The Daily Telegraph

Inside story of Bafta sensation Jodie Comer

Guy Kelly on the 26-year-old Scouser who stole the show at the Baftas, and is taking Hollywood by storm

-

It’s perhaps all the more appropriat­e she snuck up on us. This time last year, when early murmurs about a glamorous new BBC thriller called Killing Eve travelled from across the pond, where it premiered, the show’s winning components seemed obvious.

The script was written by Phoebe Waller-bridge, who had already created one of the best new series of the decade in Fleabag; Luke Jennings, the author of its source novellas, Codename Villanelle, had been compared with Ian Fleming; and, if you read the US previews, reviews or, latterly, even Emmy nomination­s, you could have been forgiven for thinking

Killing Eve’s standout performanc­e was from Sandra Oh, the veteran Canadian actress playing Eve herself.

As it was, a little-known actress from Liverpool was about to surprise us all – and in the most entertaini­ngly brutal manner possible…

If you wanted to know how popular Jodie Comer’s victory for leading actress at the Baftas on Sunday night was, just listen to the audience’s roar after Steve Coogan said her name. It wasn’t that the other nominees – Keeley Hawes, Ruth Wilson and, tellingly, Sandra Oh – weren’t brilliant last year, it was that Comer’s turn as the shape-shifting, accent-switching, self-confessed psychopath assassin Villanelle, felt too good to go unrewarded.

“Sorry, I’m the only one who’s turned on the waterworks,” a tearful Comer said as she took to the stage, surprising many with her real accent: deliciousl­y Scouse to the core.

From there, perhaps the most soughtafte­r young actress in British TV was the picture of gratitude and humility.

Comer, now 26, thanked Waller-bridge and Jennings, as well as mentioning the BBC, cast and crew. She paid tribute to fellow Scouse actor Stephen Graham – telling him: “I owe you a pint” for recommendi­ng her to his agent when she was 16, and mentoring her since – before her parents, Donna and Jimmy, and her “gorgeous brother”, Charlie.

But most movingly of all, she dedicated the award to her grandmothe­r, who passed away during the first week of filming on Killing Eve. “She never got to see Villanelle, but she was the life and soul of everything. When she was here, she used to say: ‘You get it off me, you know’,” Comer said. “Nana Frances, you were absolutely right all along.” If Britain didn’t love her before, they certainly did now.

Jodie Marie Comer was born in Liverpool in 1993, and she technicall­y hasn’t left. When she isn’t travelling (which is a lot, given Killing Eve was filmed in Paris, Berlin, Romania, Tuscany and London), she still lives with her parents, five minutes from where Brookside was filmed, and has no intention of moving, yet. Her father has worked for Everton as a massage therapist for the past two decades, while her mother works for a transport company.

Education came from a local Catholic girls’ school – where she met her best friend, Katarina Johnson-thompson, the Team GB heptathlet­e – and her drama breakthrou­gh came at 13, when she won a competitio­n by reciting a monologue about the Hillsborou­gh disaster.

“When I introduced that, I was already crying,” Comer said, recently. “I remember my drama teacher saying, ‘You need to learn how to control it.’ I always really felt things quite deeply…”

Acting remained a Saturday pursuit, until she was recommende­d for a part in a Radio 4 play being recorded in the city. She met Graham around the same time, which led to an agent, which led to parts. Yet there was never a desire for drama school. “The thought of that wasn’t something that I wanted. I think a lot of what makes people brilliant is their quirks and their flaws,” she said.

Comer’s first screen role was in The Royal Today, a spin-off of Heartbeat, when she was 14. Two years later, she appeared as a 16-year-old schoolgirl in Holby City.

She ran every stop on the British television gauntlet: small roles in Casualty, Doctors, Silent Witness, Waterloo Road… and then, finally, a bigger part in the E4 sitcom My Mad Fat Diary came along.

“She was so young, but she radiated inner confidence without a hint of arrogance,” says Jude Liknaitzky, who, along with Roanna Benn, was executive producer on the show. “She was entirely serious about her work. We were blown away by how incredibly brave and naturally gifted she was.”

A couple of years later, Liknaitzky and Benn worked with Comer again on the BBC’S Doctor Foster, in which – at just 21 – she played “the other woman” to Suranne Jones with frightenin­g maturity.

“That character couldn’t have been more different from Jodie, and yet she nailed every nuance, every tiny twitch and undercurre­nt,” Benn says. “She is phenomenal to work with. She is such a clear, deep-thinking and committed person: fearless, lacking in vanity and magnetic all at the same time.”

It appears there’s not a bad word to be found about her. The outpouring of love for Comer in messages on social media on Sunday night – among them from Ryan Reynolds, Sheridan Smith, Gemma Chan, Johnson thompson and, most pleasingly, Everton FC’S official account – seemed entirely genuine.

Just as she does. Like the last British actress whose Bafta speech brought down the house, Olivia Colman, or her hero, Dame Julie Walters, a large part of Comer’s appeal is that she seems resolutely normal. She adores HP Sauce and posts as much on Instagram, where her biography is just a Bruce Springstee­n lyric. She refuses to lose her accent, even if it so confounds American talk show hosts (from Seth Meyers to Ellen Degeneres) that they spend most of the

She is fearless, lacking in vanity and magnetic all at the same time

time talking about it. She uses her Twitter profile not to promote her website but that of a campaign called Tyred, which fights for a restrictio­n on old coach tyres after an 18-yearold from her hometown was killed when one blew on the coach on which he was travelling back from Bestival in 2012. And whenever anybody asks her what her hobbies are, she’s honest: “I don’t have any hobbies. I like to go and drink gin with my friends, and I like to dance.” Between filming Killing Eve, which will have a third series, and her first Hollywood film, Free Guy (with Reynolds), and all the other scripts she must be being sent, there probably isn’t a lot of time for all that anyway. In character as Villanelle, Comer once wore a signet ring engraved with the words of Queen Victoria. “The important thing is not what they think of me,” it read, “but what I think of them.”

For what it’s worth, there’s no doubt what the British public thinks of Jodie Comer. Just listen to that cheer.

 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ?? Shape-shifting: Jodie Comer as Villanelle in Killing Eve
Shape-shifting: Jodie Comer as Villanelle in Killing Eve

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom