Costa Blanca News

Setting the World On Fire

New drama World On Fire follows the intertwini­ng fates of ordinary people during the first year of the Second World War. Amongst the starstudde­d cast is Sean Bean, who tells Georgia Humphreys what viewers can expect from the gripping series

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Sean Bean has an unlucky track record when it comes to the fate of his characters on screen.

From Ned Stark in Game Of Thrones to Boromir in Lord Of The Rings and Alec Trevelyan in GoldenEye, the Sheffield-born actor is famed for roles which end in an untimely death.

So, it's understand­able that for his latest show, World On Fire, he was keen to check with the writer - Bafta-winning Peter Bowker - that he would survive the first series.

"I think I did have a telephone conversati­on; 'I don't die, do I?'," the 60-year-old recalls with a light chuckle. "And they said, 'No, no, no, you're alright!'"

In the seven-part BBC One war drama, Bean plays workingcla­ss man Douglas Bennett, who he says is unlike any character he's played in the past.

Now a bus conductor living in Manchester with his two grown-up kids, Douglas witnessed a lot of horror and bloodshed during the First World War.

As a result, when World War Two begins, he is "a conscienti­ous objector, a pacifist".

He is also, Bean suggests, "a man who was suffering really psychologi­cally from the past, trying to keep a hold on his life".

"These flashbacks come upon him, these memories, these horrible nightmares that he just can't get out of his head, and he's trying to deal with it himself, on his own really, as many men did after the First World War," he elaborates.

"They didn't get help from hospitals or societies or the government; they were very much seen as weaklings or men who were shirking or trying to dodge things. But they were actually men who were so shocked and so damaged that they weren't pretending."

His voice soft and quiet, the gentle star adds: "Today it would be mental illness; it's well documented and it's addressed. But then, they just thought you were weak, you weren't strong, you weren't a man.

"He is a man, and he was a strong man, until he went through this and he's kind of broken."

The emotive series looks at how the first year of the war affected several different ordinary people in various countries Britain, Poland, France, Germany and the United States.

Other intertwini­ng stories we follow include that of Douglas' children, Lois (played by Julia Brown) and Tom (Ewan Mitchell).

"He was a loving father, loving husband," notes Bean, who married his fifth wife in 2017, and has three children from his previous marriages.

"The war threw that everywhere; his wife died soon after and he was kind of living it with it on his own. He wasn't getting any help and he's going through these emotions, trying to get these horrific experience­s .... He has to live with them for the rest of his life."

What research did he do for the part?

"Well, I read up about it and I watched documentar­ies. But I suppose I've always had an interest in it, the First and Second World War.

"I've played a lot of soldiers over the years and I've talked to a lot of people involved especially in the Falklands.

"In the series Sharpe, I remember we had men from the Falklands who had lost legs and we used them for a scene we shot in the hospital in Greenwich, in the Peninsular War. That was over a period of time, and we were chatting.

"There were experience­s that had been told to me by those guys and so it was a matter of just dredging those stories back up again, a bit of talking to the directors and writers and a bit of research.

"It's a very personal thing, because it's how you portray it and how you try to show the damage that has been done. So it's a matter of choice of how far you go and how your body reacts and how your body follows your brain to demonstrat­e in your acting."

Bean, whose other recent TV roles include Broken, Medici and Curfew, admits the filming process for World On Fire was a particular­ly intense one.

"It wasn't where you went to work and said, 'Hi' with other characters," he says, imitating a cheerful voice.

"It was a man who was kind of trapped in his house, in his kitchen with his family, and he's claustroph­obic and it was intense, and he was putting on this front. He was trying to be alright for his kids - he was really falling apart inside. That was very interestin­g to play. Not necessaril­y enjoyable, but fascinatin­g to explore.

As well as Bean, other big names on the cast list include Hollywood star Helen Hunt and Oscar-nominee Lesley Manville.

World On Fire starts on BBC One on Sunday, September 29

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