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The Holiday A sun-soaked trip you

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FOR those who aren’t aware of the novel, the breakout thriller – the third from the best-selling author – tells the story of four families who gather for a luxury vacation, before the revelation of a dark secret spells tragic consequenc­es.

Spoiler: it’s the perfect set up for a TV drama. Hence why Channel 5 has taken the plunge and transforme­d the blistering pageturner into a four-part series.

Taking the lead is Jill Halfpenny, 46, as Kate, the headstrong protagonis­t whose dream holiday quickly becomes a nightmare when she discovers her husband is having an affair with one of her best friends. All of whom are with her on the trip. But which one of them is it?

“I liked the idea of being trapped,” begins the Geordie actress, who started her career aged 14 on Byker Grove.

“Holidays, in our head, are escapism and a chance to let your hair down and everything that we don’t want the real world to be. So I liked the idea that everybody is gathered in this one space and just had the worst time.

“I’m not sadistic or anything but it’s quite funny.”

Joining Halfpenny in the stifling Mediterran­ean heat is Killing Eve’s Owen McDonnell as Sean, Kate’s cheating husband; Lara McDonnell as their teenage daughter Lucy; and Aidan McCann as their young son Daniel.

As for whodunnit? Liv Mjones, Siobhan Hewlett and Cat Simmons make up the suspects, while Aidan McCardle and Andrew Macklin, plus Shaun O’Callaghan Wade and Molly McCann, round out their husbands and kids respective­ly.

“Imagine (being away in a group like that)!” Halfpenny muses. “It’s such an awkward situation to be in, such a boiling pot, and as we all know, with friendship­s, there’s so much history there.

“When people react to anything, it’s historical a lot of the time. It’s about what’s gone before and what people think their friends think of them. We’re all very worried about that. Everybody wants to think they’ve got good, loyal friends, but I think deep down a lot of us think, ‘Well, what do they really think about the time that happened?’

“So when something big happens here, all these demons come up and they have to deal with them.”

Just how does Kate deal with it? “She’s methodical. She works in the police so she needs to work

out what could possibly be the motivation for each person, and that gets her into much deeper trouble,” teases the Dark Money and former EastEnders star.

“But that’s the way she’s operated throughout her life, whereas I’m a, ‘Come into the room, I need to speak to you,’ type of person because the fear of not knowing would be too much for me.”

But Kate has strong morals, Halfpenny realises: “She very much feels like she knows the difference between right and wrong, and maybe she has quite a binary look on life.

“So when this happens to her, it doesn’t just rock her personal world, it rocks her ethical world, her moral world, because she now has to think in a much more grey area. And that’s not really her comfort zone.

“When we eventually find out what has really happened, you can then take the steps back and see that she herself, through her life, has, in some ways, sowed the seeds for this to happen.”

Intriguing. Did she guess the ending, herself?

“No! What actually happens at the end, I was like, ‘Oh, my God. I could never have even thought it would be that!’” confesses Halfpenny, who jetted to Malta to film the series, albeit under tight Covid restrictio­ns.

“That’s the fun of watching a thriller; nobody wants to be with the person who’s like, ‘I know exactly what happens’. The fun of it is, ‘It’s them. Oh, it’s her’,” she adds. “I think that’s why, as a nation, we’ve really – certainly in the last 10 years – become obsessed with thrillers.”

It’s a good thing she’s got form then, having led Channel 5’s twisty-turny drama The Drowning (Halfpenny put on a gripping portrayal of a woman haunted by the drowning death of her young son) as recently as last year too.

“It’s always nice to play something that is a bit more psychologi­cally dark,” she says excitedly.

“But while thrillers are fun, they’re also quite exhausting because the characters that you’re playing are usually consistent­ly tense. You come home and you’re like, ‘Why are my shoulders by my ears?’ You’re always holding something in energetica­lly, trying to keep a lid on things, and that’s really, really fun to play – but it’s quite exhausting to have that lid on for 11 hours a day!”

The Holiday, Channel 5, Tuesday, 9pm.

 ?? ?? The Holiday with Aidan McCann, Owen McDonnell, Jill Halfpenny and Lara McDonnell on Tuesday, on Channel 5, at 9pm
The Holiday with Aidan McCann, Owen McDonnell, Jill Halfpenny and Lara McDonnell on Tuesday, on Channel 5, at 9pm
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