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Gorgeous Star of epic new movie “The War Bride”
- ANNA FRIEL from “Brookside” to Broadway, the broody
Brit-Pack actress sets her sights on Hollywood’s Bright Lights
Famous for her lesbian kiss in rumoured-to-be-axed soap Brookside,
Anna Friel has never been one to shy away from the headlines. However
the actress famed for her love of partying and headline-grabbing
relationships has been keeping a relatively low profile over the
past couple of years. Anna, 26, is clearly besotted by her boyfriend
of 2 years, 39-year-old actor David Thewlis, and rumours are that
nowadays the party girl prefers a takeaway in bed to a night on
the tiles.
Professionally, too, Anna is breaking new territory, proving herself
to be a versatile and talented actress. Over the past three years
she has received accolades for her role in the Broadway hit Closer,
and appeared as the raunchy Lulu on stage at the Almeida Theatre.
Breaking Hollywood still eludes her, but only just – she was
narrowly beaten by Cameron Diaz in auditions for Martin Scorsese’s
film Gangs of New York. Anna has recently been on our screens in
the ‘40s love story The War Bride and, on a break from filming
her latest project Watermelon in Dublin, she spoke to OK! About
her new releases, her relationship with David Thewlis and her plans
for the future.
Anna, tell us all about your new film, The War Bride…
It’s the story of two East End good-time girls who marry
Canadian soldiers and move to Canada during World War Two. Lily,
my character, thinks she is marrying a wealthy man, but when she
arrives, she realises he is just a poor farm boy. It is essentially
a love story and a feel good story about strong women, friendship
and overcoming the odds.
Was it hard filming in rural Canada?
The look on my character’s face when she sees the bleak Canadian
landscape sums it up, but she makes the best of the situation and
wins through in the end. I felt that way about the location, but
I was only there for a matter of weeks – Lily was there for
the rest of her life! But I was in every scene every day, so I was
kept busy.
Were the rest of the cast a support?
I had great chemistry with Julie Cox, who played Sophie, and Brenda
Fricker was inspirational – particularly the way she got into
it and started plucking chickens! We are working together again
in Dublin at the moment; she’s brilliant and has become one
of my best friends.
Did you identify with your character in the film?
When I play a new character if I don’t immediately identify
with her I find a way to draw parallels with my own life and with
a character’s hopes and fears. I live the strength Lily has
and admire her balls. She is the kind of person everyone wants to
be, but she is tougher than I am. She never feels sorry for herself
and keeps busy when she is sad. I do that too.
You have played the part of a World War Two heroine before
in The Land Girls. Is this a similar role?
The only similarity to The Land Girls is the period and that I
play a ballsy woman. But Land Girls was such a great experience
I wanted to do something similar.
You say your grandfather played a part in the war effort.
Was it emotional re-enacting that time in history?
The ‘40s were a really romantic period, despite the war,
and that really comes through in the film. The War Brides were like
arranged marriages in that they hardly knew their husbands. Lily
only knew Charlie for 14 days, but somehow that adds to the romance.
The touch of a hand meant more than a kiss and there was a different
speed of living. The hardest thing was working with a shell-shocked
character. For a woman to deal with a shell-shocked husband must
have been very tough. The actor playing Charlie, my shell-shocked
husband (Aden Young), really got into it, even off camera, which
was not always easy!
You did a lot of research for the film and learnt some
new skills, tell us about them….
I learnt a lot by reading diaries of the real war brides and on
a practical level how to sew on a ‘40s treadle sewing machine,
how to drive a ‘20s car, how to dance ‘40s dances and,
of course, what it is like to have a baby!
You play a mother in The War Bride and you are playing
a pregnant woman in Watermelon, the production you are working on
at the moment. Are you feeling broody?
Getting to work with the kids in the film was one of the best things
about The War Bride – a real comfort out in Canada. Of course
I’m broody! I’m always broody, but I have to be disciplined
and make sure I’m with the man I’m going to stay with
and make sure I can make the sacrifices I need to give to a child.
I think 26 is still a bit young though.
The costume designer for The War Bride won the Canadian
equivalent of an Oscar for the film. Did you enjoy all the gorgeous
‘40s fashions you got to wear?
I love ‘40s fashion – I wish we could dress like that
now. It is so flattering to the female body and so sexy. It’s
what you can’t see, like suspenders and stockings….
And those tight waists! Howard Burden, the designer, was fantastic
and made me feel good every day, which was not easy in some of the
frumpy outfits, but it helped me get into character and we had the
same ideas about what Lily should wear. Lily is like me in that
if I feel miserable I choose a colour to lift me. And she wears
what she wants even in the face of disapproval.
Making her own clothes is a big part of Lily’s character
– are you ever tempted to try sewing yourself?
I was mad about clothes when I was at school, but that’s
about it. It is an eye-opener to realise that in the ‘40s
you had to make something out of nothing. Lily makes her wedding
dress out of a tablecloth! It must be my genes though because my
grandmother used to make her clothes in the war – and parachutes!
You were rushed to hospital with an ovarian cyst after
filming The War Bride. How are you feeling now?
It’s taken me two years to get over it, but I’m a lot
better. Actually it has been going on my whole life so I am lucky
it has been dealt with now.
Being with David Thewlis you seem more settled. Are you
partying less these days?
Everyone talks about me being more settled now that I am with David,
but it’s not just him. I’ve grown up too! It’s
going from 24 to 26. People ask me how I’ve changed and I
wonder, was I really such a bad person? But I am a bit more settled
now; I’ve found my feet a little more.
You have made no secret of how happy you are with David
Thewlis – could we soon be hearing the sound of wedding bells?
Since I’ve come back from America, all everyone seems to
be asking is: “Re you going to get married to David and have
babies?” But he has not asked me and I haven’t asked
him. It just isn’t the most important thing right now –
but who knows what will happen….
You are very close to your mum and dad – in fact
they even dressed up as extras when you were filming the wedding
scene in The War Bride – what was that like?
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