South Wales Echo

SECOND SERIES: Show creator and lead actor Joe Gilgun on the return of Brassic

JOE GILGUN TELLS GEORGIA HUMPHREYS ABOUT PENNING A SECOND SERIES OF BRASSIC, HIS DATING WOES AND WHY HE’S ‘THRIVING’ IN LOCKDOWN

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THE launch of Brassic was overwhelmi­ng for its creator and lead actor, the inimitable Joe Gilgun. The Chorley-born star, 36, doesn’t own a TV, and so didn’t watch the Sky comedy air; instead, he sat in silence for hours, waiting to hear about the reaction to it.

“It’s autobiogra­phical, so if people had thought it had been rubbish, it would have had serious mental health implicatio­ns for me,” he confides.

“I laid myself bare, so if it had been boring, I’d have been mortified.”

Luckily, Joe – whose varied CV includes Emmerdale, This Is England and Misfits – could breathe a huge sigh of relief, because “initial reports that came back said, ‘It’s the best comedy drama [on Sky] we’ve had in seven years’.”

Now, there is a second series. Once again, it follows the crazy escapades of Vinnie, a Lancashire lad with bipolar disorder (played by Joe), and his group of working class mates, as they try to win at life in northern suburbia.

The show is that perfect blend of comedy and drama, as the pals – who have grown up scamming and stealing – face all sorts of trouble.

And it’s a heartfelt exploratio­n of friendship, particular­ly between Vinnie and his life-long best mate, razor-sharp Dylan (Damien Molony). So, what’s it like on set for Brassic? “There’s a lot of love,” Joe says of his co-stars and crew.

“I mean, I’m not going to witter on about that too much, because actors do, and it does my head in.

“They talk about families – the image a lot of actors try to portray is that everyone’s pi**ing themselves laughing all day, and that’s not it. You’re a real family, you squabble, you disagree on things...”

The star, who has bipolar disorder in real life, says he “was terrified during the shooting of season one. I felt like a massive impostor as a creator”.

But the success of Brassic has made him more confident about writing other material.

“I obsessivel­y write. I don’t have a lot of mates, I don’t have a girlfriend, I’m like a bit of a loser who feeds the pigeons – which has actually become a bit of a problem, them s ****** g all over my balcony – but I do have a lot of ideas,” he quips.

For the last three years, Joe has spent six months of the year in the US filming horror show Preacher. When he was back in the UK, he used to squat in a house without running water.

But Brassic proving to be a hit means he has been persuaded to buy himself a house.

“I don’t want it!” he exclaims.

“I’m happy. I’m happy feeding the pigeons!”

No one sums up Joe better than himself: “My personalit­y is a bit intense,” he notes.

He talks a lot – and swears a lot – and at an insanely fast pace, seeming to have no filter at all.

It’s refreshing, a celebrity being so unabashedl­y open, especially about their mental health.

As something at the forefront of all our minds, we discuss the current lockdown, and how Joe is coping with the impact of the Covid-19 pandemic.

“Genuinely, Vinnie’s mental health is exactly mine; he’s a mirror image of me, Vin,” reveals Joe. “What you see on screen is pretty much who I am, especially when it comes to the mental health, even down to the medicine he’s on – I’m on exactly that medicine I’ve spoken about, to the actual milligram. “And I am not social; really, I’m not. I spend a lot of time on my own, so it [lockdown] hasn’t made a massive difference.”

He continues: “I have a very small support network that understand me – I’m lucky to have them.

“My friends are the people I work with now, really.”

If anything, he’s probably “thrived” during lockdown, he adds.

“I’ve started running again – that’s been good. I’ve been putting that off for a long time.

“That’s been good for my mental health.

“I don’t enjoy running, the process of, I just know that it helps me.

“I’m eating healthy for the first time in my adult life, dude. I’m having salad every day.”

He’s finding it hard not being able to see his family, though.

“I miss my sister and the kids. I miss my mum – my dad passed away last year and that was pretty heavy, so like, we’re quite close as a family.

“But I’m doing a lot of work, coming up with a lot of new ideas, lots of new stuff to obsess on.

“I think I’ve done all right, actually. I’ve handled it well. There are moments when I think I’m going to fall off the face of the earth and it’s very real that, when it happens.

“But, the majority of the time, I’m doing all right.”

One topic he has been writing about recently is his experience on dating apps; he’s realised he will “never, ever, meet The One on Tinder”, he admits.

“It’s taken a good year and a bit to dawn on me that actually it’s full of lying sociopaths!

“People are just mean, like you get dropped... I don’t understand how people can just drop each other like that. Just because they’re not in front of each other is what it is.

“Because I’ve never been involved in, like, a social media-type platform of any kind, Tinder’s come as quite a jolt, man. No-one cares about anyone.

“I’m not successful on it, I don’t get many matches.

“I’m not much of a ladies’ man at all. It doesn’t complete me, know what I mean?”

 ??  ??
 ??  ?? Brassic follows the exploits of a group of working class friends
Brassic follows the exploits of a group of working class friends
 ??  ?? Joe’s Brassic co-star Michelle Keegan
Joe’s Brassic co-star Michelle Keegan
 ??  ?? Intense: Joseph Gilgun as Vinnie in Brassic
Intense: Joseph Gilgun as Vinnie in Brassic

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