Wales On Sunday

BACK WITH A BANG

CREATOR JED MERCURIO AND STAR VICKY McCLURE TELL JESSICA RAWNSLEY ABOUT THE DANGEROUS WORLD OF BOMB DISPOSAL, AHEAD OF TRIGGER POINT’S RETURN

- TRIGGER POINT

SHE’S barely been back at work five minutes and Lana Washington is already having to disable two connected bombs, following an attack on a power plant orchestrat­ed by a sophistica­ted terrorist cell targeting London.

Played by Line of Duty’s Vicky McClure, the character is an ‘expo’, a member of the Metropolit­an Police bomb disposal squad.

ITV’s tense drama, Trigger Point, follows Lana and her team of experts as they work to defuse bomb threats and track down shady perpetrato­rs.

Almost every episode of the first series was punctuated by nailbiting moments, near-misses and unexpected, devastatin­g deaths.

For Lana, many of those were personal. Her younger brother was killed in one attack, a close colleague in another.

She returns after a six-month hiatus from work to get her head together – or that was the idea, anyway. Series two promises more of the same breathless intensity.

“Lana can’t catch a break!” confirms Vicky.

While it was great to step back into the part of brave, traumascar­red Lana, “there was a heavy load to come back with because of what happened to her in series one.

“It was great to make sure we took that on board and honoured all of those awful scenarios and losses that she had,” she continues. “It is non-stop, it is edge-of-your-seat, it is entertaini­ng television.”

But for the real-life expos that work, often surreptiti­ously, often unacknowle­dged, to keep us safe – those who run full speed into the dangerous places people are running from – this is their day-to-day reality.

Vicky and her on-screen team – Danny played by Suspicion’s Eric Shango and Hassan Rahim played by Blue Lights’ Nabil Elouahabi – spent time with bomb disposal experts ahead of filming to learn about their perilous work.

“We do work very closely with the advisers because we want to get the technical details right,” explains executive producer Jed Mercurio, the writer behind numerous hit dramas including Bodyguard, Bodies and Line of Duty.

“Also, it’s really important to pay tribute to the work they do.

“They’re incredibly heroic. What they do is so courageous, but when you meet these people who are doing this incredibly dangerous job, they’re all so down to earth, they’re so humble.

“It’s just so amazing that they’re like that. So we love working with the expos.”

“The expos haven’t got a clue what they’re walking towards,” says Vicky, 40. “They don’t know who’s behind it, they don’t know how they’ve put it together, what the tripwire might be, if there is one.

“There’s so many different variables when it comes to the devices.

“Some can be very complex and some can be very simple, but they both have the same effect.”

Vicky is often seen in a huge, astronaut-esque bomb suit that expos wear to protect themselves. The suits weigh some 90lbs.

“There was a choice this season where costume said, ‘look, we could make something [lighter] for you’, because it is so incredibly heavy to the point where it’s probably about the same that I weigh,” Vicky relates.

“I said no because I just feel like I’m an actor, they shout ‘cut’ and I can take the helmet off – bless Eric, he’s always there on hand because I physically wouldn’t be able to do it alone – but I think it’s important for us to show the real deal.

“I remember on that day where you see me trying to get the mirror round the bend in the gate, I couldn’t lift my arm, it was so tough.

“And it just always reminds me how much respect I have for expos, not just for the fact that they walk towards potential death and danger every time they step out, but just the equipment and all that kind of stuff.

“When we did the first series, we spoke a lot about that kind of gear that wasn’t as accessible to women, because most of those kinds of uniforms are made typically for men.” An unexpected consequenc­e of the show was the “huge influx of people that applied to become expos, females as well, which is quite rare”, Vicky says.

“That was what attracted me to the role initially, because I was just like, ‘what is an expo?’ I’d never heard of the word.

“I knew about bomb disposal, it’s a whole world that was sort of untouched. And so it exposed something to people that has attracted people to want to do it, which is no bad thing.”

Within the overcrowde­d crime genre, Trigger Point struck a chord with viewers – the first series averaged over 9.5 million viewers an episode.

The show reunites Jed and Vicky who worked together on

Line of Duty, where

Vicky played Detective Inspector Kate Fleming.

“When a show goes out on TV, you never know what’s going to happen,” says Jed.

“And so the fact that so many people came to the show and stuck with it was incredibly rewarding. We were absolutely thrilled by the response.”

That success added weight when it came to making a second series. “You have to find that balance between breaking new ground and delivering on expectatio­ns”, explains Jed, 58.

The tense action is grounded by the very human, very complicate­d relationsh­ips between the characters. There’s a new cop on the scene, DS Helen Morgan (Outlander’s Natalie Simpson), and with her arrival a love triangle between Lana, her ex-boyfriend DI Thom Youngblood (Happy Valley’s Mark Stanley) and his new love interest, Helen.

There is a part-fraught, parthumoro­us scene where Lana and Thom share a passionate moment – while his foot is on a trigger that will set off an explosive if he moves. “I think if you work as an expo or in the army or in any kind of job that has that kind of danger attached to it, there is a certain gallows humour that the expos have talked to me about,” says Vicky.

“Being cool about things, not ‘ah there’s a bomb!’, that’s her job.”

It is non-stop, it is edge-of-your-seat, it is entertaini­ng television

Star Vicky

McClure

IT seems there’s no end to the number of people who shout a resounding “yes” in answer to the quiz show’s titular question.

Now a new batch of them are being invited to give it a go, and find out how nervewrack­ing sitting in the hotseat can be – not just because Jeremy Clarkson is opposite them, but because they know getting everything right will result in them winning a lifechangi­ng amount of money.

And with times hard, there are lots who could really use the cash. But will any of them triumph tonight? One thing Jeremy dreads is the Ask the Host lifeline that’s offered to contestant­s.

“I’m never comfortabl­e until the Ask the Host question is out of the way,” he says.

“I’m sitting there thinking, ‘It’s coming, it’s coming. I’m going to make a fool out of myself in a minute!’”

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 ?? ?? Defusing the situation: Vicky McClure as Lana Washington in series two of Trigger Point
Defusing the situation: Vicky McClure as Lana Washington in series two of Trigger Point
 ?? ?? Love hurts: DI Thom Youngblood (Mark Stanley) and Lana
Love hurts: DI Thom Youngblood (Mark Stanley) and Lana
 ?? ??
 ?? ?? New face: Natalie Simpson as DS Helen Morgan
New face: Natalie Simpson as DS Helen Morgan
 ?? ?? Trigger Point executive producer Jed Mercurio
Trigger Point executive producer Jed Mercurio
 ?? ?? He’s the bomb: Eric Shango as Danny
He’s the bomb: Eric Shango as Danny
 ?? ?? Life-changing: Jeremy Clarkson asks the questions that could make someone a millionair­e
Life-changing: Jeremy Clarkson asks the questions that could make someone a millionair­e

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