Evening Standard

Sophie’s world

Her dazzling performanc­e as Cleopatra saw Sophie Okonedo crowned Best Actress at the Evening Standard Theatre Awards. She tells Nick Curtis she’s glad to be back on the stage

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RAUCOUS applause and cheers shook the Theatre Royal Drur y Lane on Sunday night when Sophie Okonedo and Ralph Fiennes won Best Actress and Best Actor at the Evening Standard Theatre Awards for their revelatory performanc­es in Antony and Cleopatra.

“It’s completely thrilling because this is one of my favourite jobs ever,” says Okonedo, grinning, when we speak. “To get an award for something you are having a ball doing is a real buzz.”

The production comes back into the National’s repertory this week after a hiatus, during which “me and Ralph had been texting each other saying we feel quite lost not doing the play, because it has been so meaningful for us, such an event. We’ve become mates, which is not always necessary [with co-stars]. But Ralph is a special person, a real artist.” The same could be said of Okonedo.

It’s only the second time in the awards’ 64-year history that male and female leads in the same show have taken the two top honours — it last happened with the National theatre’s 1988 production of Cat on a Hot Tin Roof starring Lindsay Duncan and Ian Charleson — which is testament to the lucidity of Simon Godwin’s production, and Okonedo’s and Fiennes’s chemistry.

The Times critic Sam Marlowe praised “fine performanc­es, rich in detail, full of passion’s tremulous desire, yet movingly tempered with the rue of middle age”. The Evening Standard’s Henry Hitchings, said: “Okonedo revels in Cleopatra’s contradict­ory nature, capturing her wit and vanity, her disarming mix of regal pride and playful c h a r m… h e r p a r a d ox i c a l q u a l i t y dazzling all around her.”

While Fiennes has been a fixture of the London stage in recent years (he also won the Evening Standard’s Best Actor prize in 2016), winning the Natasha Richardson Award for Best Actress, in partnershi­p with Christian Louboutin, was a welcome return for 50-year-old Okonedo.

The daughter of a Jewish Pilates teacher and a Nigerian civil servant who left when she was five and later died, she grew up on Wembley’s rough Chalkhill Estate, left school at 16 and began her career with the Royal Court’s young writers’ and actors’ groups.

She went to Rada on a scholarshi­p and since graduating has mixed stage work with film (an Oscar-nominated performanc­e in Hotel Rwanda in 2004, a Baftanomin­ated lead role in Mrs Mandela in 2010) and TV (The Slap, Undercover, and a ground-breaking Queen Margaret in The Hollow Crown).

But she took a break from the stage after Haunted Child at the Royal Court in 2011, concentrat­ing on screen work and at some point — she is deliberate­ly vague — acquiring a husband, Jamie, and two stepchildr­en and moving to East Sussex. Okonedo also has an adult daughter, Aoife, from a previous relationsh­ip.

Then, in 2014, she was cast opposite Denzel Washington in the Broadway revival of Lorraine Hansbury’s A Raisin in the Sun, about a disadvanta­ged black family trying to better themselves in 1950s Washington, and won a Tony Award. Okonedo calls the play “so beautiful, almost perfect” and says of her co-star “bloody hell, he is an amazing theatre actor”. They didn’t become mates, but he calls her when he’s in London.

This was followed almost immediatel­y by Arthur Miller’s The Crucible with Ben Whishaw (who is one of her closest friends) and Saoirse Ronan, for directorof-the-moment the Belgian Ivo van Hove, also on Broadway. This became the hottest ticket in town and saw her nominated for a second Tony, but she found it “knackering”.

“There is no light in the play, no hope. So you feel a bit bashed round the head by the end of the night. I can do that for five weeks, but that play ran for six months, and I was really homesick too. It was at a time when I had played a lot of sad parts and I think I am moving on from that now. If I am doing eight shows a week, I want it to have some funny bits.”

Her choice of l i g h t re l i e f , whi c h brought her back to London, was last year’s West End revival of Edward Albee’s The Goat, or Who is Sylvia, playing the wife of a man (Damian Lewis) who leaves her for the titular animal.

“I thought: ‘Wow, let’s have a go’,” she says. “It was the perfect antidote to The Crucible — lively, punchy and short.”

When Simon Godwin,whom she knew from Royal Court workshops, came calling about Cleopatra, she didn’t take long to say yes. Her first Shakespear­e job was playing Cressida for Trevor Nunn at the National in 1991, and she recalls cycling from her flat in Muswell Hill over Waterloo Bridge, watching Denys Lasdun’s Brutalist building looming up before her and feeling: “This is it: I’ve arrived.”

She says: “I am rather partial to Shakespear­e, though I haven’t done loads. But when it’s done right, there’s nothing like it. There are layers upon layers upon layers, and you unpack new things constantly. I don’t know how he knew so many things — about the world, about women, about human nature, life, death, our fears and hopes.” Plus, Cleopatra is actually very funny, with a thoroughly modern way of dissing her rivals and owning her boyfriend.

Okonedo taps into this trait brilliantl­y, making the audience complicit, like a seasoned raconteur.

When I ask how it feels to play someone endlessly fascinatin­g, she says she didn’t think about it. “I work on the words, deeply, for months and months,

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