Daily Record

NESBITTI’M ALUCKYMAN

Television star admits he knows he’s fortunate but insists he loves the pressure that comes with being the lead star of his own series about a superhero and says show ensures he keeps himself healthy

- SUSAN GRIFFIN reporters@dailyrecor­d.co.uk

ACTOR James Nesbitt is a busy man – and he wouldn’t have it any other way.

He finished The Secret, about double-murderer Colin Howell, before Christmas 2015. “Then I worked straight from Cold Feet to Lucky Man,” said Nesbitt, 52.

“I had such a lovely time but when you come back, you’re straight into it again. I start filming Cold Feet on Monday.”

There was much hype ahead of the Cold Feet crew reuniting after 13 years – and last year’s series didn’t let anyone down.

Nesbitt said: “It went very well and now we’ve got to do it all over again, which is a responsibi­lity.”

Not only did the reunion allow fans of the original series to reflect on their own passing years – “Oh yeah, I think Cold Feet held up a lot of mirrors to a lot of people,” Nesbitt nodded in agreement.

It also introduced the gang to a new audience.

Nesbitt admitted: “I, in my arrogance, thought everyone had seen the first five series but quite a lot of people hadn’t.

“They came to it new, loved it, embraced those characters and really got it, so that’s encouragin­g,” added the actor, who considers himself “lucky” that Cold Feet is “such an ensemble piece”.

It means he can enjoy time off and regularly return home to London from the Manchester set to see his daughters (he and their mum, Sonia, divorced last year after 22 years of marriage).

Stan Lee’s Lucky Man, which returned to Sky1 on February 24 for a second run, is filmed in the capital but Nesbitt shoulders the responsibi­lity of playing the leading man.

“It really is, at the risk of sounding arrogant, my show,” he said, noting that the pressure of playing a title character isn’t often talked about.

“There should be a pressure because often the buck stops with you.”

In the show, created by comic book icon Stan Lee, Nesbitt plays DI Harry Clayton, “a contempora­ry superhero” who’s been given a bracelet that brings him great luck.

There’s plenty of action, which, Nesbitt revealed: “It gives you an excuse to keep fit.

“But as I am a man of a certain age, you do feel a bit stiffer in the morning, a wee bit creaky but I love that and the fitter you are of body, the fitter you are also of mind.

“I’ve always been like that because I enjoy the good things in life, and so to enjoy the good things in life, you’ve got to do the difficult things in life as well.”

Aside from working with a personal trainer, Nesbitt has a mini gym in his trailer.

He added: “It becomes your home for six months, so you want to be comfortabl­e. I’ve got a very nice bed too, which I use a lot.” He feels “blessed”, a term he uses frequently, by his success.

Nesbitt said: “The work is full-on but it’s something I always wanted to do. And the fact I still enjoy it and I am challenged by it is a blessing. So the balance is pretty good – I think.”

In the new series, Harry is “clearly trying to walk the right path”.

“Harry didn’t ask for this bracelet,” said Nesbitt. “He’s trying not to use it because he’s seen the price and that for every good bit of luck, something bad can happen to those he loves. Or that’s what he’s always been led to believe.

“When we find him, he’s trying to be the better man, but of course, all that’s thrown into disarray when Isabella [played by Thekla Reuten] arrives.”

Asked how he’d feel meeting a femme-fatale like Isabella in real life, Nesbitt said: “I’d be terrified but I’ve got three older sisters, I’ve grown up with them. My mother had three sisters, my granny had three sisters, so I’ve grown up loving but being intimidate­d by women as well.”

Nesbitt admits the superhero genre isn’t one he was “really that interested in” before embarking on this project.

He said: “It just didn’t play a part in my life but now I’ve embraced it so much, I love it. I think the escapism of

I did spend time on my own and I think that can fuel one’s imaginatio­n JAMES NESBITT

the genre is important to people in an complicate­d, everchangi­ng world.

“I think they need that. What’s important about Harry Clayton is that he is flawed. He’s quite anti-heroic in a sense. He’s an addict, he walks a very fine line in terms of the law. He’s lost his wife and his family, he sometimes makes decisions that are questionab­le but he errs ultimately on the side of right.”

Nesbitt could relate to the character straightaw­ay.

He said: “Harry and I are 52 and we’ve probably seen a lot, been involved in a lot and had our ups and downs, but we’re still trying to fight for the right things. So yes, I recognise a lot in him.”

Born and raised in Ballymena, County Antrim, Nesbitt recalls it being “hard to entertain the notion of being an actor, because it didn’t seem like a real job”.

Though not shy as a child, he said: “I was quite isolated.

“I wasn’t lonely by any stretch of the imaginatio­n but I did spend time on my own and I think that can fuel one’s imaginatio­n.”

Being Northern Irish “is everything”, and he regularly returns home.

Nesbitt said: “My three best mates are there. My dad’s there. Two of my sisters are there. I have a company called G&H Film and Television Services, who do all the facilities for Game of Thrones. I’ve got a presence there, and have just bought a property by the sea.”

His pals often take the mick out of their friend’s career.

“They think it’s ridiculous. They don’t think it’s a real job at all,” he laughed. “But they’ve done rather well from it.

“They looked out for me when I was at drama school and impoverish­ed, and now we’ve got to have some fun perks from it. I’ve been very, very lucky. I’m a lucky man.” ● Stan Lee’s Lucky Man continues on Sky1 on Fridays

 ??  ?? WINNING RETURN James with the cast of Cold Feet
WINNING RETURN James with the cast of Cold Feet
 ??  ?? ON THE CASE Nesbitt in Lucky Man, above, and in ITV’s The Secret, right CALL OF DUTY Nesbitt as DI Harry Clayton in Sky1 series Lucky Man where he becomes a superhero
ON THE CASE Nesbitt in Lucky Man, above, and in ITV’s The Secret, right CALL OF DUTY Nesbitt as DI Harry Clayton in Sky1 series Lucky Man where he becomes a superhero

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