The Korea Times

British actress Kate Winslet leaves her comfort zone in new HBO series ‘The Regime’

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Kate Winslet is running things — on and off the set of her new TV show, “The Regime.”

In the upcoming HBO show, she plays Elena Vernham — also known as “The Chancellor,” the ruler of a fictional country in Europe, possibly near Poland. Winslet, who is also an executive producer on the show, says she’s never been offered a character like this “in her life.”

“I’ve never read a script like this before. I’ve never laughed so much at the material that was in front of me, as we did every single day, and I really just felt this was an exciting, challengin­g, terrifying opportunit­y for me to step totally out of my comfort zone,” she says.

As the show’s worshiped leader, she came face to face with many huge artworks of herself. “Initially I thought to myself, oh God, that’s so brilliant. I’ve got to have one. And then I got so sick of looking at them that towards the end I just wanted to burn them all,” Winslet siad.

Sometimes, the production team would neglect to warn her of a large, sequined image of her face on set.

“Funnily enough I don’t like looking at me. It’s not a comfortabl­e place to be. So yes, there was a, there was a lot of being confronted with that, this heightened version of myself,” she says. “I just had to kind of roll with it.”

That’s one of the many major difference­s between the star and the dictator — who loves to be loved by her people, addressing them regularly and also, occasional­ly, serenading them with the song “Santa Baby.”

Among her loyal subjects: Guillaume Gallienne, as her husband Nicholas; Andrea Riseboroug­h, who runs the palace, and Danny Webb as one of her many ministers, subservien­t to her bizarre pronouncem­ents.

Things in the country are running smoothly — well, as smoothly as they can while Elena deals with her latest hypochondr­ia, paranoia and abandonmen­t issues. Then she hires a soldier, played by Matthias Schoenaert­s, in her fight against tiny deadly spores — and begins a relationsh­ip with repercussi­ons that shake the regime, and the country, to its core, moving her battles to a much larger scale.

The dark comedy is billed as a twisted love story about two people who should never have fallen in love, which is “exactly why everybody should watch it,” says Schoenaert­s.

“The world is full of people that should have never met,” he says.

Off screen, the results were less damaging with lots of laughter on set, Schoenaert­s recalls: “It gives us some relief because, obviously, sometimes we really have to go to dark places.”

And it was much less of a dictatorsh­ip than on screen. “She leads by example,” Schoenaert­s says of Winslet. “She’s always on time, always prepared, always kind, generous, open and extremely sharp. And she’s a lot of fun to work with.”

“The Regime” directors Stephen Frears and Jessica Hobbs both agree that a Winslet set is more like a welcoming theater company.

 ?? UPI-Yonhap ?? Kate Winslet
UPI-Yonhap Kate Winslet

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