The Star Malaysia - Star2

Big Ben theory

Benedict Cumberbatc­h’s take on a female Sherlock Holmes on TV.

- By STEWART CLARKE

BENEDICT Cumberbatc­h is ready for his closeup – as a producer as well as actor. His production company, SunnyMarch, is gearing up for the debut of its first drama, The Child In Time, which airs on the BBC today.

Cumberbatc­h has the central part in, and produces, the TV movie, an adaptation of the novel by Ian McEwan about the disappeara­nce of a five-year-old girl and the impact it has on her parents.

Playing Stephen, a successful children’s author and the missing girl’s father, was a deliberate shift away from the title role in Sherlock that made him a global celebrity.

“It’s a part that’s a million miles away from a lot of stuff I’ve done, especially the more famous one from telly,” Cumberbatc­h said.

“That’s an appeal for me, to always be shaking things up a bit as far as expectatio­ns are concerned.” Cumberbatc­h said producing added to the challenge of the project: “It’s different when you’ve got a producer’s hat on because you’re there at the inception of the idea – in this case when an already finished script was delivered and talked about and worked on – and also thinking who would be right to direct it (Julian Farino). I’ve never been at that stage before, so it’s intriguing.”

The actor said seeing his own performanc­e in its early form was not part of the process he enjoyed. “It’s horrible, and if you’re front and centre it’s really hard. I’m excited about the moment where I’m not in something – I can look at that with much more distance,” Cumberbatc­h said, adding that he is a harsh critic of his own work.

“Trust me, the Internet is full of hate, but there’s nothing compared to the self-critic in your head for brutality. I’ve said it all before they have.”

The harrowing nature of the source material in The Child In Time presented another challenge for Cumberbatc­h, himself a father of two. “You have to take care of yourself in a way. It’s a very dark place to go to. When you’re literally breaking down for a whole day, it’s a very strange space to occupy, but that’s what the drama demands, and it’s a very human experience he goes through.”

Cumberbatc­h said he wants his production company to work across TV, cinema, and live events, and to promote diversity.

“There’s a lot of other things we want to include at SunnyMarch, which we have got on our slate and fulfill the promise of diversity and giving a bolder place for women both behind and in front of the camera,” he said. “What I’m doing in the immediate future doesn’t reflect that because we’re trying to get it off the ground and do things that are a little more expected, and with me involved.”

Cumberbatc­h also leaped to the defense of Jodie Whittaker, who has been cast as the first female Doctor in BBC sci-fi series Doctor Who.

“It’s an alien. Why can’t it be a woman, why can’t it be any gender? It doesn’t matter to me,” he said. “I don’t speak as someone who has the right as a fan to have an incredibly strong opinion. I just speak as someone who wants to see Jodie Whittaker’s performanc­e as the doctor. I think she’s an extraordin­ary actress and we are lucky, culturally, to have got her to agree to do it, let alone any debate ensuing about whether it’s right or wrong.”

Asked whether there could be a female Sherlock, he added: “Why not? I don’t care. Sherlockin­a is coming to you soon!” – Reuters

 ??  ?? The Child In Time tells the story of the disappeara­nce of a five-year-old girl and the impact it has on her parents. Cumberbatc­h plays the girl’s father. — Handout
The Child In Time tells the story of the disappeara­nce of a five-year-old girl and the impact it has on her parents. Cumberbatc­h plays the girl’s father. — Handout

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