South Wales Echo

My children are the centre of my life... I liked the idea of playing someone whose reality was the opposite of that

Californic­ation star Natascha McElhone plays the CEO of a company launching the first mission to colonise Mars in innovative drama The First. The actor talks to GEORGIA HUMPHREYS about her complex character and raising her three sons by herself

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IF YOU’VE ever wondered what it would be like to be an astronaut, there’s a new drama on Channel 4 with your name on it. The First – which has already been streaming in the US on Hulu – stars Sean Penn in his first lead TV role, is set in the near-future and chronicles the effort to send the first crewed mission to Mars.

Californic­ation star Natascha McElhone, who’s also known for films such as Solaris and The Truman Show, plays Laz Ingram, a visionary aerospace magnate overseeing the astronauts.

Part of the appeal for the Surreyborn actress was embodying a character so different from herself.

“My kids are the centre of my life and work is something that I fit around them,” notes the 48-year-old mum-of-three, whose husband, plastic surgeon Martin Kelly, died of heart failure in

2008. She was pregnant with their third child at the time.

“So, I liked the idea of playing someone whose reality was the opposite of that

– her primary relationsh­ip is with her work and significan­tly, you don’t see her kids in the pilot.

“And that’s not to say they’re not well adjusted and well taken care of, it’s just she sees life through a very different prism, which is, I suppose, the mark she’s going to leave behind on human history.”

Being her kids’ sole parent meant Natascha had to think long and hard about taking on The First – written by House Of Cards creator Beau Willimon – as filming took place in Louisiana.

“Beau is hugely generous and understand­ing about the complexity of our lives, so that was one of the first things we spoke about when we met, whether it was even possible for me to do this job, because I need to be home, pretty much all of the time.

“They shot a lot in my kids’ school holidays, so my kids came out for a month, which was great. And the rest of the time I commuted. It would be a week shooting and then I would just come back and then go back out a few weeks later.” A moment later, she adds earnestly: “I must big up all the people I’ve worked with over the last 10 years. They’ve been incredibly understand­ing.” Laz, who is singlemind­ed Natascha McElhone on the red carpet

THE KENNEDYS: A FATAL AMBITION Tonight, Channel 5, 9pm

THE Kennedy family has endured two assassinat­ions, deadly plane and car crashes, as well as several other tragedies and scandals. Former US senator Ted Kennedy once even said he thought there may be “a curse hanging over all the Kennedys”.

This two-part documentar­y examines the ups and downs that have engulfed the clan since they arrived in America in the mid-19th century. The opening episode begins in 1849 with the first Kennedy to arrive in America, Joseph P Kennedy.

ANTIQUES ROADSHOW: WORLD WAR ONE SPECIAL Tomorrow, BBC1, 6pm

FIONA BRUCE presents the show from Etaples Military in her mission to reach Mars, was a complex character for Natascha to get her teeth into.

It’s obvious from the first episode just how driven she is. But she also comes across as rather cold, as she doesn’t have the best interperso­nal skills.

“She is quite inscrutabl­e on some level and an awful lot of her personalit­y is an interior one and not something people are privy to,” notes Natascha.

“It’s difficult to convey that. I quite liked that challenge, and you’re very reliant on the camera, whether they’re going to pick up moments of insecurity or doubt or not, because you don’t have dialogue to support it.”

Does she think viewers will find it hard to empathise with Laz?

“Possibly,” the star ponders in her typically soft, calm tone.

“I wonder though, if, as a TV audience, we are over catered to in that way, that writers only dare put very empathetic characters in lead roles, because unless someone’s likeable, someone isn’t going to want to watch them.

“And I think recently we’ve found that that isn’t necessaril­y the case. That doesn’t mean the person has to be a villain, just simply that they’re honest, and you’ll see throughout First World War soldier Robbie Burns, who was one of the last Tommies

Cemetery in France, as the team discovers the personal stories behind treasured objects associated with the First World War. Among the unique items brought in are two poppies that were picked from Ypres in 1915 and a document that was part of the political process to bring the war to an end. the show Laz is very honest and transparen­t, in the way she conducts her business and herself. There’s something quite refreshing about that.”

Natascha has been outspoken about being anti-Brexit. She was one of a handful of public figures who contribute­d to the cost of coach travel for people heading to a march calling for a referendum on the final Brexit deal earlier this month.

Talk turns to politics as she discusses how we, as a society, seem to have the attitude that someone saying they’ve made a mistake is a sign of failure, or disappoint­ment.

“It’s so strange to me, politicall­y at the moment – obviously I’m talking about Brexit – this idea that we can’t revisit and re-examine something, and that there’s something undemocrat­ic about that.”

She elaborates further: “It’s so peculiar to me that, at the highest level of administra­tion and of policy-making – and I’m assuming in big, big companies like Laz’s – there’s this fashion and trend to just use smoke and mirrors and not be

transparen­t, and be right,

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