Edinburgh Evening News

‘It’s a warren of little nooks, and it’s a handsome town’

Kerry Godliman talks about starring as a private detective in seaside drama Whitstable Pearl, which airs on March 14 at 9pm on Drama and UKTV Play

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British seaside towns have a reputation for having an “underbelly”, says Kerry Godliman, making them the perfect locations for gritty crime dramas.

Godliman stars as Pearl Nolan, a restaurant owner and private detective, in Whitstable Pearl, a detective drama based on English author Julie Wassmer’s books.

The first scene of the series sets the tone for things to come, as Godliman’s character pulls a dead body out of the sea and on to a fishing boat. Godliman, 50, who has also appeared in Derek and After Life, says the Kent town of Whitstable is the perfect location for this kind of drama.

Seaside towns have a reputation, she says. “You know there’s an underbelly to seaside towns. There’s import and export [dealings] that are not always above board.”

“It’s got loads of little alleys, so it’s really good for people hiding and having secrets – there are lots of really good shots of us running down alleys and emerging on beaches, or emerging in boat yards,” she says. “It’s a warren of very old little nooks, and it’s a handsome town.”

But Godliman won’t be giving up comedy any time soon, adding: “I would like to keep that balance. It’s something I didn’t ever predict I’d have – both. I always thought I’d have to choose one or the other. I would like to keep that going if I can, because I enjoy having the freedom of two arenas.”

But Whitstable is slightly unusual, with Godliman continuing: “I associate British seaside towns with end-ofthe-pier arcades and Ferris wheels and things like that, but Whitstable isn’t really that sort of town. It’s more industrial than that.

“It’s got a very nice working harbour, it’s got the oyster farms, it’s got a concrete factory or something pretty ugly and industrial-looking right down on the front. It isn’t a picture postcard summer town – there’s no fair or arcades, it’s not like that. It’s got a different sort of vibe.”

In the six-part first series, Pearl is a “local woman who’s lived all her life in Whitstable and is a passionate community member”, Godliman explains. “She’s a single mum and she runs a seafood restaurant, but she’s had a lifelong desire to be a private investigat­or. Now at this time in her life, her son’s about to leave home, she is having a go at that as a career, as a new chapter in her life.”

“I’ve always done both,” she says of her relationsh­ip with comedy and drama. “When I started doing stand-up, it was all comedy – then, over the last few years, I’ve had an opportunit­y to do more drama and I have really enjoyed it.”

Godliman has performed stand-up throughout her career and appeared in comedy game shows like Taskmaster and Mock The Week, but Whitstable Pearl gave her the chance to show off her dramatic chops.

Plus, she says there’s plenty in the show that viewers might find relatable, like Pearl’s complicate­d relationsh­ip with Mike McGuire, played by The Musketeers actor Howard Charles, who comes into town from a big city. “There’s a bit of hostility between them initially, but there’s an undoubted attraction that grows through the show – and I think she’s got mixed feelings about that,” Godliman says.

She calls this quite a “luxurious” experience, as “we had the beach to ourselves, we had the high street to ourselves”. Godliman appreciate­d that even more after returning to film the second season, which was “more challengin­g” because Whitstable was “back open for business” and a lot busier.

All is not as it might seem with Pearl, who’s got “a few dark secrets in her past that come out through the series”, Godliman says.

Then there’s the relationsh­ip between Pearl and her mother Dolly, played by Frances Barber, who works with her at the restaurant. “Her mum is brilliant – vital and vivid and funny. But she’s also a bit of a pain, because she’s quite nosy, she’s quite controllin­g, she’s very opinionate­d,” Godliman adds.

Pearl “can’t help herself being attracted to him – but she’s also jealous of him, because he’s got her dream job. He’s a legitimate police detective, and she’s a private detective”.

The first season of Whitstable Pearl came out in 2021 on subscripti­on streaming platform Acorn TV, and it is now getting its first linear broadcast on UKTV. “I’m really chuffed about it, because I know not everyone’s got Acorn – so it’s an opportunit­y for more people to watch it,” Godliman notes. “I think it’s doing all right abroad, but less people are familiar with it in this country – which is a slight shame, because obviously it’s set in this country.”

While the show’s content might be dark, Godliman says filming – which happened in the middle of the pandemic – was particular­ly pleasant. “I love Whitstable – I didn’t know it as well as I do now, but I had visited. It’s a really lovely little town and we had it practicall­y to ourselves, because we were still under some of the restrictio­ns. So even though we were allowed to shoot, restaurant­s and pubs and everything weren’t open.”

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