Daily Mirror (Northern Ireland)

I insisted on equal pay for my latest role... I would not have felt confident enough to do that five years ago LINE OF DUTY

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so few women who’d done that job, inevitably there will be comparison­s. “Julia is not based on anyone but Amber Rudd was a brilliant source.”

Keeley adds: “I watched a lot of videos of her on Youtube and I stumbled across an interview with her sister, who was talking about their childhood.

“It was quite moving because you don’t think about these people in that way. It’s easy to see politician­s as caricature­s, figures you love to hate. But it opened my eyes and I started to see her as a person.”

Keeley says the role of Julia was “a nice change of scenery” after filming ITV’S The Durrells, where she plays loveable mum Louisa.

“After doing eight episodes in an apron I was ready for something different,” she says. “So when this came along, with car chases and lots of action, I couldn’t wait. I love The Durrells but it’s a long shoot.”

Bodyguard was also a huge attraction because it meant working again with writer Jed Mercurio – creator of Line of Duty, which won Keeley a Bafta nomination for her role as Detective Inspector Lindsay Denton.

“I feel very safe with Jed,” she says. “I feel safe with his writing, I feel safe in terms of where his stories are heading and the characters and his research. “It is all there. Jed’s absolutely brilliant.

“He doesn’t really follow a format. You think you know where you are, and where you are with the characters or with the story and by the end of the hour, it’s all been thrown into a blender. “You know, you’ve got no idea where it’s going to go. He dabbles in comedy and various other things – he’s prepared to take risks as well. I’m happy to go along with that and I loved working with him again. I think I probably would have said yes to this having not read it. It’s one of those sort of no-brainers really.”

Set in and around Westminste­r, Bodyguard tells the fictional story of David Budd, who is a troubled war veteran now working in for the Royalty and Specialist Protection Branch of London’s Metropolit­an Police Service.

He is assigned to work with Home Secretary Montague and, while she continues to speak about military action, he is torn between his duty protecting her and his beliefs.

“Without giving anything away, it does get into fifth gear by episode two,” says Keeley.

“Julia is a very powerful woman, she’s very ambitious, she wants to be Prime Minister. She’s makes no bones about it. The thing I liked about her, she’s very dry. When I first read it, it made me laugh much more than I expected to. She’s not really terribly likeable, but she’s a grower.”

Chatting in her West London home, Keeley, who, as well as 18-year-old Myles, has a daughter Maggie, 13, and son Ralph, 11, with Ripper Street star Matthew, insists she did not swot up that much on politics for the new role.

“I’ve tried to steer clear of the news,” she says. “It’s getting quite depressing if nothing else. I keep up with it, but I’m not really a very political animal. “I don’t envy what the politician­s are going through. You’re never going to keep everybody happy all the time. It can’tbe easy.”

Bodyguard starts with two parts shown over the Bank Holiday weekend on Sunday and Monday at 9pm on BBC1.

 ??  ?? As top politician with co-star Richard Madden In stark contrast, she plays mum Louisa
As top politician with co-star Richard Madden In stark contrast, she plays mum Louisa
 ??  ??
 ??  ?? Bafta-nominated for her role as DI Denton
Bafta-nominated for her role as DI Denton
 ??  ?? HUBBY Actor Matthew Macfayden
HUBBY Actor Matthew Macfayden

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