Daily Mail

Bye bye Bodyguard, hello to the killer BBC thriller that’s ten times better

Missing Bodyguard already? Fans swear BBC thriller Killing Eve is ten times smarter, gorier, funnier – and with a mesmerisin­g leading lady who’s a new fashion icon

- by FAr the star of the series is Jodie Comer, a young liverpudli­an actress who was little known until now, but whose turn as the psychopath Villanelle is already opening doors for her in Hollywood. Aged 25, Jodie still lives at home in middle-class Child

Ablonde assassin, angelic in looks but deadly in temperamen­t. A rogue MI5 agent, obsessed and seduced in equal measure by her enigmatic nemesis.

And a high-octane, utterly addictive cat-and-mouse game, guaranteed to hook you in from the start.

It’s no wonder Killing eve, the compelling new TV thriller, has enthralled audiences — first in America, where it debuted in June, and now in the UK, where last week’s Saturday night premiere on bbC1 drew 3.3 million viewers.

So here’s all you need to know about the new bodyguard.

WHY ALL THE FUSS ?

based on a series of novels by british author luke Jennings, Killing eve tells the story of Villanelle, a beautiful but ruthless femme fatale who becomes intrigued by eve — played by Canadian actress Sandra oh — a frustrated and scatterbra­ined MI5 security officer who is transferre­d to a clandestin­e unit of MI6 and sent on a topsecret mission to hunt down Villanelle.

As well as Villanelle’s enviable designer wardrobe, of which more later, part of the appeal is in the beautiful locations. Much of the drama was shot around north london, but the cast also travelled to Paris, bucharest and Tuscany.

It’s part spy thriller and part black comedy. one minute you’ll be reeling at one of Villanelle’s cold-blooded assassinat­ions, the next you’re laughing at her one-liners and the way she teases her handler like a naughty child.

Then there’s the minutiae of everyday life in the secret services — office politics everyone can relate to, with actress Fiona Shaw playing Carolyn Martens, the icy-calm boss with a dry sense of humour.

The plotting is fiendishly clever, with our TV critic calling it ‘thrilling’.

This is also an experiment for the bbC. While episodes are being shown weekly on Saturday nights, the whole series is available to download. Great for those who’ve got into the habit of binge-watching their box sets.

THE HOMEBIRD STAR

homebird,’ Jodie said recently. ‘I honestly cannot imagine not living with my mum and dad. I like having these two worlds — I get to travel and visit cool places, but then go back to reality.’

Jodie’s love of drama started at St Julie’s Catholic High School, where she attracted attention with her uncanny ability to slip into a character, or accent, entirely unlike her own. In Killing eve, her Scouse twang is eclipsed by Villanelle’s husky French-russian voice.

Teachers at St Julie’s remember a girl with ‘prodigious talent and diligent work ethic’.

‘She was a really big part of life at

the school,’ recalls Jo Walls, head of performing arts, who taught dance when Jodie was a student. ‘She was academic but also very creative.’

In 2006, Jodie won the Liverpool Drama Festival. It led to her first paid job — a Radio 4 play — and soon after that, an agent, at global agency Internatio­nal Talent.

After bit parts in Holby City, Waterloo Road and Silent Witness, she got her first break in Channel 4’s My Mad Fat Diary. But it was her next role, in which she played an abduction victim in BBC thriller Thirteen, that earned Jodie a Bafta nomination.

In 2015, she won the part of Kate Parks, the student having an affair with Simon Foster, the errant husband of Dr Gemma Foster, played by Suranne Jones, in the eponymous and hugely popular drama.

In 2016, Jodie was named as one of the British Film Institute’s Stars of Tomorrow and last year was cast in The White Princess, the sequel to the BBC’s The White Queen. The script for Killing Eve came her way shortly afterwards. When she saw writer Phoebe Waller-Bridge’s name on it, she says, she ‘knew she had to do it’.

Jodie threw everything into the role, decamping from Liverpool for locations in France, Italy, Germany and Romania; having intensive language lessons (she speaks French and Italian in the series); and even learning to do some of her own gory stunts.

But as the series receives universal acclaim, and filming begins for the much-anticipate­d second run, Jodie admits that what matters most is winning her family’s approval.

‘We’re a very close family,’ she says. ‘They’re really pleased for me, especially my brother. He’s two years younger and I care more about what he thinks than anyone else. Whatever happens, I can’t upset our Charlie.’

Her attitude to fame is, as one would expect, incredibly level-headed.

‘A lot of things have happened by chance,’ she said recently. ‘I’m a big believer in fate, and it’s working out well so far.’

WARDROBE TO DIE FOR

American Vogue called Killing Eve ‘ the most fashionabl­e show on TV’, with outfits — particular­ly those worn by Villanelle — better suited to a high- end catwalk than bloodspatt­ered murder scenes.

Her designer wardrobe, estimated to be worth tens of thousands of pounds, is part of the plot: Villanelle is based in Paris, and charges high fees for ruthlessly slaughteri­ng people, to fund her love of clothes.

She wears a bubblegum-pink tutu- style dress with Balenciaga boots to meet her employer in Paris, dons a brocade Dries Van noten suit to carry out a hit in a Berlin club and stabs a man in the eye in Tuscany using a vintage hairpin — but not before checking with him who designed his silk throw.

As with many elements of the femalefrie­ndly production team, the wardrobe mistress is a woman: namely Bafta-winning Brit Phoebe de Gaye, who was also behind Jodie’s costumes on The White Princess.

To save money, Phoebe bought most of the clothes in the summer sales, but still ‘spent

quite a lot of money on Villanelle’, though she won’t put a figure on how much.

CHILLING MUSIC

HAUNTING at times, upbeat at others, the soundtrack for Killing Eve is just as seductive as what’s on screen. Composer David Holmes, who worked on the Ocean’s Eleven trilogy, and music supervisor Catherine Grieves, behind the soundtrack on the bigscreen production of Les Miserables, worked together to bring the sounds of the series to life.

‘We wanted a powerful female voice in the music from the beginning,’ Catherine explains. ‘Villanelle and Eve are strong, complex women, and we wanted the music to reflect this.’

Pop songs alternate with eerie, more obscure tracks such as Killer Shangri-La, by Spanish band Psychotic Beats, and ‘K’ by U.S. band Cigarettes After Sex. Fans can listen to the soundtrack on Spotify, and there is talk that it could be released as an album.

DEATH WISH

LONDON-BORN actress and playwright Phoebe WallerBrid­ge, previously best known for the critically acclaimed BBC sitcom Fleabag, is the brains behind Killing Eve, having written and produced the eight-part series.

Phoebe, 33, graduated from the Royal Academy of Dramatic Art and went on to have small roles on stage and screen, including in Lady Thatcher biopic The Iron Lady in 2011 and Broadchurc­h in 2015.

Divorced from Irish filmmaker Conor Woodman, she is now in a relationsh­ip with Martin McDonagh, director of Oscar-winning Three Billboards Outside Ebbing Missouri. Fleabag, a comedy about a young woman struggling with modern life, started out as a play, which was how Phoebe crossed paths with Luke Jennings, author of the novellas on which Killing Eve is based, who came to watch a matinee at the Soho Theatre in 2015.

As Fleabag — in which Phoebe stars — transition­ed to TV in 2016, behind the scenes she was starting work on Killing Eve, determined to twist the traditiona­l male spy thriller into a tale of female empowermen­t.

‘There was a meeting at one point where someone said: “We can’t have too many women,”’ she said recently. ‘I was like, “What the f*** are you talking about? Not if it’s written and shot well.” ’

She has injected both the dialogue and plot with her characteri­stic wry humour and witty repartee — and says her only regret is not casting herself in a cameo role.

‘I wanted to be brutally murdered, but the schedule meant I couldn’t do it,’ she admits.

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