The Sunday Post (Dundee)

Brian’s been a hero of mine for a long time. Working with him was fantastic

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friends. She adapted the novel and had been working on it for years, raising the money and producing it. It’s a remarkable achievemen­t on her part and it was a no- brainer when she asked me to come on- board,” he said.

“The film’s been getting good reviews and it’s good for Caroline – and also from the point of view of women in the medium, because they are blossoming and running it and doing a better job than men at times.”

While some of The Bay Of Silence was filmed in Scotland, Brian’s scenes were shot in London. But he was back in Scotland last week to visit family.

“I just returned from Scotland last weekend. My big sister, Betty, who was more like my mum when I was wee – she’s 16 years older than me – had been really not well at Christmas and I was very worried,” he said.

“She turned 90 in April, which I had to miss during lockdown. She still lived in a house in Dundee and although I bought her a chairlift we were still concerned because she was on her own. So her daughter, my niece, Jan, she’s a medical officer in Edinburgh and did a wonderful job getting her into Dalweem care home in Aberfeldy.

“The transforma­tion in my sister since Christmas is phenomenal. She’s funny, she’s walking with a frame, and she’s looking better than she has for a couple of years. It’s fantastic, and it’s down to the work of the most dedicated folk who have been looking after her.”

His performanc­e as Dracula gave viewers nightmares, but Claes Bang says that was nothing compared to the fear he felt while working in Edinburgh.

The Danish actor visited the capital three years ago to take part in the Edinburgh Children’s Festival. “I was asked to do a one-man show, The Evil, which I’ve been performing since 2002,” explained 53-year-old Claes.

“Then I found out a film I was in, The Square, was nominated for the Palme d’or at Cannes and the ceremony, which we had to attend, was the day before my Edinburgh shows.

“The festival organisers moved one of the performanc­es so I could attend, but it meant I had to do the show three times in the one day. I’d never done three shows in a day in my life before and when I woke up that morning, I didn’t know how I was going to get through it.

“The monologue is 75 minutes, nothing on stage but me and the story. I will never, ever agree to do that again in a million years – I start sweating now just thinking about it!”

Claes shot scenes for The Bay Of Silence further down the east coast in Eyemouth and in Howick, Northumber­land.

The haunting thriller sees Claes play a loving husband who has to uncover the disturbing truth about his family when his wife and children suddenly disappear. And he says the typically unseasonal Scottish weather helped with the unsettling nature of the

plot. “We

Claes Bang as Dracula were filming in July and August, but the weather was quite stormy and rainy, it had a rough feel to it, and that went well with what was going on in the story,” he said.

Working with Brian Cox and former Bond girl Olga Kurylenko was another reason Claes signed on to the project. “Getting to work with those two was amazing. Brian has been a hero of mine for a very long time and he was one of the things that drew me to the role. Working with him was as fantastic as I thought it would be. We really dug down into our scenes together and it was like having a really cool play mate. I went home from work with

Claes and Olga in a scene from The Bay Of Silence more energy and more invigorate­d than when I went in.”

Claes also enjoyed working with Brian on lockdown project Little Room. It was co-written and directed by Dolly Wells, who starred opposite Claes in Dracula as Sister Agatha Van Helsing. “One of the best collaborat­ions I’ve ever had with another actor was with Dolly in Dracula. I thought the best thing about the show was turning Van Helsing into a woman.”

But Claes wasn’t convinced about starring as Dracula. “I was sceptical at first but when I heard it was Sherlock’s Mark Gatiss and Steven Moffat who had written it, I thought it would be worth a read. It was a new take on Dracula.”

funny. He’s a marvellous actor. He’s the sweetest guy. I adore him

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