Categories Fearless Interviews Print Media

Helen McCrory on Fearless, Peaky Blinders and juggling family life with husband Damian Lewis

The actress tells James Rampton why she refuses to accept that society is inherently selfish

by James Rampton | June 8, 2017 | The Independent

McCrory stars as a human rights lawyer in the legal thriller
McCrory stars as a human rights lawyer in the legal thriller

When he was interviewing politicians on BBC2’s Newsnight, it was often said that the presenter Jeremy Paxman lived by the old journalistic motto: “Why is this lying bastard lying to me?”

That is also the credo adopted by Emma Banville, the central character in Fearless, ITV’s absorbing new six-part legal thriller. Played with characteristic panache and passion by the actress Helen McCrory, Emma is a human rights lawyer whose speciality is defending lost causes. Her whole career has been based on questioning the powers that be and refusing to accept the official line.

According to Patrick Harbinson, the creator of the series, (who also worked with McCrory’s husband Damian Lewis on Homeland), the character is inspired by the work of lawyers like Gareth Peirce and Helena Kennedy.

Continue reading Helen McCrory on Fearless, Peaky Blinders and juggling family life with husband Damian Lewis

Categories Damian Lewis Fearless Interviews Print Media Their Finest

Helen McCrory on her marriage to Damian Lewis: “He’s never given me reason to be jealous”

A Thoroughly Modern Marriage

by Elizabeth Day | Stella Magazine | April 1, 2017

Helen McCrory arrives hungry. We’re meeting  on a spring afternoon in  a pub around the corner from her north London home, and Helen hasn’t yet eaten. She’s got a couple of hours before  she has to pick up her children – Manon, 10, and Gulliver, nine – from school, and she fully intends to make the most of them.

‘Are you sure this is all right?’ she asks  as she orders the soup of the day. ‘I mean, really? OK, well, I think I’ll have the lamb as a main… I’ll come back for pudding.’

We sit outside. Helen is tiny: slender and upright with the poise of a ballerina. She is also wildly entertaining. At 48, she is one of those women whose face is accentuated by faint wrinkles rather than oppressed by them – and she couldn’t care less anyway, given that she is constantly in work. Actresses over 35 are routinely asked if they’re concerned about the lack of roles for ‘older women’. When I raise this, Helen deadpans, ‘Well, I hope they find work.’

For her, it’s never been a problem. She finds vanity and self-regard boring. Recently, she took on the part of Elizabeth I for the children’s TV series Horrible Histories,  and ‘I begged the director to let me have  a bald cap, a pockmarked face and blackened teeth. And he was like, “But we could make her look so beautiful.” I said, “Yeah, but where’s the fun in that?”

‘Ageing hasn’t changed that much for me because it’s never been, “Elle Macpherson’s not available, let’s get McCrory!”’

Helen is more interested in characters ‘if they’re different from me. That’s what I enjoy most about the job.’ Her career has been both impressive and varied – from big-budget box-office catnip (Narcissa Malfoy  in the Harry Potter films) to small-screen critical acclaim (Aunt Polly in Peaky Blinders) to dazzling stage performances (her electrifying 2014 turn as Medea won her a Critics’ Circle Theatre Award for Best Actress).

Continue reading Helen McCrory on her marriage to Damian Lewis: “He’s never given me reason to be jealous”

Categories Damian Lewis Events Fashion and Style Screenings

Damian Lewis and Helen McCrory Attend Franca Screening and Anna Wintour’s Dinner Celebration

by Gingersnap | November 18, 2016 | damian-lewis.com

Source: Instagram @millermode

Damian and Helen attended Vogue Magazine’s screening of Franca: Chaos and Creation at the new Metrograph theater in Manhattan. The documentary is an intimate portrait of Franca Sozzani, the legendary editor-in-chief of Italian Vogue.

Capping off the evening the couple attended the screening after party, a private dinner celebration hosted by Anna Wintour at her home.

Source: Vogue

Categories Interviews Print Media The Deep Blue Sea

Helen McCrory, who has been awarded an OBE, on why she’s never wanted people to see her as ‘sexy’

Helen McCrory is known for playing strong women. She’s the gunslinging matriarch in period gangster drama Peaky Blinders and her CV is full of meaty stage roles, including a heartbreakingly defiant Medea at the National in 2014, and big-screen appearances, notably as an intransigent Cherie Blair in The Queen. So it’s strange to see her sitting down and eating very daintily, pushing the food to one side of her mouth.

“Look at me, I resemble a little gerbil,” she says.

Personally, if I had to compare her to an animal, it would be a cat. She has a feline sensuality and a formidable emotional intelligence which have marked her out as one of the most compelling actresses of her generation. These qualities are being put to good use in her latest stage role as Hester Collyer, the tragic wife at the heart of Terence Rattigan’s smouldering 1952 master-piece The Deep Blue Sea. The unhinged, sexually infatuated Hester has abandoned her High Court judge husband and Eaton Square home for a chaotic, all-consuming affair with boozy, former RAF pilot Freddie.

Continue reading Helen McCrory, who has been awarded an OBE, on why she’s never wanted people to see her as ‘sexy’

Categories Charity Damian Lewis Interviews Peaky Blinders Print Media Sir Hubert Von Herkomer Arts Foundation The Deep Blue Sea

Peaky Blinders star Helen McCrory: ‘Actors are just people who can’t write their own words’

Helen McCrory Talks Peaky Blinders, Deep Blue Sea and Her Charity

Helen McCrory & husband Damian Lewis pictured with Debbi Clark, chief executive of the charity. Pic
Helen McCrory & husband Damian Lewis pictured with Debbi Clark, chief executive of the charity. 

What does 1920s Birmingham gangster drama Peaky Blinders and an American western have in common?

More than you might think, according to Tufnell Park actress Helen McCrory, who’s back on our screens as the hard-as-nails Aunt Polly in the third series of the hit BBC show.

“Something that the Americans have understood is that they have mythologised their people.

“A bunch of cow herders going across the west are turned by John Wayne into a western. The gangster by [Martin] Scorsese has been turned into the hero.

Continue reading Peaky Blinders star Helen McCrory: ‘Actors are just people who can’t write their own words’