The Irish Mail on Sunday

ONE NIGHT IN BANGKOK

A hard-partying stewardess finds herself accused of murder on a boozy stopover in Thailand in dark comedy The Flight Attendant

- James Peachey

American air stewardess Cassie Bowden leads a carefree, booze-fuelled life, but it’s about to come crashing down spectacula­rly. A romp on a plane with a first-class passenger leads to a murder mystery involving the FBI and CIA in Sky’s new Golden Globe-nominated comedydram­a The Flight Attendant.

Cassie’s world turns upside down after she catches the eye of suave Alex Sokolov on a flight to Bangkok and the pair hit the town after landing. In the morning she wakes up in a hotel bed next to Alex, who’s dead having had his throat cut.

‘She remembers spending time with him on the flight, and drinking the night away in Bangkok and making love – but then nothing,’ says Kaley Cuoco, who plays Cassie. ‘She has to find out what happened in that hotel room and escape a possible murder charge.’

But her immediate priority is to get out of Thailand without arousing suspicion. ‘After phoning her lawyer friend Annie, she realises how much trouble she’s in, so she dumps all evidence of her time in the hotel room and heads to Bangkok airport, before Alex’s body is discovered by cleaners,’ explains Kaley, who starred as Penny in The Big Bang Theory.

‘Cassie’s colleague Megan is used to her erratic behaviour because of her heavy drinking, but she seems even more detached from her duties than normal on the next leg of their journey. And when, on arrival back in the USA, Cassie learns that two FBI officers are there to interview all the stewards, she panics and tries to evade them…’

The truth behind Alex’s murder emerges over the course of the eight-part series in a thrilling plot that involves corporate espionage, illegal weapons and North Korea.

The Flight Attendant is truly Kaley’s baby. She bought the rights to Chris Bohjalian’s 2018 novel of the same name with the aim of developing it for TV. It’s the kind of big-budget gamble Kaley could take after earning $1 million per episode during the latter stages of her 12 years on The Big Bang Theory.

‘I read the first line of the novel synopsis and a chill went up my spine,’ remembers Kaley. ‘I think that receiving Golden Globe nomination­s – for both myself and for the series – has justified that decision!’

The Flight Attendant, Friday, 9pm, Sky One and NOW TV.

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