The Irish Mail on Sunday

Sue Johnston cast as Sean Bean’s mother – 30 years after she played his lover. Isn’t that ageism?

- By Katie Hind

THE last time they appeared on screen together, Sue Johnston and Sean Bean were lovers.

Now, 30 years on, they have been cast as mother and son – prompting the actress to hit out at the sexism facing older women in showbusine­ss.

‘That’s what happens to actresses in the theatre or TV business,’ she complained. ‘Men stay the same and women get to be mothers.’

The pair first acted together in a 1992 episode of Inspector Morse, in which Bean played a convicted fraudster and Johnston was his wife.

But while in the forthcomin­g BBC1 drama Time, Bean, 61, again plays a jailbird, this time 77-year-old Johnston is his mother.

The actress, best known for starring in Brookside and The Royle Family, says the news is typical of how actresses must age into older roles, while their male co-stars can remain in similar parts.

In a candid interview with the Soap From The Box podcast, Johnston said: ‘I’ve just done this new drama called Time. It’s a Jimmy McGovern prison drama, just brilliant, three-parter, as all Jimmy’s are, and it’s with Sean Bean, among others, and Stephen Graham.

‘I play Sean Bean’s mother. Now, the last time I worked with Sean in Inspector Morse, I was his lover and now I’m his mother. And that’s what happens to actresses.’

Her accusation­s of sexism and ageism are likely to prompt unease at BBC Studios, the BBC’s commercial

‘Men stay the same and women become mothers’

production company, which made the series.

In it, former Sharpe star Bean portrays a teacher whose life is destroyed when he accidental­ly kills a man and is so consumed with guilt that he welcomes his four-year prison sentence. Johnston is understood to have a large role in the series, which has just completed filming in her home city of Liverpool. Line Of Duty’s Stephen Graham also stars on the show, as prison officer Eric Reid.

Johnston isn’t the only actress to find herself playing her former lover’s mother.

Oscar winner Sally Field played Tom Hanks’s love interest in the 1988 comedy movie Punchline and, just six years later, appeared as his mother in Forrest Gump – even though she is only 10 years older than him.

Such age discrimina­tion is not rare in Hollywood. Nicole Kidman will play the mother of Jason Mamoa’s character Arthur Curry in the forthcomin­g Aquaman 2 movie, even though 53-year-old Kidman is only 12 years older than her male co-star. And on the 2004 film Alexander, Angelina Jolie

played Colin Farrell’s mother, despite being just one year his senior. Nor is it a new phenomenon: in the 1959 Alfred Hitchcock film North By Northwest, Cary Grant was actually 10 months older than

Jessie Royce Landis, the actress who played his mother.

New BBC director-general Tim Davie this week unveiled his new ‘critical’ diversity drive, with targets to improve the percentage­s of

under-represente­d groups on and off screen. When he was appointed to his role last September, Davie criticised the ‘obsession with youth’ in broadcasti­ng, but was soon drawn into an ageism storm after Sue Barker was dumped as the host of Question Of Sport at the age of 64.

The BBC said: ‘Sue Johnston and David Calder, who are brilliant as Sean’s parents in Time, were authentica­lly and appropriat­ely cast for these roles, as audiences will see when the drama airs.’

AND SHE’S NOT THE FIRST TO END UP AS HER SCREEN LOVER’S MOTHER!

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 ??  ?? CHANGING ROLES: Sean Bean with Sue Johnston in Morse, left, and Stephen Graham in Time, above. Right: Sue now complains of sexism and ageism in casting
CHANGING ROLES: Sean Bean with Sue Johnston in Morse, left, and Stephen Graham in Time, above. Right: Sue now complains of sexism and ageism in casting
 ??  ?? Sally Field with Tom Hanks in 1988’s Punchline – and six years later as his mum in Forrest Gump
Sally Field with Tom Hanks in 1988’s Punchline – and six years later as his mum in Forrest Gump

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