Gulf News

Gina suits up for ‘Bodyguard’

The British actress stars as a police commander in charge of counter-terrorism in the new thriller

- By Chris Harvey

Gina McKee enjoys a food metaphor. We’ve been talking about her performanc­e in Paul Thomas Anderson’s sublime Phantom

Thread, alongside Daniel Day-Lewis in his final acting role. The experience was “bitterswee­t”, she says. It was a small part and she was hungry for more. It was like “having a starter from the most fantastic chef. You’re desperate to have the main course.”

Now we’re chatting about her part in BBC One’s Bodyguard, the new six-part thriller from Jed Mercurio. McKee was “excited about working with Jed again” — she was in the first series of his police corruption drama, Line

of Duty. After its ratings nudged six million during series three, it was moved from BBC Two to BBC One, and its 2017 finale topped 10 million viewers. Did McKee know at the time what a phenomenon it would be? “I can rarely tell,” she says. “If you go to the market and get some fantastic ingredient­s and a really good recipe, in theory it should be good, but your pie might not quite turn out the way you think...” Even with the best ingredient­s, she says, “I think, ‘OK, let’s just see how it bakes in the oven’.”

We’re at BBC headquarte­rs in central London. McKee, 54, has just come from a wig-fitting session for a new role and is fretting that her hair looks like it’s recently been plastered to her head with cling film, which it has. She’s in trousers and flat shoes, a white shirt.

In Bodyguard, she plays a police commander in charge of counter-terrorism at a time of heightened threat, alongside Keeley Hawes as the home secretary and former Game of Thrones star Richard Madden as Hawes’ police protection officer.

McKee is in awe of Mercurio’s “intriguing plotline that delivers constantly with twists and turns”. “I don’t think there are that many people who have the strength of talent to do that,” she says.

This is the first time she has played a cop. “I spent ages with one of the police advisers, asking him loads of questions, then you start to learn what it would be like to be in the police service at that level. I read as much as I could.”

The milieu wasn’t completely unfamiliar: her brother was in the Metropolit­an Police, although he has retired. She’s famously reticent about her personal life. “I think that if you can handle [being open about your life] and the people who are close to you can handle it, if you have that sort of personalit­y, I admire that,” she says. “I don’t, and some of the people around me are not interested in that.”

She was raised in Co Durham, in a village close to Easington Colliery, where her father was a miner. The family lived near a dean — a small wooded valley. “I was always in the wood, playing, making camps.”

She loved art, too, and would sit for hours drawing. “I would never say I was shy, but I was quiet,”

McKee says. The actress paid her dues in bit parts throughout the 80s and early 90s. It was hard to get a job in regional theatre without having been to drama school, but she appeared in Auf Wiedersehe­n, Pet, Inspector Morse

and Minder.

Next up is The Rook, a US adaptation of Twilight author Stephenie Meyer’s supernatur­al spy novel, and another big project she can’t talk about. She’s also excited about a role in a play that she read a while ago that “we’re trying to figure out how we can do. If it does come off, it’ll be 2019.”

Between now and then, we can expect her cool to be tested in Bodyguard, when some serious heat is put on McKee’s Commander Anne Sampson. This pie is going to be piping hot. — The Telegraph Group Limited, London 2018

 ?? Photos courtesy of Netflix ?? A still from ‘Bodyguard’. Bodyguard streams on Netflix from today.
Photos courtesy of Netflix A still from ‘Bodyguard’. Bodyguard streams on Netflix from today.

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