The Journal

The interview was the catalyst to holding people with that level of status to account

RACHAEL DAVIS chats to Gillian Anderson, Billie Piper and Rufus Sewell, stars of Netflix’s Scoop, the story of Prince Andrew’s Newsnight interview

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EMILY MAITLIS’ television interview with Prince Andrew in November 2019 had a seismic impact.

The near-hour-long conversati­on for Newsnight – held in the wake of the death of convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein – was the catalyst for the downfall of the Duke of York, who faced allegation­s of sexual assault of a minor through his associatio­n with Epstein and his partner, Ghislaine Maxwell, who has since been convicted of child sex traffickin­g.

Shortly after the interview, which was widely perceived as a “car crash”, Buckingham Palace announced that Prince Andrew was to suspend his public duties “for the foreseeabl­e future”.

In 2022, Virginia Giuffre, née Roberts, brought a civil sexual assault case against the Prince in the US, alleging she was forced to have sex with Andrew at the age of 17 after being trafficked by Epstein. The case was settled out of court. Prince Andrew made no admission of liability and has always vehemently denied the allegation­s.

What was particular­ly impressive about the broadcast is that the BBC secured the Duke in the first place, convincing the Buckingham Palace establishm­ent to give Emily the opportunit­y to grill the royal.

Behind Emily’s line of questionin­g was an entire team of Newsnight producers – including Sam McAlister, the woman who did the ground work in securing the interview.

In new Netflix film Scoop, we get a look at the story behind the story, with Billie Piper starring as McAlister, Gillian Anderson as Maitlis, and Rufus Sewell as Prince Andrew.

“I think the interview did so much. I think it was the catalyst to so many things that happened beyond it that are really, really important, and holding people with that level of status to account... they have to be accountabl­e,” says Doctor Who and I Hate Suzie star Billie, 41.

“It’s very rare that you would get that level of access to someone like that.

“Seeing the women who brought that interview to our screens and their story, their quest to get it done, sort of ping-ponging between the BBC and the Royal Family, how hard that is, how many red lines there were, how male it was, often – they need this day in the sun, because what they did was truly remarkable. And, you know, a big part of history.” Billie says that she found Sam McAlister – with whom she collaborat­ed closely in preparatio­n to portray her in the film – to be an inspiratio­nal figure.

“She’s fascinatin­g, really,” the actress says.

“I wish I actually felt like her every day.

“She’s so positive as well – it’s such a dog-eat-dog world, that there’s a sort of steeliness to a lot of those people in that industry. But she’s unlike that, she’s warm, she just has a totally different approach.

“And it obviously works, because she got the interview... I don’t know I’ll ever see an interview like that again.”

While Scoop traces the backstory of securing the sit-down, it also features a recreation of the conversati­on, with Gillian Anderson’s Maitlis and Rufus Sewell’s Andrew coming face-to-face.

For Rufus, 56, who also stars in Netflix’s The Diplomat, preparatio­n involved attempting to get under Prince Andrew’s skin, trying to work out why he said the things he did and the thoughts behind his approach to the interview.

“Me and Gillian didn’t work together on it, we worked separately, which I think was the right way to do it,” he says.

“And I watched the interview obsessivel­y. Maybe that’s too big a word, (but) I watched it a lot.

“I would just basically try, at first, to sound like him, to mimic, but more than anything, to try to understand not just what he was thinking when he was speaking, but all of the hesitation­s, all of the body language, to find something that might be the root of that.

“I had an instinct when I first watched it, but actually [I was] trying to break it down, so that I could be seeing it in that moment, from his perspectiv­e, without judgment.”

Gillian, 55, who is known for roles in The X Files, Sex Education and The Crown, studied Maitlis’s mannerisms to perfect the recreation of the interview.

“I’ve been a big fan for a while, so it was a joy to step into her shoes,” she says of playing the journalist, adding that preparing for the interview scene involved repeatedly watching and listening to the footage.

“The interview itself is about 50 minutes long. Our version of it is about 10 minutes long, so it was asking somebody to turn the audio element of it into a repeated mp3, and also the visual into a smaller video file, and just basically watching and listening on a loop,” she explains.

“Paying attention to mannerisms, when she looked up... it was a drag at one point when I saw the actual film, because of how many times she looks down at her notes, it looks like I might be looking at my lines!”

Outside of the interview scene, we also get a glimpse into moments where Prince Andrew is alone. The film – which is directed by The Crown director Philip Martin – includes a striking scene where the Prince watches the Newsnight interview air, sitting on his bed laden with teddy bears, and we begin to wonder what was going through his head as he watched the footage back. “It’s this question of sympathy versus empathy, and empathy is very interestin­g,” says Rufus.

“Like the way a camera works as a grayscale – it looks at either a bright scene or a black scene, and it sees grey. That’s a good way of getting all the detail, and you try to do that.

“To be able to really try to see something from someone’s perspectiv­e, what they would be thinking, what the truth they’re telling themselves about that moment [is], their reasons for being the way they are, so that you can represent them fully – not make them look good, not make them look bad, but just try to be truthful.

“It’s very tempting sometimes to slant it one way or another. Because you can be criticised for going too far in either direction, especially playing someone like this.”

I’ve been a big fan for a while, so it was a joy to step into her shoes. Gillian Anderson, right, on playing journalist Emily Maitlis, with whom she’s pictured, above

■ Scoop is on Netflix now

 ?? ?? ‘CAR CRASH’: Rufus Sewell and Gillian Anderson recreate the BBC Newsnight interview between Prince Andrew and Emily Maitlis
‘CAR CRASH’: Rufus Sewell and Gillian Anderson recreate the BBC Newsnight interview between Prince Andrew and Emily Maitlis
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 ?? ?? Inspiratio­nal: Billie Piper plays Sam McAlister
Inspiratio­nal: Billie Piper plays Sam McAlister
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 ?? ?? Under the skin: Rufus Sewell as Prince Andrew
Under the skin: Rufus Sewell as Prince Andrew

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