By Katy Harrington - The Irish Post
It may be the bad line, Shaun Evans’ strong Liverpool accent (or my Cork one) but whatever it is, Rí-Rá’s conversation with the star of ITV’s latest hit crime drama, Endeavour, doesn’t get off to the smoothest start. The 33-year-old actor is taking a badly needed break from filming after a nonstop year, so perhaps it is just that he’d prefer not to spend his time off answering questions. Evans’ career is on the ascent. He has proved himself a charismatic and convincing actor with roles in The Take, Silk and playing the menacing Ian in The Last Weekend. His latest, and most high-profile part to date, is playing the young Inspector Morse in Endeavour, a four-part prequel series written by Lewis creator and Inspector Morse writer Russell Lewis. The first episode of Endeavour (which Morse anoraks will know is the detective’s seldom-uttered first name) transmitted in January 2012 to mark the 25th anniversary of the first episode of Inspector Morse and attracted 8.2 million viewers, making it the most popular single film on television in the last five years. Despite fans of the original series worrying about a prequel, the pilot film and Evans’ brilliant portrayal of Morse were well received by critics and viewers alike. Evans was born in Britain, but he has family in Tyrone and Dublin and visits often. “I’m always [in Ireland], I love it. It’s one of my favourite places,”he says. Faced with a choice after he left school between pursuing acting or studying history and politics at university, he chose the former. Did he know from a young age he wanted to act? “Was I a show-off in school, is that what you’re asking me?” No, I explain, but I do want to know where the instinct, the urge or the desire to act came from? “I was 18 and I fancied it to be honest. It may sound flippant but it was what I wanted to do… I can’t really explain it. I was lucky enough to get the opportunity to go to drama school and I went. I dunno, I don’t really think about it to be honest.” Were his parents surprised by his choice of career path? “Ya, surprised but supportive,” he says, closing the subject down. Evans was almost finished his threeyear drama course when he left to start working, but his first film never saw the light of day. His next big part was in the Channel 4 comedy Teachers. Was that his breakthrough role? Evading the question, he gives the analogy of a driving lesson to illustrate the difference between drama school and acting in the real world. “You can take lessons but you only know when you get out behind the wheel. It was great to be surrounded by people of my age with a common interest and that is probably the best thing I take from it,” he says, describing his days in drama school. Using his analogy then, was his role in Teachers his first time on the road? Teachers is not something Evans wants to talk about, it seems. The analogy is silly, he says, and circumventing the topic again he goes back to taking about being surrounded by like-minded people at drama school. So, after drama school, what was it like for a young actor auditioning and landing their first TV part? Irritated now, he repeats: “What was it like? Right, why are you interested in that?” I say that I am interested because I imagine it is an exciting time, a turning point in a young actor’s career. Leaving Liverpool, moving on and starting to work was “a natural progression”, Evans says, and that is all he is willing to say. He is happy to talk about The Last Weekend, the gripping ITV thriller which aired last year, and co-starred Irish actress Genevieve O’Reilly. “I loved that. It’s based on a great book by Blake Morrison, and a great adaptation… it was a lovely job.” He is also positive about The Boys from County Clare, the Irish comedy/drama he starred in alongside Andrea Corr and Colm Meaney. “It was extraordinary, I had the best time. It was just a great, great group of people and a beautiful setting. It was amazing. We shot up North just outside Belfast and on the Isle of Man and it was just a great time.” It was while on set that Evans and Andrea Corr started a relationship that lasted for four years. Was it strange to date the singer in the height of her fame? “Again it’s like a natural progression… you start going out with someone and then you don’t make a big song and dance about it, you just get on with it,” he says, before cutting himself off. “I don’t really want to focus on that to be honest. Let’s move on to the next question.” Thankfully, the next question is about Endeavour. Was Evans a Morse fan? He answers honestly: “Truth be told… I was working away at the time in the US and my agent gave me a call and said ‘what do you think about this?’ I said ‘I don’t know what I think about it’.” At this stage, Evans was yet to receive a script, so he went back to the source material — Colin Dexter’s Morse novels, which the TV show was based on. “I hadn’t really seen Morse in any of the incarnations so I bought the books because I think your imagination is the best place to start.” Intrigued by the part, he returned to Britain and started work on Endeavour, but he was adamant that he would be playing Morse on his own terms — this wasn’t going to be any John Thaw imitation. “I was clear that if an impression was what they were after then they should look elsewhere. If you just do that then you aren’t doing anything interesting. I had the good fortune that all the creators were on the same page.” Playing a legendary character like Morse wasn’t daunting, he says. “I never even thought of it to be honest. When you are working you can’t be thinking about that kind of stuff. Whatever has come before, you have to come at it with fresh eyes… it was only when we made it and everyone started asking me questions that I thought about it.” Unsurprisingly, as Morse is such an iconic British TV character, the series has attracted media attention, which I doubt Evans has enjoyed. “I actually feel incredibly grateful for the exposure,” he says, somewhat surprisingly. “If that’s what it takes in order for people to engage and watch our show, then so be it.” Evans is proud of the four new films, each shot by a different director, and co-starring Roger Allam as Detective Inspector Fred Thursday. Inspector Morse ran for 13 years and spinoff show Lewis lasted for seven series, so even at this early stage there are rumours that Endeavour might turn into something more, but Evans is coy about what might happen. “I was glad that the first one went down well and I hope these ones do too. Each of them is a great story well told in itself. If this is it, then that’s enough.” His career to date has seen him on stage, the big and small screen and Evans says he has been lucky in this regard. “To be honest, the medium isn’t important, if it’s a really interesting part and a really interesting character, if it’s a radio play or a stage play then I’m happy either way, just as long as I can keep working… if I can keep shaking things up then I’m happy.” Asked about his plans for the coming months, he just says: “It’s been a really full on year so I’m just going to hang out.” Evans gives little away, but comes across as driven, intelligent, serious, taciturn and occasionally terse… he might just be more like Morse than he knows. On portraying the younger Morse… We have tried to show someone who is slightly out of joint with the world he is in. He does have a talent for this particular line of work but he finds it difficult to get over things from his past and move on. As a result of that he’s trapped a lot in his head, which is both a great and terrible thing. A great thing because you have these tiny details of people and crimes and Endeavour has space in his head to ruminate and pay attention to those, which ultimately brings justice to the stories we’ve created. By the same token in his personal life, he finds it difficult to move on in a relationship and suffers with social awkwardness. He’s still trying to find his feet. I also think that the flip side to being tenacious is the feeling of being superior and more intelligent than the people around him. On why he thinks the public love Morse so much… With the films that were made with John Thaw, I think that it was a combination of an interesting character played by a very charismatic actor. As a detective, he has that combination of imagination, intellect and curiosity. With our films it’s very much still forming. We have to tell a great story and tell it really well. But all the credit is due to Colin Dexter. None of us can take credit for Endeavour Morse apart from Colin. We do our thing but the idea of sitting at your kitchen counter and creating a character — that’s really special. He’s very pleased and grateful with what we try to bring to Endeavour. That makes me happy. On Morse’s relationship with Fred Thursday (played by Roger Allam)… It’s easy to say it’s a father/son relationship but it’s more interesting than that. Thursday is somebody whose time and way of working is about to change. If you throw on top of that this guy who hasn’t got a relationship with his father, Thursday feels he has something to impart to Endeavour. Thursday sees the potential in him but also that capacity to screw it up. If you’re mentoring someone, they are the ones who need slightly more attention — the ones you think can be brilliant if they just stop screwing it up. With brilliance alone, you’ll just rise to the top. But if you do need a guiding hand, those more complicated people are definitely more interesting. On the production… The 1960s setting is very authentic. It’s lovely seeing the girls dressed up and the chaps in suits. It’s good for a story to have a strong style. The four directors each have their very own take on how it should look and although we’ve had the same production and costumes designers, each one has had a different spin. It adds something to it. Also Oxford is a very special place — the architecture, the streets, the people walking around. Endeavour continues on ITV this Sunday (April 28) at 8pm.
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By Keith Watson for Metro.co.uk
TV review: Endeavour (ITV) offered a tantalising glimpse of the man behind the mask. Endeavour treads such familiar ground, echoing the sleuthing spires of Lewis and, of course, Inspector Morse, that you might suspect it would struggle to carve its own identity. Yet, though last night was only the second episode, more than a year since its pilot, it instantly feels like a classic addition to the detective genre. It might be a stretch to make the genetic connection between Shaun Evans and John Thaw, the bookends of Morse’s life, but there’s something in Evans’s distracted introversion as Morse the younger that connects to Morse the elder. The sense that life will inevitably turn out to be vaguely disappointing, saved only by personal infatuations, is already tapping out as a coda on Morse’s shoulder. The format is familiar to the detective genre, last night’s murder spree culminating in the device of having the ingenious sleuth – Morse – unravel the seemingly disparate clues, much to the consternation of those who had doubted him throughout. But it was such a clever denouement, involving hymn numbers, the Periodic Table and crossword clues, that it felt surprisingly fresh. There were strong hints of Morse’s fractured childhood littered throughout, his impassioned championing of a young mother’s battle to get her son back – her family had taken him from her on the grounds that she was unfit – being a case in point. His boss DI Thursday, played with indulgent aplomb by Roger Allam, was worried that Morse was letting his heart rule his head. ‘There’s a child in the middle of this being kept from its mother – if that’s a blind spot, then so be it,’ declared Morse, offering a rare glimpse of the man behind the mask. It made you want to see more. Endeavour: Shaun Evans - "I'm getting better at the opera but no better at the crosswords"4/14/2013 As the ITV drama returns, we talk to its lead actor about Morse's passions and why the detective is destined to remain an outsider in the Oxford police force.
By David Brown, Radio Times Endeavour Morse is back and, as Shaun Evans explains, he’s as cerebral and complex as ever. Here, the actor talks about the challenges the young Oxford detective faces during his four new cases: In the pilot, we saw Endeavour on the verge of resigning. So is he destined to remain an outsider in this new series? Yes. His mind works in a specific way, which is useful for solving crimes, yet being in Oxford and in the police force is not the best environment for him. But I don’t think he would know what would be best for him – some people are just like that though, aren’t they? Slightly out of joint wherever they go. Whatever he was doing it would never be perfect. What do you think has made him turn out this way? Well, there are those in life who can experience things and just deal with them and move on. Others can’t and they can become quite melancholic, pensive people and that’s what makes this particular person interesting. He’s lost his mum, he has a funny relationship with women and a strange relationship with his dad, to his education in Oxford and therefore to his place in the world. That’s an engaging thing to watch and certainly one of the interesting things about the part for me. When I read Colin Dexter’s original books, I thought it was very telling that Morse only allows people to call him by his surname. He’s saying that he doesn’t want personal, first-hand relationships with people. It’s fascinating that he’s got everyone at arm’s length. We get to meet PC Strange in the opening episode, who Morse fans know will eventually overtake him and become his boss. What does that say about Endeavour’s character? Endeavour isn’t someone who is immediately destined for greatness. If you really pay attention to the story, you’ll see that we’re drip fed things about his past that offer clues about the nature of his character. And then in the last episode, Morse has to go back to his family home to see his dad. I don’t want to spoil it, but his dad is on his deathbed and you get to glimpse the relationship that Endeavour has with his stepmother, his sister and his father. In the last half hour of that final episode, there’s a very clear indication of why this person is the way he is. It suddenly makes sense. How good is your knowledge of crosswords, opera and classic cars? I’m getting better at the opera, but no better at the crosswords. I’m a good driver, though – I won’t have it said that I’m not! It’s a beautiful car to drive, temperamental like all good things are, but so well made. It’s one of the great things about playing a character from this time period. The suits are well made, the cars are beautiful – everything has just got a good quality about it. Would you do another series of Endeavour if it were offered to you? Yeah. It’s a lovely job, but what I’m not doing is being complacent about this series. So I’m not really thinking about more episodes. I feel like I’ve fulfilled the task I was charged with. They gave me four scripts and I’ve done everything in my power to bring them alive. And that’s the same for everyone – the writer Russell Lewis, the directors, the cast. We all put a lot of energy and effort into it. So I hope that it gets a good audience and that it’s well received. But I’m not going to ask for anything more at this stage. By JAMES RAMPTON - Sunday Express
SHAUN Evans returns as the young Inspector Morse in a brand new series of Endeavour. Between scenes, Roger Allam is siting in a freezing cowshed in the remotest part of the Oxfordshire countryside, discussing ITV's new drama Endeavour. It begins a full series this week afer a hugely successful pilot last year, which atracted an audience of 8.2 million, making it the most watched single film on any channel in the last five years. The actor admits that he initially had concerns about making this prequel to the enormously popular Inspector Morse, which starred the late John Thaw in the title role. "When we made the pilot, I was worried that people would say, 'Never go back. Morse should be untouchable'," says Roger, who plays the fatherly Detective Inspector Fred Thursday, mentor to the young, troubled detective Endeavour Morse (Shaun Evans). "But fortunately they did like it. So here we are in this lovely cowshed in Oxfordshire. The sheer glamour of it takes my breath away!" Roger, who has also featured in The Tick Of It and Parade's End, goes on to assess why Endeavour struck such a chord. "Audiences really liked the father-son relationship between Morse and Thursday. They also connected with Shaun's magnetic sense of an inner life. He brilliantly conveys Morse's internal turmoil," he says. "You get the sense this man is someone who's been hurt and uses his learning as a defence against that hurt and against his sense of failure because he didn't complete his education." The new series also stars John Taw's daughter, Abigail, as the feisty journalist Dorothea Frazil, and Sean Rigby as the young PC Strange (a character played as an older man by James Grout in Inspector Morse). When a young secretarial student is found dead at home in the frst episode, Morse jeopardises his relationship with Thursday by refusing to accept the preliminary diagnosis of "heart atack". Shaun says that while paying tribute to the original, the producers of Endeavour hope to create a completely self-sufficient drama. "I feel incredibly grateful that the response to the pilot was enough to allow us to do more," he adds. "But now everything is up for grabs. I don't want us to feel like we can rely on a ready-made audience. It is our duty to tell the best story in the best way we can." Abigail concurs that Endeavour must be an entirely new proposition. "I didn't worry about tarnishing the memory of the original, because this is set in the 1960s when Morse was still a young man. If they had remade the original series, I would have felt odd. I would have had a problem geting my head around that. But exploring the story before the original makes it something completely fresh." Shaun adds, "If you read the books, you know that Morse is a troubled, unhappy character who ultimately dies alone. What is interesting is portraying how we travel from this point to that point. You can't get there if everything goes smoothly for him. He has to find life difficult. "Look at the pilot. There you have a chap who lost his mum very early on. He then meets a girl who rejects him, before he meets another woman he has a crush on from far away. But again it doesn't work out. As a result, it's hard for him to be open to a relationship." Endeavour, on which the original Inspector Morse novelist Colin Dexter acts as a consultant, contains the sort of ingenuity we have come to expect from this character. For example, Abigail explains her name."Frazil means a kind of ice. So Dorothea Frazil is 'D. Ice', or 'Thaw'. If you look for them, there are a lot of crossword clues in Endeavour!" Roger is lucky enough to have appeared in an episode of Inspector Morse - Death Is Now My Neighbour, in 1997 and fondly recalls working opposite the great John Taw. "John was a lovely man," says Roger. "I was really inexperienced in front of the camera at the time, and it was very instructive to watch someone so incredibly at ease." Refecting upon what her late father might have thought of Endeavour, Abigail says, "The series is a strange paradox for me. It's only happening because dad is not around. I'd love him to be here to help and make me laugh. "Dad would appreciate this show. He'd say to us, 'Great work, you lucky things!'" Endeavour, Sunday April 14, 8pm, ITV |
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