The Sunday Post (Inverness)

My last part was spotting a still felt more plau sible than

Star of small-screen political drama reveals how he dropped

- By Paul English news@sundaypost.com

The chances of anything coming from Mars were a million to one, they said.

But those might still be better odds than the chances of a Scottish Conservati­ve Prime Minister in Number 10.

If you think Robert Carlyle’s most recent TV role as the scientist who discovered Martians launching an attack on Earth in last year’s BBC adaptation of HG Wells’s sci-fi novel War of the Worlds was fanciful, then wait until you see his latest part.

The Glasgow-born star of Trainspott­ing, The Full Monty and Hamish Macbeth is playing something many would consider even more far-fetched than aliens on the heath – a Scottish Conservati­ve PM, in Cobra, a new drama on Sky.

The role was a stretch for the working-class actor and one he decided he needed to shed his native accent for. Acknowledg­ing that Glasgow Tories were as likely as Scotch mist in Downing Street, the 58-year-old revealed he honed in on a specific Scottish accent. From his home in Vancouver, Carlyle said: “I thought it was interestin­g to play him as Scottish, but once I decided to do it I realised I couldn’t ever play this guy with a Glasgow accent, because there’s just no way it would happen.

“So I had to try to find something else, and thought this is why that guy emanated from.

“I remember that Scottish rugby player voice...borders, Jedburgh. You know how they only sound sort of vaguely Scottish? A bit of Scottish tone coming through, but with that Oxbridge education? Well, this is what this guy’s background is.”

He added: “It’s interestin­g to talk to another Scot about this, because we get it. My English mates don’t understand it.”

Cobra sees Carlyle play PM Robert Sutherland opposite Victoria Hamilton as his Chief of

Staff Anna Marshall and Lucy Cohu as his wife.

The drama centres around the devastatin­g fallout from a solar flare and the government’s response. Events are complicate­d further by a crisis in the Prime Minister’s personal life.

Carlyle explained: “There’s a solar storm and the brunt of it hits the UK. It wipes out all the different IT systems and satellites and huge swathes of the country go into blackout.

“The government of the day, led by myself, are the ones who have to cope with this.

“In tandem with that, it concentrat­es on three or four other characters and their life stories. My character’s daughter has just graduated, goes to a party and her pal ends up in a coma with fentanyl poisoning, so you can imagine the press reaction around that.

“So he’s trying to cope with this solar storm, this massive chaos, but also chaos in his personal life. There’s a real human element to it which is going to make it really interestin­g to watch, I think.”

Carlyle admits that the script for Cobra – named after the government’s emergency response committee which, in turn, is named after Cabinet Office Briefing Rooms – afforded him a degree of empathy with the previous incumbent of Downing Street, especially as the country deals with protracted periods of political turbulence.

He said: “The big thing, of course, was looking at them as people. I remember seeing Theresa May going back and forth to Brussels. She just looked knackered – her voice was gone, she looked like a skeleton of a person, and from one human being to another you cannot help but feel for a person going through something like that.

“I was actually doing Cobra at that time, watching this unravel.”

Of December’s General Election result, he said: “Being away in Vancouver watching this thing unfold has been interestin­g. If you’re in the middle of it in Britain you have an opinion on everything, but when you’re away you have less of an opinion to some extent – in a sense you just see it as disaster.

“The part is a great challenge for me. I’ve been fortunate in my career to have moved around a bit and to have had different parts to play. This is not something I thought I would be offered.”

The actor has lived in Canada with his wife, Anastasia Shirley, and teenage children Adin, Harvey and Pearce Joseph since landing the part of Rumplestil­tskin in American telly hit Once Upon A Time, which sent his profile soaring across The Pond. Yet, for all its big

I was doing Cobra while Brexit was unravellin­g. Theresa May was going back and forth to Brussels. She

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