overview
The
stakes are raised in the
new series of the
award-winning Spooks, as
the threat to national
security increases and
the need to thwart the
activities of terrorists
operating within the UK
becomes more urgent. Tom
(Matthew Macfadyen) and
the team find themselves
at the heart of the
action and must deal
with the psychological
fall-out of leading such
dangerous double-lives.
Matthew Macfadyen,
Keeley Hawes, David
Oyelowo and Peter Firth
all return, with Natasha
Little also joining the
Spooks cast. Spooks,
which has just won a
Bafta Award for Best
Drama Series, gets off
to an explosive start in
the new series, which
picks up at the exact
moment when the first
series finished. Tom’s
girlfriend, Ellie, and
her young daughter are
trapped inside a
securely sealed house in
which a bomb is about to
explode and there’s no
way out. Executive
producer Jane
Featherstone says:
"We discovered with
the first series that
Spooks can tell stories
that no other
long-running British TV
drama can.There were
times when we found our
fiction blending
imperceptibly with the
news. One episode,
for example, was
about race issues and,
at the time it was
broadcast,The 10 O’Clock
News followed with a
story about race
riots.There were a
number of times when
items in the news seemed
frighteningly to mirror
what had just happened
on the screen."
Simon
Crawford Collins,
producer of Spooks,
agrees: "This new,
longer series runs for
10 episodes and builds
on that sense of
topicality as threats to
national security have
never been greater and
our team of spies has to
match the growing
sophistication of an
often unseen
enemy." "In
the current political
climate, never have
people been more aware
of the risk of terrorist
threats," says
writer David
Wolstencroft.
"Sadly, it is at
the back of all our
minds that what happened
in the United States on
September 11 2001 could
be repeated in some way.
For this reason, the
role of MI5 is becoming
increasingly
significant. "I
think that everybody is
informed these days
about the threats,
everybody knows what
could happen and they’re
much more aware of world
events."
Forthcoming
Spooks storylines
include a visit by the
US president, a war
criminal on the run, a
computer security breach
at MI5, a poisonous gas
explosion in the centre
of London and a
potential mutiny in the
British Army. The
Section B team, which
includes Harry (Peter
Firth),Tom (Matthew
Macfadyen), Zoe (Keeley
Hawes) and Danny (David
Oyelowo), will certainly
have their work cut out.
A newcomer to the team
is Sam Buxton (Shauna
Macdonald, Late Night
Shopping), who is keen
to make a good
impression and joins Zoe
undercover on a
surveillance operation
to discover who is
behind a nationwide
bombing campaign. Other
new characters include:
intelligence analyst
Ruth Evershed (Nicola
Walker, Touching Evil)
and Carlo (Enzo Cilenti),
who takes a fancy to Zoe.
Also returning in a
bigger role is Christine
Dale of the CIA (Megan
Dodds).
For
Wolstencroft, working on
Spooks is a dream come
true. "I absolutely
love making things up
for a living. That’s
where the fun of it is
for me! I grew up in
America watching things
like Hill Street Blues,
St Elsewhere and
Moonlighting. Then I
moved to England and the
one thing that really
blew me away was
watching Edge Of
Darkness, which was just
inspirational and I
remember thinking that I
would love to write
something like that.
"I didn’t really
think that I had the
confidence to do it, but
then I wrote Psychos for
Ch4.With Spooks, I
really wanted to break
the speed limit and to
learn a lesson from the
Americans in terms of
the pace of the
scripts."
Featherstone agrees:
"I think the
strengths of Spooks are
that it is fast, dynamic
and pacy. It’s an
intelligent action
series which deals with
big subjects." The
first series of Spooks
was broadcast in May and
June 2002 on BBC One. It
was a big hit with
viewers, reaching an
average audience of 7.6
million. Reviews of the
series included:
"Terrific
entertainment, and a
quality drama at the
high end of the
mainstream."
(Sunday Times) In the
2002 Broadcast Awards,
Spooks won Best Drama
Series and was nominated
for Best New Programme.
It was also nominated
for an RTS Award for
Best Drama Series.
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INTERVIEWS
Matthew
Macfadyen plays Tom
Quinn
The success of the
first series of Spooks
was something of a
surprise to Matthew
Macfadyen. "I
thought it was a good
show when we were making
it but you can never
really tell. I was
thrilled when the
producers called me to
tell me how well it had
done." There was a
downside, however.
"They put huge
billboards up to promote
the series and the
strange thing was, there
was one right outside my
flat! I would walk out
of my front door and
think to myself, ‘Oh,
there I am!’ which was
the weirdest thing. But
then, after a while, it
became strangely normal
to see my face staring
back at me every
day!"
Macfadyen
clearly enjoys playing
Tom Quinn, the senior
case officer at MI5 who
finds himself at the
heart of the action.
"Part of the fun of
being an actor is to
explore those parts in
you that you wouldn’t
normally be able to
do," says Macfadyen.
"I think I’ve
influenced Tom and he
has also influenced me.
Tom’s quite a serious
character and
concentrates on his job,
sometimes at the expense
of other areas of his
life. He has difficulty
when his work spills
into his personal life,
and he finds it hard to
keep things
secret."
The
new series starts where
the first series ended.
Tom has moved in with
his girlfriend, Ellie
(Esther Hall) and her
young daughter, Maisie
(Heather Cave).
"Tom has
inadvertently taken a
laptop computer home and
then he gets a call from
an Irish terrorist who
tells him that there are
explosives in the
laptop," explains
Macfadyen."Tom is
outside the house and
Ellie and Maisie are
inside but because of
the extra security
measures on the house he
can’t get in and they
can’t get out – and
that’s where we left
them."
Tom
is much colder and
harder in the new series
and one episode in
particular proved a
greater challenge than
most. "Tom and the
team walk into the grid
for an ordinary day at
work when they are faced
with what’s called an
Extreme Emergency
Response Initiative
Exercise (EERIE).They
are informed that a
dirty bomb has exploded
outside Westminster, and
they have to decide how
to deal with it,"
says Macfadyen. "It
was very exciting
filming that episode,
which was brilliantly
written by Howard
Brenton.The team are
doing everything by the
book but, as the episode
unfolds, they become
unsure whether it is an
exercise or not.The
whole episode was shot
entirely on the grid, no
one can leave and no one
can enter. It was also
shot in sequence which
was fantastic – you
almost never get to do
that in television. And
I finally get to use a
gun, so I was thrilled!
I love all the physical
stuff where you get to
charge around." He
continues: "In that
episode, even more than
any of the others, it is
vital that the team can
trust each other to get
through. I think Tom
gets on with everyone in
the team, but
particularly Zoe and
Danny, who he really
likes and trusts. He’s
their boss and he does
play the ‘boss card’
when he has to. He also
looks out for them in
quite a paternal way
when he’s not that
much older than them.
"We’ve also got
some new characters
joining the team this
series.There’s Ruth
[Nicola Walker] who is
an intelligence analyst
and has been seconded to
MI5 from GCHQ.And there’s
a new recruit, Sam
[Shauna Macdonald], who’s
just out of the academy
and is really keen to be
thrown in at the deep
end."
For
Macfadyen, who is
enjoying an off-screen
romance with co-star
Keeley Hawes, acting was
a childhood
dream."I did lots
of plays when I was at
school and being on
stage was when I felt
happiest. I found it
incredibly exciting and
so I auditioned for all
the school plays. I was
certain that this was
what I wanted to do and
never really considered
anything else. I was
very fortunate to get
into RADA and had a
really good three years
there. Acting still
doesn’t feel like a
proper job sometimes –
I get paid to do
something I love which
makes me feel very
lucky."
Macfadyen’s
first big break was in
the theatre, where he
spent three years at the
RSC and Royal National
Theatre. Then came his
first television role in
Peter Kosminsky’s
acclaimed BBC One drama,
Warriors, followed by
well-chosen roles in
Stephen Poliakoff’s
Perfect Strangers, The
Way We Live Now and The
Project.
Keeley
Hawes plays Zoe
Reynolds
For Keeley Hawes,
the hardest thing about
playing feisty MI5
officer Zoe Reynolds is
the language. "The
dialogue is a real
challenge,"
explains Hawes.
"Some of the jargon
that the characters use,
I don’t even
understand. A lot of it
is like reading the news
because it’s all facts
and figures and names.
Some of the time you
have no idea what you’re
actually talking about,
it’s just a matter of
remembering it all and
then getting it in the
right order."
That
wasn’t the only
challenge for the
26-year-old actress:
there’s also the
difficulty of
remembering several
different aliases from
one day to the next.
"In one episode,
Zoe goes undercover as a
teacher in a
school," says
Hawes. "So, for her
day job she’s Jane, an
English teacher. Then in
her private life at the
same time, she’s
pretending to be Emma, a
legal secretary, to her
new boyfriend, Carlo,
and when she actually
does go to work, she’s
Zoe Reynolds, MI5
Officer. It’s all very
confusing!"
As
if that wasn’t bad
enough, Hawes also found
the prospect of standing
up in front of a
classroom full of
teenagers a terrifying
experience. "It was
a nightmare! I certainly
have a new-found respect
for teachers. You have
no idea what it’s like
and I wasn’t really
teaching them. I think
it must be an incredible
thing to be able to
do."
In
the new series, viewers
see more of Zoe’s
personal life. "In
the first series she had
this will they/won’t
they thing going on with
Danny and nothing
happened in the end. But
in this series, Zoe does
have a bit of romance.
She meets this Italian
stallion called Carlo
and she does some quite
unexpected things, like
running off to hotel
rooms in the middle of
the day!" Zoe has
seen the problems that
Tom faced when his job
got in the way of his
personal life and is
anxious not to make the
same mistakes. "I
think she is a bit wary
of romance. I think it’s
hard enough for anyone
who’s single to meet
someone but, when you do
what Tom and Zoe do for
a living, then it’s
especially difficult –
you can be called out
anywhere at anytime.
They don’t have much
of a social life really
apart from with each
other. The easiest way
sometimes is if they
date each other, which
is what Zoe tells Danny
when he fancies
Sam."
Unlike
Zoe, who has always
wanted to be an MI5
officer, Hawes had no
ambitions to be an
actress when she was
younger. "I think
acting chose me,
actually," she
says. "The Sylvia
Young Theatre School
moved opposite the house
where I grew up and I
would hear them all
singing and I remember
saying to my mum how
good it sounded. I don’t
think I had any
ambitions to be an
actress at that age but
I went along and I had a
great time. "After
that, I modelled for a
year after being spotted
on Oxford Street. I
never really enjoyed
modelling so I was glad
to give it up when I got
a part in Dennis Potter’s
Karaoke. I was very
lucky really."
Since
then, Hawes, who is
currently dating co-star
Matthew Macfadyen, has
gone from strength to
strength with roles in
Our Mutual Friend for
BBC One, A Is For Acid
alongside Martin Clunes
and more recently
starring alongside
Stephen Tompkinson in
Kingsley Amis’s Lucky
Jim. |