Glasgow Times

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EMMA THOMPSON IS SUPERB IN EMOTIONAL COURT DRAMA MOVIES

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DAME Emma Thompson plays a High Court judge in her latest film The Children Act, but says her character has the kind of responsibi­lity few women are granted. She tells LAURA HARDING about stepping into the corridors of power, how things are changing for women in the world and why opportunit­ies must be equal.

EMMA Thompson is famously un-starry but she is also an Oscarwinni­ng pillar of the British acting establishm­ent and regarded as a national treasure.

As a result, one wants to address her with as much respect as one can muster.

It is therefore more than slightly horrifying to realise you have casually called her ‘Emma’ rather than acknowledg­ing the Damehood she received earlier this year in the Queen’s birthday honours.

“I will let it go this time,” she jokes mischievou­sly. “But next time – off with your head. The executione­r is in the wardrobe.”

The star of such films as Howards End, Love Actually and Sense and Sensibilit­y was recognised by the Queen for her services to drama and she adds another worthy role to her repertoire with her latest film, The Children Act, in which she plays a High Court judge.

Adapted by Ian McEwan from his novel of the same name, the project offered Thompson, who is now 59, a character she had never seen before.

“When you hear the word ‘judge’, even in this day and age, in our patriarcha­l way you just tend to think, ‘Oh it’s a man’,” she says.

“We have never seen a film about a woman who is a High Court judge, I have never seen that, and so I was fascinated to do the research and see what it’s like to be that very rare thing of a woman who has that kind of power.

“She has to make decisions that are life and death, decisions that affect families and people in visceral, extreme ways.

“Feeling that power in the corridors of the Courts of Justice was overwhelmi­ng. I made friends with two judges who I love and admire more than I can begin to tell you. They sit above everyone else and it makes the court into a theatre and they are the one who everyone is looking up at.

“You can also see everything that is going on and the women used to say to me that they watch the body language a lot, it’s a completely compelling job.”

Thompson spent a great deal of time “backstage” in courts observing their arcane procedures and marvelling that only judges and their clerks can walk on the red carpet of the corridors.

“You suddenly realise that they are these god-like creatures in their robes, walking around with this extraordin­ary power, and hardly any women have that kind of power in the world, ever.”

In the film, Thompson’s character Fiona Maye must rule in a family court on whether a hospital can treat a seriously ill teenage boy, played by Dunkirk actor Fionn Whitehead, against the wishes of his Jehovah’s Witness parents.

“The thing to note is that the family court is considered the poor cousin,” she says.

“Criminal is the macho guy thing, that is where the ‘real’ stuff happens, and that view is just typical, frankly.

“But family court is where the real drama and the real pain is, it’s terrifying. All human life is there, it’s like the Greek myths, every f***ing day.”

Thompson said that fact was drawn into particular­ly sharp relief during the case of Charlie Gard, the baby whose fate was the subject of a protracted court battle after he was born with the rare genetic disorder mitochondr­ial DNA depletion syndrome.

His parents fought a five-month campaign to have him transferre­d from Great Ormond Street Hospital in central London, where he was on life support, for experiment­al treatment elsewhere before he eventually died in July 2017.

“You realise here are no winners,” Thompson said. “There is no right and wrong really.

“There are decisions that have to be made and they are always painful and they are painful on both sides and they are painful for the judge.”

Thompson is far more optimistic when it comes to the subject of women in positions of power, especially on the judiciary.

She said it is “terribly important” for young girls to see characters such as the female judge depicted on screen so they know that kind of job is possible for them.

“If you think about the way in which the iconograph­y was changed when Barack Obama became president, it’s exactly the same.

“As soon as you see a powerful role, a government role, a role like this, being taken by a woman, you can see that and think, ‘Oh, I can be a judge’.

“But that has to be backed up. It’s alright having dreams but they have to be backed up by the intentions of your government.

“The judiciary is like parliament, it’s still a club for straight, white men – although I have to say that is changing.

“There are little pockets of hope and the greatest place to find hope about all of these issues is with the young generation.

“If you want to find new ideas, go to the Edinburgh Festival, go to the little theatres – go and see what poor, young, female writers are writing about, what it is to be born into the female body today.”

The Children Act is released in UK cinemas tomorrow.

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