Lesley Sharp webchat – your questions answered on football, female roles and lipsyncing with David Tennant

Currently starring in Simon Stephens’ version of The Seagull, Lesley Sharp talked about creating characters with Mike Leigh, teaming up with Suranne Jones, writing her first novel – and the joy of animated caterpillars
  
  

Moves seamlessly between stage and screen ... Lesley Sharp
Moves seamlessly between stage and screen ... Lesley Sharp Photograph: Richard Saker/The Observer

That’s all for today!

Thanks very much - great questions! It's been lovely. Farewell!

maxine64 says:

Hi Lesley, I love everything you’ve done, you’re an inspiration. What has been your favourite thing so far, and is there something you’re longing to do but haven’t yet?

Actually, The Seagull is one of the things I've longed to do for a very long time. Going on stage is always a process that causes anxiety and nervousness. You don't know whether you'll end up with something you can wholeheartedly commit to for the length of time you've got to perform it. This has been one of those moments that is intensely pleasurable - the play, the role, the rehearsal process, the company of actors - it's all come together. I actively, even though I get anxious, look forward to doing it. That's a real privilege to have a job where you feel like that. And I'm really grateful for that.

Lott49 asks:

Mike Leigh has a unique way of working with actors – what are your memories of collaborating with him? What kind of roles do you wish you were offered more of? Does your husband Nicholas make his own f-ing tea?

Working with Mike Leigh is a process of distillation. You start with nothing, then with him you talk about a lot of people you've met who are in and around the same age group as you are, and somewhere Mike has an idea of the kind of person he's looking for. He guides you towards a few people and then inputs some ideas about what the person might be like. You come up with a notional character who then meets other notional characters he's been preparing with the other actors. Out of this cloud of ideas comes this landscape of characters who are walking, talking, bumping into each other and creating a story. Out of hours and hours and days and weeks of improvisation, Mike distils a script and once the shooting starts you turn up every day and shoot these fragments of the story, usually in order. But all you know about is your journey within that structure. You don't know what anyone else is doing. For example, when I was working with David Thewlis, I understood what we were doing together as characters but when I saw the film I was shocked to see how his character behaved with everyone else and what he'd been up to. I think all of Mike's actors must feel the same when they see their finished films because they have no idea what the other characters are doing.

BeckyDavidson says:

Afterlife was still good when catching the repeats a decade later on ITV3

I'm glad you enjoyed Afterlife. It was quite an unusual show for ITV and an attempt to investigate the nature of grief and death, how people cope with it, hide from it. So underneath a show that could be labelled a 'spook' show was an attempt to really examine some pretty big issues that everyone has. Andrew Lincoln is an amazing actor and turned into a great friend. I loved my character - she was such a crazy mess.

Updated

Filming Playing the Field, we were all useless at football. In the end they brought in professional footballers and shot their legs and our huffing, puffing red faces

Jo Phillips asks:

Playing the Field – still love watching that. Who was the best footballer among the amazing women in the cast?

It wasn't me! It was agony every time the schedule was released and there were three days set aside to do the football match. Everyone knew it would be a nightmare: cold, incompetence. In the end they brought in professional female footballers and they would shoot their legs and then shoot our huffing, puffing red faces, trying to thunder up and down the touchline. But more like waddling. We were all awful. Melanie Hill was one of the best. Lorraine Ashbourne had a 1980s Jane Fonda headband that always made her look like she knew what she was doing. Marsha Thomason was one of the youngest and fittest of us all and could be pretty good every now and then. But basically we were all useless.

Updated

ChrisTalmighty says:

My wife and I have watched a lot of Scott & Bailey here in Sweden – which we think you’re brilliant in btw – but I’m curious to know what you enjoyed the most about your character in that series ...

What was fantastic about Scott and Bailey was the opportunity to engage with female characters that were absolutely committed to their working life but also had to cope with all of the outside stress and pressure of their real lives. Sally Wainright's imperative was to show a police team working with great detail and reality on the cases that came in. She also wanted to show female comradeship. It was terrific that Suranne Jones and I played women of different generations who still had a complete friendship and comradeship in the workplace. Often on TV you see women in a workplace competing with each other - either sexually or within the hierarchy. I really liked playing a character who was unfussy, calm, competent, not complete in the way that she ran her family life, making mistakes with her children, trying to get things right with her husband. All these things that I see going on around the world with women - and, to my astonishment, not particularly well represented on TV. It was great to be part of a drama where the women' s stories and viewpoint are at the centre rather than being peripheral characters orbiting a male view of the world. More and more there is a clamour for stories that are depicted from a female point of view because TV and film and plays are seen by 50% of the population, which is women. They don't want to continually see stories through the eyes of a man. We have to start addressing that. It's difficult as an actor because actors can only deal with the scripts they're sent unless they start to originate scripts themselves. That's tricky because it takes a lot of time. I've started writing myself. I'm writing a novel at the moment. I'm thrilled about that. I'm 25,000 words in and counting.

By the end of the day shooting that scene in Road, with the cameraman moving backwards, we'd walked four miles

dothestrand asks:

How many takes did you do of that monologue in Road, which was fantastic, as was the whole play?

The scene from Road was done on a Steadicam so there was a cameraman walking backwards and I walked towards him. There were some misadventures when he bumped into lamp posts so we had to start all over again. By the end of the day we worked out that we'd walked four miles getting that shot. Road was directed by Alan Clarke who also did Rita, Sue and Bob Too. He was an amazing director. I think the BFI have released a boxset of his films - it's well worth getting them. He influenced a lot of today's film-makers I think.

Updated

Our Country's Good is a hymn to the transforming power of playwriting, the humanising effect theatre can have on troubled souls

EnjoyandEntertain asks:

I wondered if you could share some of your memories of rehearsing Our Country’s Good? This isn’t a Max Stafford-Clark related question; I teach the text and am directing it as a 6th form play!

At the Royal Court, Our Country's Good was twinned with The Recruiting Officer, which is the play the convicts are performing in Our Country's Good. We rehearsed during the day and performed at night. At times it felt like we never left Sloane Square. We didn't know how it was going to end up. Timberlake would come in with scenes that we'd rehearse and talk about. The play gradually emerged. We were all delighted and incredibly surprised when it became the hit that it was. What's fabulous about the play, rather like The Seagull, is that it's a hymn to the transforming power of performance and playwriting, the interaction between the audience and the actors, the humanising effect that the theatre can have on troubled souls. It was an immensely rewarding piece to work on.

Updated

Rita, Sue started life as a jokey depiction of working-class life in the 80s. Now, it's become a social document, as important as Dickens

Jo Phillips says:

Question re: Rita, Sue and Bob Too

Filmed/set in my home city, Andrea Dunbar, the clothes, the accents – I loved it. Now when I watch it and also after watching The Arbor, I feel a bit uncomfortable. What are your thoughts on the film now 30 (blimey!) years later?

I worked with Andrea Dunbar at the Royal Court in 1986 on a play called Shirley. As a result of that, Alan Clarke asked me to be in Rita, Sue and Bob Too. Andrea always said that Rita, Sue and Bob too was her life. Indeed, everything that she wrote had elements of her background, her upbringing, her city of Bradford. In The Arbor, a girl of 16 gets pregnant and I think that was true of Andrea. Rita, Sue and Bob Too, 30 years on, makes for quite shocking viewing. It's shocking because parts of the UK still look as spiritually, psychologically, economically undernourished as Bradford and the Buttershaw estate looked in 1987. 30 years on, the UK is perhaps in some places still in a very bad way. Watching Rita, Sue again recently, I was struck by how Bob's behaviour in the film now might be regarded as the behaviour of a pedophile, 30 years ago it was seen as slapstick, harmless, the behaviour of a sex-starved husband. In the light of Weinstein and other inappropriate behaviour, perhaps it doesn't make for such comfortable viewing. There's also a lot of casual racism in the film - that would not be tolerated now. As a social document, the film is remarkable. I'm not surprised that filmmakers like Clio Barnard wanted to make her amazing film, The Arbour, which is about Andrea's life. Rita, Sue started life as a jokey depiction of picaresque working-class life in the 80s. What's happened over the years is that it's become a social document, as important as the work of Dickens in showing what UK life was like. That is one of the reasons why the arts are so important in a nation's cultural life - what we leave behind us. We need to take not of that.

Updated

Bob and Rose was the first show I did by Russell T Davies. It was a dream job – the scripts were delicate, clever, funny, beautiful ... It was an amazing role for a woman

Liam Quane asks:

What is the best thing a director can do for you on set?

Get a really good lighting cameraman so that my nose looks smaller and my eyes don't look quite so tired and old...

Updated

It's been said that Three Girls was a piece of TV-making that harks back to a golden age of the BBC and I'd agree with that

DWFan1 asks:

How was it working on Bob & Rose (which was great?) Were you wary that there might be a backlash given the storyline? Also: what’s your favourite Pixar film?

Favourite Pixar film? A Bug's Life. I love the Austrian caterpillar...

Bob and Rose was the first show I did written by Russell T Davies - I've worked with him twice since. Oh my god it was a dream job - the scripts were delicate, clever, funny, beautiful... It was an amazing role for a woman. It didn't feel like it to us when we were making it but it did make a fuss because it was about a straight woman and a gay man falling in love. Back in 2002, Russell was tapping into a conversation that is really going now - about gender fluidity, not being bound by names for what you are and who you love. Alan Davies and I jumped into his slipstream and had the most wonderful time. It was glorious! Russell is an amazing writer. A lot of the questions here are to do with why I decided on a certain project - one of the issues, always, is to do with the writing. And Russell is a writer par excellence. The Second Coming was extraordinary. I can't see it being commissioned today. It was about the death of Christ in the modern age, about religion being killed off. And then I did an episode of Doctor Who called Midnight. David Tennant and I had to lipsync lines together at the same time. How did we manage to do that? We both had to learn it and practise saying it agin and again and again and again. It was really difficult but kind of exciting. It was thrilling when we watched it back on a monitor and saw that we'd nailed it. It was a great thing to do. Only Russell would think of something like that.

Updated

Dodesy says:

You were brilliant in Three Girls. Was it hard to deal with such a storyline on a psychological level? Was there any support offered to the actors who took on roles in the drama? Or do actors learn to separate themselves from the story?


Working on Three Girls, which was a drama depicting real events in Rochdale, required the utmost sensitivity and care because they're real people, who are still alive and able to see the work that we'd done, and able to comment on it. The work that was done on Three Girls before the actors even arrived took three years and was handled by the producer, director and writer with sensitivity. They had laid all that groundwork for us. I was fortunate enough to meet Margaret Oliver who I portrayed and she gave me an insight into her part of the story. The responsibility was to engage with the script, the way the story had been edited down into three hours, and be sensitive. Really, with every role that one takes on, there has to be some level where you understand that you are not that person, you are not in that situation, so you can have a perspective on what's going on. Otherwise, your own day-to-day life would be intolerable. It's been said that Three Girls was a piece of TV-making that harks back to a golden age of the BBC and I'd agree with that. It was a difficult show to get made but it seems that there is an appetite for this kind of programme-making. We should be thrilled and amazed that there are still TV companies in this country who would commission this work. It was very shocking when the news story itself broke and when the facts were laid bare in the show. I'm enormously proud to have been asked to be a part of it. This is one of the reasons I went to drama school.

GonePhishing asks:

Have you ever considered working with Paul Abbott? I think your gritty Manc style would totally suit his writing. You’d make a pretty good crime lord (or cynical and jaded detective) in No Offence. Have the two of you ever discussed anything like this? If not, why?

Thanks for suggesting - I'd love to work with him ... again! I did Clocking Off, which he wrote in the early 00s. I was Trudy Graham, a loyal secretary who had a boob enhancement and was secretly in love with Phil Glenister who by the way I've just finished working with in Living the Dream on Sky1 on 2nd November. Paul Abbott is an amazing writer - I loved working on Clocking Off.

Updated

repeatandfade says:

“Who wants to see this naked?”
“Me, Dave. I do”

Thanks for giving unhappy chubby blokes everywhere some self respect and confidence. This one in particular.

I'm so glad that you were validated. Everyone was so thrilled and surprised that The Full Monty was such a hit. It still lives on!

oscarowen asks:

I’ve seen a lot about how Chekhov requires a very unique style of acting. For you, how does acting Chekhov differ from other acting styles? And does Simon Stephens’ translation for this ‘Seagull’ change the approach to ‘Chekhovian acting’ in any way?

Acting Chekhov is like acting any other play. But Chekhov's plays are very specific in what they ask of actors - they really ask actors to delve into a deeper understanding of a character than appears to be present in the lines themselves. What you have in Chekhov is rich and detailed, and felt rather than spoken. Hopefully that's understood by the audience. That's why the four big Chekhov plays are still performed now. He plugged into the same thing that Jung and Freud brought to our attention later - the inner impulses that guide the behaviour of human beings. Chekhov was one of the first playwrights to be fascinated by that. Simon's translation of the adaptation is wonderful because it makes all of the dynamics between the characters incredibly clear and modern without making the play feel shunted from the world it was created in. In the play, you can sense there's a seismic shift in the world coming - all of the characters are fearful of something being taken from them, which arguably is the same case now. Simon has managed, very cleverly, to access that. As a writer, he has a similar ear and empathy for the human condition. That makes Simon a brilliant collaborator with Chekhov. Simon now has Three Sisters and Ivanov in his sights, having already done The Cherry Orchard too.

Hello there! It's very nice to be in the Guardian offices and I'm looking forward to getting stuck into these fantastic questions...

Lesley Sharp is with us now!

Lesley Sharp webchat – post your questions now

Lesley Sharp has been a regular, comforting presence on our TVs and cinema screens ever since uttering the immortal line: “Make your own fucking tea!” while playing the snooty Michelle in 1980s council-estate romp Rita, Sue and Bob Too. Bringing humour and pathos to even the most unassuming roles, she’s worked with many of the best British directors and showrunners of our times: Alan Clarke on Rita, Sue…; Mike Leigh on Naked and Vera Drake; Paul Abbott on Clocking Off; Kay Mellor on Playing the Field; Sally Wainwright on Scott & Bailey; and several times with Russell T Davies, who once tipped her to become the next Doctor Who.

Sadly that hasn’t come to fruition – yet – but Saturday night telly’s loss is theatre’s gain, as Sharp is currently starring as Irina in Simon Stephens’ version of Chekhov’s The Seagull at the Lyric Hammersmith (we called it “a vivid production … more full of anger than languor”). Sharp has always moved seamlessly between stage and screen, drama and comedy. Recently, she played the lead role of DC Margaret Oliver in the BBC’s harrowing dramatisation of the Rochdale child sex abuse ring, Three Girls. But she’s also led light comedy-dramas such as Starlings and Bob & Rose, as well as being nominated for a Bafta for her unforgettable role in The Full Monty.

Ask her about all this and more ahead of her visit to the Guardian offices on Monday 23 October at 1pm.

 

Leave a Comment

Required fields are marked *

*

*