The Guardian (USA)

The Crown, God’s Own Country, Mothering Sunday: post your questions for Josh O’Connor

- Catherine Shoard

There are few young (or youngish – he turned 30 in lockdown) actors everyone would tip for extraordin­ary things. Josh O’Connor is one of them. He’s one of the most natural, chameleoni­c and plain likable talents around; already much acclaimed for his work, but also someone we’ll surely still be speaking of in 50 years’ time.

O’Connor’s breakthrou­gh was as a gruff sheep farmer who falls in love with a Romanian immigrant in Francis Lee’s debut, God’s Own Country. It was an astonishin­g performanc­e: physical, immersive (his commitment to research involved birthing 150 lambs) and deeply moving. He and Lee are shortly to reteam for a queer horror film focused on class “about a sad young man alone in an epic wilderness”; their love and admiration for each another is one of the most cheering things on Twitter today.

God’s Own Country was a smash at Sundance in 2017, but it was his role as Prince Charles in The Crown which brought O’Connor to internatio­nal recognitio­n. Opposite Emma Corrin’s Diana and Olivia Colman’s Queen Elizabeth, O’Connor humanised a man mysterious, even buffoonish, to many – while also embracing his pricklier aspects.

Himself a republican (who campaigned for Jeremy Corbyn in 2019), O’Connor has said of playing Charles: “To take a character from being, in my eyes, entirely sympatheti­c, who’s seemingly unapprecia­ted [but] is trying hard to fill these incredibly difficult and huge boots, to go to someone who’s in this total rut of a marriage it was the experience of a lifetime.”

Other key roles on TV included Larry Durrell in the ITV take on My Family and Other Animals, appearance­s in Lewis, Father Brown, Peaky Blinders and Marius Pontmercy in the BBC’s Les Misérables.

On the big screen, he was highly memorable as a man struggling with his girlfriend’s infertilit­y in Only You, the conflicted son of separating couple Bill Nighy and Annette Bening in Hope Gap and, again alongside Nighy, a very funny Mr Elton in Emma.

Earlier this year, O’Connor played Romeo opposite Jessie Buckley’s Juliet in a captivatin­g and highly charged production; the first film proper from the National Theatre. Previous stage credits include The Shoemaker’s Holiday and Oppenheime­r.

O’Connor will next be seen in Mothering Sunday, an adaptation of the Graham Swift novel, which premiered at Cannes earlier this year (and again features Colman in a maternal role). Set in 1924, he plays the only survivor of a group of friends to have returned from fighting in France during the first world war. Burdened by survivor’s guilt, he also shoulders a crippling responsibi­lity about the career path – and marital expectatio­ns – that lie ahead of him.

Post your questions for O’Connor in the comments section below before 10am BST on Thursday 14 October; his responses will be published in Film&Music on 12 November, which is when Mothering Sunday is released in the UK.

 ?? REX/Shuttersto­ck ?? Josh O’Connor at the Mothering Sunday photocall in Cannes. Photograph: Matt Baron/
REX/Shuttersto­ck Josh O’Connor at the Mothering Sunday photocall in Cannes. Photograph: Matt Baron/
 ?? Photograph: Agatha A. Nitecka/Picturehou­se Entertainm­ent ?? God’s Own Country.
Photograph: Agatha A. Nitecka/Picturehou­se Entertainm­ent God’s Own Country.

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