse purists, Endeavour became the highest-performing new drama to air on UTV in 2012, peaking with 7.5 viewers.

‘But if people were waiting for me to fail as the younger Morse,’ says Evans, ‘I knew nothing about it.’

Now, on the eve of the fourth season, there’s speculatio­n about how long he’ll stay in the role.

Thaw first portrayed Morse in his mid-40s, and so Evans, now 36, could convincing­ly play the character for another 10 years.

But he says the shooting schedules are arduous, ‘beginning at 5am and finishing at 9pm’, with each series demanding 20 weeks of his time each year.

‘Never say never. But I doubt very much I’ll be talking about a new series of Endeavour in 10 years’ time.’

You suspect that he yearns to stretch himself with less convention­al work than Endeavour.

He talks fondly of his time on the London stage in 2009, playing Kurt Cobain to Danny Dyer’s Sid Vicious in Kurt And Sid, and he relished his role as a seedy politician in BBC2’s raunchy drama The Scandalous Lady W.

‘I’m not uncomforta­ble with sex scenes,’ he says.

‘I’ve been known to get my backside out for the camera now and then. As long as it’s not gratuitous, I’m up for it.’ Born to a taxi-driver dad and a careworker mum, Evans has got genuine working-class credential­s, although he thinks long and hard when asked whether the acting world is unfairly dominated by middle- and upperclass actors such as Tom Hiddleston and Benedict Cumberbatc­h.

‘Acting isn’t a normal job,’ he says. ‘Just because you go to a good drama school and get a first, it doesn’t guarantee you work.

‘What you need most is tenacity. If you come from a lower-income family, you may not have so many opportunit­ies but you may have the tenacity to stick with it and make a living from it.’

Like many British actors on the rise, he’s also been tipped as a future Doctor Who and a potential replacemen­t for Daniel Craig as the next 007.

‘Those rumours sound a bit far-fetched,’ he says coyly.

‘But you could argue that my life up to this point has been far-fetched. So you never know.’

And with that, he’s gone, his mystery intact. Just as he likes it. Endeavour returns on Sunday January 8 at 8pm on UTV

‘You can see more when you’re at the edge; it’s too noisy at the centre of things ’

 ??  ?? Main picture, Shaun Evans as Morse in
Endeavour. Above, Evans with Natalie Dormer in The Scandalous
Lady W. Below, with Roger Allam in Endeavour
Main picture, Shaun Evans as Morse in Endeavour. Above, Evans with Natalie Dormer in The Scandalous Lady W. Below, with Roger Allam in Endeavour
 ??  ??
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Ireland