The Sunday Post (Dundee)

How June Cartercash and Lady Macbeth helped me through lockdown

Actor Charlene Boyd on country superstars,

- By Murray Scougall mscougall@sundaypost.com

It was a memorable first encounter for all sorts of reasons.

Charlene Boyd was looking forward to filming a scene with Unforgotte­n star Nicola Walker for new Scottish detective drama, Annika. But Charlene gave both of them a fright when she reacted to Nicola’s hands-on approach.

“Since River City returned to filming after the first lockdown, we’ve maintained a strict two-metre distance during filming,” explained Charlene, who plays police officer Jac Dunn in the BBC Scotland soap. “I’ve had the most lovely scenes where I’ve been talking to a tennis ball and then it’s put together brilliantl­y in the edit. But on Annika we worked in a different way and we were all tested.

“I went into a scene with Nicola and she touched my leg, and I screamed. I had to apologise and explain no one had touched my leg in a while.”

There were no hard feelings and the pair instantly hit it off, with Charlene getting advice from the twice Bafta-nominated star, most recently seen in the ITV smash-hit crime drama.

“She was wonderful to work with and we got on so well. We had a day of chatting,” said Charlene, from Cumbernaul­d.

“I love when there are actresses around who I can look up to and the parts they play, and she is one of them.

It’s also interestin­g to speak to actresses who are mums and have managed to push on and get work. We ended up talking all day about getting a job and wanting to do it, but what about the kids? Just the constant juggle of it all.

“She pushed her acting career and had kids later, whereas I spoke about having children first and hope to push on with acting once they are at school.

“It was nice to see a woman’s perspectiv­e on things. She was lovely and gave me good advice and some pointers on auditionin­g. When I was working with her, you could just tell she’s a natural. I was a bit in awe of her.”

Charlene plays Siobhan Kelly in Annika, which follows a specialist marine homicide unit investigat­ing crimes off the coast of Scotland. It’s due to be shown on Alibi in the autumn.

“I couldn’t go for one of the roles that would cover most of the episodes as it was filming at the same time as River City but I loved working on it and it’s a great part,” she said.

“What’s so lovely about Annika is it has a huge Scottish cast. I was looking at all of the

actor head shots in the make-up room and there were so many faces I knew. For them to have had a phone call saying here’s a job, after a year like we had, was really nice.”

She felt lucky to have had the River City role to return to when restrictio­ns were eased last year, especially as she had only joined the show a month before the initial lockdown.

“I was so grateful. I’d been on holiday when I received a call out of the blue asking me to do Jac, and then a month later the world locked down,” Charlene recalled. “It was the best thing to be a part of to get through the past year, as I had something consistent and a group of people to work together with. It was something to focus on, otherwise I would have had nothing.”

The Shieldinch soap is currently on a five-week filming break, and some of Charlene’s juiciest storylines and dramatic scenes have still to come.

During lockdown, while also home-schooling her two children, aged seven and four, Charlene managed to find the time to write her first play, based on the life of June Carter

Cash. “I’ve sung in a country rock band for about 11 years and I sing her parts,” she revealed. “I applied to Creative Scotland for funding and it led me on an amazing journey, where I was able to pay other actors and directors to work with me over Zoom. I had to do something creative when everything else had stopped.

“I’m continuing to work on it, and I’ve had some interest, so I think that will go on.”

In the meantime, though, she is returning to a role that has given her plenty of opportunit­y for the dramatic

– Lady Macbeth. It’s the third time Boyd will play the character in writer Frances Poet and director Dominic Hill’s re-imagining of Shakespear­e’s play, which focuses on the passionate marriage at the heart of the story. The two-person production has been filmed by the Citizens Theatre, Glasgow and will be available online next month, with Charlene having previously been part of the production at the Citz in 2017 and then on tour the following year.

“Dominic was interested in the power couple at the heart of the story, and was fascinated by the theme of sleep, them not being able to sleep,” said Charlene, who was nominated for a Critics’ Award for Theatre in Scotland for her initial portrayal of Lady Macbeth.

“I was on maternity when he asked me to come in and audition. It was my first time doing Shakespear­e, so it was all new to me.”

She will perform opposite Outlander star Keith Fleming, her real-life partner. He played Macbeth in the original production but not in the touring version.

“It was the only way it could happen – to film with people who were in a bubble. We actually hadn’t been sure if we should go into a bubble together before lockdown – we didn’t live together previously and no one knew how long it was going to be for, so we had to make a quick decision, and I’m glad we did.”

The filming was done over three days at The Beacon Arts Centre in Greenock, as the Citizens is still undergoing refurbishm­ent, and Charlene said it felt great to be back on stage after so long.

“It took my breath away when I walked in and smelled that theatre smell,” she recalled. “I felt the sparkle of it, of that magic feeling of being on stage. It was like a little pocket of time that stood still.

“There was no audience, of course, but the camera is the audience. We were aware of how small we were able to play it, and again it made it a very different experience to before.

“I’ve always looked back and wondered what the previous performanc­es looked like, and now that it’s filmed I’ll probably look at every detail and worry about my facial expression­s. In the madness scenes, there was one point I looked down and all I could see was dripping saliva and snot, and I thought, that will look just lovely on screen!”

The Macbeths, Citizens Theatre, Glasgow. See citz.co.uk

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 ??  ?? June Carter and Johnny Cash duet on stage, above
June Carter and Johnny Cash duet on stage, above
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 ??  ?? Charlene Boyd, far left, and below on the set of The Macbeths, stars alongside Nicola Walker in marine murder drama Annika
Charlene Boyd, far left, and below on the set of The Macbeths, stars alongside Nicola Walker in marine murder drama Annika

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