The Chronicle

You can't live a normal life with a bodyguard

Richard Madden, 32, and Keeley Hawes, 42, team up in Bodyguard - a modern thriller that tells the fictional story of a former soldier assigned to protect an ambitious minister. GEMMA DUNN learns more

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Richard, you play David Budd, a former war hero now working for the royalty and specialist protection branch of London’s Metropolit­an Police Service. How much did you know about being a bodyguard before the series?

RICHARD: Very little; the nature of their job and their character is they give very little away. So I had very little to go on, which was quite interestin­g, because it gave me a chance to get into the head of him as a husband and a father, and that side of things.

With David, it was more about being a soldier who had been through a lot – that’s where I started to build up where he was, as a young man who went to war.

Torn between between his duty and his beliefs, he sounds like an intriguing character to play...

RICHARD: I was attracted to the contradict­ions within this man – a man who deeply cares and wants to protect, but who also has these strong political opinions that get in the way of that.

So I was attracted by someone who is constantly fighting with himself, but with this inherent good in him.

David also suffers from PTSD. how did you approach the subject in a responsibl­e way?

RICHARD: It’s very hard to get people to talk about PTSD, so that was a struggle to begin with.

I’ve got a couple of friends who were in the army, and even just to get them to talk about their experience­s was very difficult.

So we worked together to balance it out, but I think sadly it’s still a very untouched-upon subject for a lot of people.

Keeley, did you take inspiratio­n from any of our politician­s, in order to play Home Secretary Julia Montague?

KEELEY: At the time [of filming], Amber Rudd was home secretary, so parallels were always going to be drawn. But I’m not playing Amber Rudd – that wasn’t what we were going to do – but she’s a very good example and she was brilliant for me to research. It’s fascinatin­g, actually. It’s changed my ideas of politician­s, as silly as that sounds. I ended up listening to a podcast on Radio 4 that Amber Rudd’s sister was giving, and she was talking about Amber’s upbringing – a side we don’t often see when we look at our politician­s.

It’s very much a public job these days – but everything is so controlled. would you agree?

KEELEY: It’s very controlled, and the

I’m not playing Amber Rudd... but she’s a very good example and she was brilliant for me to research. Keeley Hawes

good ones make it look as though it isn’t controlled at all. It’s really fascinatin­g.

I actually went away for a couple of days while we were filming, and I walked out of my hotel room and there was this guy standing there in the corridor and I thought, ‘What the hell is he doing?’ He was a bodyguard! It’s the only time I’ve seen it in my life.

Is that level of protection something you would struggle with?

KEELEY: I don’t know why you would choose it. It’s awful. It’s different for me because I have three children, so I can’t imagine something like that taking over my own life. But yeah, you just give yourself over and I think that would be the only way to deal with it.

You can’t live normally, but at the same time [you’d] be incredibly grateful because you are at risk every day.

Has working on this series made you more sympatheti­c to those under scrutiny, then?

KEELEY: Yes, I think so. It’s not popular to say that you’re sympatheti­c to politician­s, but I’d like to think that most politician­s have gone into those roles because they want to make a difference, and they’re doing what they do for the right reasons, regardless of what we may think of those reasons or their opinions.

You can only do that job if you really believe in change.

Line Of Duty, The Durrells and now Bodyguard is quite a variety – have things changed for you in terms of the roles you’re being offered?

KEELEY: I’m very lucky that, particular­ly after Line Of Duty, people, in terms of casting me, have been more imaginativ­e.

Maybe they’ve realised that I am willing to go to places that maybe they thought I wouldn’t. Bodyguard starts on BBC1 tomorrow at 9pm.

 ??  ?? Political cover: Richard Madden and Keeley Hawes
Political cover: Richard Madden and Keeley Hawes
 ??  ?? Richard Madden plays an ex-soldier turned bodyguard. Right: As Rob Stark in the hit series Game Of Thrones
Richard Madden plays an ex-soldier turned bodyguard. Right: As Rob Stark in the hit series Game Of Thrones
 ??  ?? Keeley Hawes in The Durrells. The star says she is grateful to be offered eclectic roles
Keeley Hawes in The Durrells. The star says she is grateful to be offered eclectic roles
 ??  ?? Former Home Secretary Amber Rudd
Former Home Secretary Amber Rudd
 ??  ??

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