South Wales Echo

TV highlights, soap news and seven-day listings

FORTITUDE’S RICHARD THINKS DAN ANDERSSEN PLAYING DORMER SHERIFF HAS BEEN THE MOST CHALLENGIN­G ROLE OF HIS CAREER. HE TALKS TO GEORGIA HUMPHREYS ABOUT FILMING IN MINUS 35 DEGREE WEATHER AND WHY HE’S KEEPING HIS CHARACTER’S GUN

-

IT’S impossible to ignore how emotional Richard Dormer feels about the end of Fortitude. Tears suddenly start rolling down the Northern Irish star’s cheeks, as he discusses the Sky Atlantic sci-fi thriller.

Now in its third – and final – series, the 49-year-old plays the mad and sinister Sheriff Dan Anderssen, at the centre of the crazy goings-on in a close-knit community located in the Arctic Circle.

“Some characters, some jobs, some souls you can relate to,” Richard says, as he dabs at his eyes, and tries to pinpoint exactly why this has “been the most emotional” shoot he’s ever done.

“Just personally, in my life I’ve been going through tough times and this guy is doing the same thing, he’s trying not to lose himself.

“It’s kind of a reflection of where I am, and that journey of someone trying to hold on to the things he loves.”

But filming the series, which was created by Simon Donald, has been “cathartic”.

“It’s therapy time for me!” quips the actor, who’s also known for his role as Beric Dondarrion in the HBO television series Game Of Thrones.

So far in Fortitude, we’ve seen a lot of deaths, and some bonkers storylines, such as a killing spree by a parasitic wasp, and the rampage of a shaman seeking revenge.

And Dan – having survived the parasite, and a host of other traumatic events – has lost his way.

The new episodes will see the complex character struggling to hold on to any sense of good and evil.

“He’s evolved, he’s a new human being... or maybe not human,” offers Richard.

“He’s a demon, he’s lost his morality, his humanity. But he’s stronger and wiser than ever, so that’s pretty scary.”

He’s also seeing ghosts – and things that others can’t see.

Richard continues: “As well as being addicted to every substance on the planet, he’s now addicted to muscimol juice; when reindeer have eaten fungi and then they pee, and they collect the pee.

“Eskimos used to actually do this to be able to have visions of the afterlife or the land of the dead. Dan has one foot in this world and the other foot in the land of the dead, so he can communicat­e with the people who he has killed.” The final instalment of the show, which also stars the likes of Dennis Quaid, Luke Treadaway and Sienna Guillory, was shot in Svalbard, Norway.

At times, the weather dropped as low as -35 degrees, -50 with wind chill.

“It’s where the show is originally set,” says Richard, “and it really added a new dimension to the characters because we were informed by the severity and the absolute brutality of that landscape.”

How did he find it being in a much colder environmen­t for this series?

“If you take your glove off to light a cigarette, within 20 seconds it hurts,” he admits.

“And if you’re going out for a walk you’ve got to tell somebody, because if you slip and get knocked unconsciou­s, you’re dead in 10, 15 minutes. So you have to be really careful.”

But there’s no denying this added element of danger helped with his performanc­e.

“I think everybody got tougher and meaner and then whenever we do the interiors, when it’s warm and cosy, out comes this extreme gentleness and love. So you get those extremes.”

The show isn’t an easy watch, with its heavy themes of loss, death and identity.

But it has amassed a cult following, perhaps for the clever way it balances elements of horror (expect some gruesome scenes) and sci-fi.

It also feels “kind of Greek”, notes Richard.

“Dan is kind of Prometheus because he’s stolen this gift... He’s stolen the power to regenerate, to become godlike, and with that power of course comes the responsibi­lity and it’s how a human being deals

 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ?? Richard alongside his co-star Dennis Quaid
Richard alongside his co-star Dennis Quaid

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom