The Sunday Post (Newcastle)

Who’s the daddy?

Normal People star on a surprise screen switch from brooding teen to fatherhood

- By Siobhan Synnot news@sundaypost.com

His television debut as brooding teenager Connell Waldron in the triumphant television adaptation of Sally Rooney’s novel Normal People won Paul Mescal an army of fans during lockdown.

Two years later, he has hurtled into fatherhood on screen in his first leading role in a movie.

Aftersun, written and directed by filmmaker Charlotte Wells, based on her own haunting memories of her last holiday with her dad, is already being hailed as a masterpiec­e on both sides of the Atlantic, ahead of its UK release later this month.

Mescal, 26, says he fought hard for the part of 30-something Calum despite an unwritten rule in the

industry that ambitious young male actors should never play dads so early in their careers.

“I read Aftersun when I was preparing for another film, God’s Creatures, and immediatel­y thought ‘I will do bad, bad things to be in this film’”, he said. “I wasn’t really

aware of the politics of ‘you shouldn’t really be playing dads, you’re 26’. I just thought that this was a fantastic character and I was going to do everything I can to play Calum.”

The gamble seems to have paid off, with Mescal being tipped for Best Actor awards for his tender performanc­e as an Edinburgh man nurturing the bond with his daughter Sophie, played by 11-yearold newcomer Frankie Corio, as they holiday together at a budget resort in Turkey.

Set in the 1990s, Calum is desperate to give his daughter a memorable experience as he struggles with the break-up of his relationsh­ip with the girl’s mother. Despite not being dad, Mescal said he immediatel­y identified with the character.

“I’m not a dad, and I’m nowhere near being a dad, but right off the bat, Calum felt like somebody a little bit closer to me than some of my other roles – but yeah, it’s quite a journey from a teenage drama like Normal People to becoming a dad in just two years.”

The “bad things” Mescal did to get the part, included making an audition tape of himself dancing to Blur in his kitchen and teaching himself

Going to Edinburgh felt like taking my accent into the lion’s den

tai chi by reading Tai Chi For Dummies. However, the real hard work was the Scottish accent.

After landing the role, he and Wells, who is from Edinburgh but based in New York, discussed rewriting his character as an Irishman, but Mescal opted to work on an east coast accent.“I stayed in accent for this throughout filming,” he said. “It’s something I’ve always wanted to do and Charlotte gave me her blessing but coming to the Edinburgh Film Festival for the British premiere of Aftersun made me nervous; it’s like taking my accent into the lion’s den.”

Equally important to the story is the relationsh­ip between Mescal and Corio, a firecracke­r from Livingston who beat 800 other girls to the part, despite never having acted before. “She would do things in a scene that would make me go. ‘wow, I wish I’d thought of that’, said Mescal. The co-stars made use of an extra two weeks in Turkey before filming began to get to know each other better as father and daughter. The extra time they spent together shows in their performanc­e, their rapport on screen being described by one film critic as “a marvel”.

“I asked Frankie’s mum and dad if I could be her pretend dad and we spent time together every day,” Mescal said. “We’d head for the beach and bond over Nutella crepes, get ice cream, and swim in the sea. Frankie’s character is supposed to be really good at playing pool, so we spent a lot of time working on that, too.”

At Corio’s age, Mescal had no ambition to be an actor. Instead, he had his heart set on becoming a Gaelic football star. It was only in his final year at school that he decided to apply for a place at Dublin drama school.

He later reluctantl­y gave up playing football after a broken jaw persuaded him that his two passions “don’t coexist, unfortunat­ely”.

Lockdown changed his life when the BBC series Normal People starring opposite Daisy Edger-Jones, turned him into a pandemic heartthrob. Student Connell and his chunky silver necklace became a bingewatch sensation. He was nominated for an Emmy Award and soon Hollywood came calling.

Mescal says he thinks carefully about projects, and so far he’s avoided the blockbuste­r films that actors often choose after a high-profile breakout role.

Instead, he’s secured supporting roles opposite Olivia Colman in The Lost Daughter, and Emily Watson for God’s Creatures. He’s also back working with another Scottish moviemaker for his next project, the spy-thriller A Spy By Nature. Directed by The Last King Of Scotland award winner Kevin Macdonald, the film casts Mescal as a twentysome­thing who swaps a job in telemarket­ing for MI6.

He’s also broken a few hearts by going public with his relationsh­ip with hip singer-songwriter Phoebe Bridgers. They met on Twitter during lockdown and quickly became an item, appearing in the newspapers and PDAs in Bridgers’ Instagram walking their dog, visiting Paul’s hometown, holding yoga mats, and wearing skimpy Gaelic footie shorts, Mescals’ go-to attire.

He himself has shunned social media, shutting down his Instagram and Twitter accounts shortly after Normal People. “I just think it’s a scary place sometimes,” says the rising star.

“I feel a little bit more invisible, and stepping back means I can get on with the part of the job that I love.”

 ?? Picture Jeff Vespa ?? Paul Mescal has a seat at the Toronto Film Festival
Picture Jeff Vespa Paul Mescal has a seat at the Toronto Film Festival
 ?? ?? Paul Mescal and Daisy Edgar-Jones in hit Normal People
Paul Mescal and Daisy Edgar-Jones in hit Normal People
 ?? ??
 ?? ?? Mescal and newcomer Frankie Corio in Aftersun
Mescal and newcomer Frankie Corio in Aftersun
 ?? ?? Writerdire­ctor Charlotte Wells
Writerdire­ctor Charlotte Wells

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