Re: Summer 2016 | Page 18

your life is just unbelievable and I had things in the press where they’ve rung up previous girlfriends - one in Australia for instance. They did a whole piece on me called ‘lady-killer then and lady-killer now’ and a picture of me kissing my 17-yearold girlfriend in a photo booth. They’d obviously got hold of her in Australia and said that old Brian’s doing well; let’s get some story out there about his past. It was interesting to see all that and to realise what people do have to cope with and of course I’ll say there are far more good points than bad point and I’m not complaining at all. Being thrust into that level of limelight is a massive shock and I can understand why people’s lives fall apart you know… mine’s nothing compared to others, it’s just a little small moment in my life but it was a fascinating experience. about four or five years. I used to go back and take in the Fairclough foster children, I was the fostering social worker called Donald Worthington with a big shock of 70s hair. Tell us about your final scene in Coronation Street, it was quite dramatic. (Evil Richard tied his family up in a van in a garage and attempted to gas them all, including himself, with the engine running. That didn’t work so he sped off with the terrified Gail and her children and drove into the canal. Gail and the kids were rescued but Richard drowned, leaving Gail with a mountain of debts and a lifetime of horrible memories) It’s been well documented that Simon Gregson who plays Steve McDonald had to take some time out of the show. He suffers from depression, but for me he’s my favourite actor in the show and when I joined I remember thinking he was a brilliant actor. He’s so natural and he makes everything real, he can turn on a sixpence and he’s doing it day in, day out. Then there’s David Nielson who plays Roy – these are normal people and David’s always been normal - he just gets on with life, they’re just down to earth. It was brilliant because they used five cars for that stunt. We had two cars underwater and a tank for two days at different heights and you’ve got your eyes closed you are weighted down so you don’t float and you each have a guy looking after you underwater, each person has a minder because it was quite a dangerous stunt. You’re underwater and you have your eyes closed and you’re breathing through this apparatus and then they tell you to get ready and you throw the apparatus away or they take it off you and then they count down on your fingers 5, 4, 3, 2, 1, and then you do your acting open your eyes and go.. Sounds a bit much to me! Oh it was! But it was very exciting and it was shot brilliantly - the chase sequence and then going up and into the water - that was the coldest night of the year when we did the exterior shot and I had to be in a body bag which was horrible. It was not a very nice experience and then we did the underwater shots the following week which was actually fantastic. I feel so fortunate and the funny thing is of course I had been on Coronation Street as a social worker in the early 80s and I never thought I’d be going back! I was in and out of it for two or three weeks for 16 Some people cope with it really well like my favourite person who plays Audrey, Sue Nicholls, she’s brilliant and she’d been an actress and had a career before the Street. Funny e nough I worked with her on Up the Elephant Round the Castle with Jim Davidson before Coronation Street. She’s a diamond, she’s terrific and I’ve got a lot of time for Sue, she’s a very good actress. She’s also really posh; her dad was a Baron or a Lord! I remember when she started in Crossroads, she played a waitress, I’ve know her for years. Trying to keep sane in those programmes is tough - I don’t know how she does it. Are they? They are brilliant; those guys are such everyday people. In fact, most of them are alright and very warm and that’s a northern thing which is lovely. EastEnders is quite a cold place because everyone lives in their own little spaces but they all used gather in the green room because that’s where the main studio doors were but it’s not like that anymore. At EastEnders now they’re all in their own little rooms but being in the green room is what used to make it lovely - even if you didn’t particularly like somebody you would admire them. So was it hard to lose your reputation as soap’s biggest villain or is it still lurking? Ah well that’s an interesting question I think, partly because I’d been an actor for 30 years beforehand and that helped me to move on, it’s a double-edged sword, without Richard Hillman I wouldn’t have had the last 13 years of solid work. Where it’s really helped me is that people who go to the theatre they nearly always like to see somebody they’ve heard of or vaguely know about. That’s where Richard Hillman came up trumps particularly as he’d been seen by so many people - even people who didn’t watch Coronation Street normally - we had up to 20 million viewers - you know you’re reaching a very, very big audience so that has led to me being in fair demand for touring theatre shows. If I had a plan, because I love the theatre, it was to get known on television in order to put bums on seats in a theatre. You can’t really have a plan but that’s kind of how it worked out for me…and actually it’s quite rewarding financially as well as you are a profiled person. So I do quite comfortably out of it but when I left Coronation Street it was quite difficult to move on from a soap. Sometimes people do spectacularly well from it like Suranne Jones and Catherine Kelly but they are quite rare and it can be quite tricky. I was lucky in that I was playing a character and when people meet me they realise I’m not actually Richard Hillman. I have a wide range of skills I can use though, I did Educating Rita about two years ago and soon as you walk on the stage you are in character and people just forget all about Richard Hillman but of course that’s why we are there in the first place although obviously not the only reason. I’ve never done panto and didn’t want to be a panto/soap person so I made the decision not to do anything like that - I was very lucky I went to the National Theatre I reinvested myself within my business and played there in a play called Harper Regan opposite Lesley Sharp so that helped move me on a bit. I had an enormous piece of luck that put me into completely different part of the business I was doing Where the Heart Is for three years and that was nice that moved me on from Coronation Street. So aside from the theatre, soaps and drama, you’ve done a bit of reality TV as well, what was what your experience on Strictly Come Dancing like? I had just done Guys and Dolls and really I’d never watched Strictly - I didn’t know anything about it and I thought it was three months getting paid (in those days everyone got the same money) so I looked upon it as a bit of a holiday as I could be at home and my dance partner Karen Hardy came down here. Karen is a very nice person but I think she was a little over ambitious and enthusiastic with me – I was the oldest in the show! Were you? Yes! I was older than Stephanie Beecham and so you feel it’s slightly unfair when you’ve got very young people taking part but I suppose it doesn’t matter - it’s just a reality show. It was very interesting from the point of view of understanding how reality television shows work and it was very useful to learn first-hand how they