Each Beach: Interview With Martine McCutcheon
This is an interview with Martine McCutcheon on her new ITV1 show, Echo Beach.
“Susan is a very unhappily married woman who has played everything pretty safe in her life. She’s quite repressed and she’s got all these emotions in her head waiting to explode. But there was only ever one man who could make her head explode, and that was Daniel Marrack. He comes back and a repressed woman about to explode is sight to see.
“Susan is quite an integral character really - she’s the main reason why all the problems happen. When Mark, Daniel and Susan were younger they were very close. They were like the three musketeers. However, as they got older Daniel and Mark naturally developed feelings for Susan. Daniel’s a lot more laid back and so treated her more like a friend while not realising his true feelings, whereas Mark acted on his straight away. Unfortunately Susan doesn’t think Daniel would ever want to be with her, so she marries Mark and has an affair with Daniel, the consequences of which are catastrophic.
“The amount of times Susan says “I can’t talk about it, it’s complicated” is just so frustrating. You want to scream “be true to yourself woman - get some backbone”. But she’s been moulded into something over the years, subtly controlled to the point that she’s almost forgotten who she is and has accepted that life is a massive compromise. Susan is really the most co-dependant person you could ever meet. She is only fuelled by other people or situations. She’s got this passion in her for Daniel that she just cannot turn off, however much she tries. She feels so guilty about everything, the woman is riddled with guilt. The other sad thing is that Mark really does love her. He is controlling - he has come from nothing and has become like the Godfather of the area but he can’t help himself. He can’t bear to lose her.
“There is a fantastic scene when Susan finally has the permission she’s been looking for to make herself feel better about the fact she’s in love with someone else. It’s all done in one shot and we didn’t have one aeroplane go over it - it just felt like magic. Before we knew it they said ‘cut’ that’s when you know you’ve got it. We were in a different zone. It was so lovely to be given that sort of freedom of acting in a TV show: to almost do a theatre piece, with no cuts, no changes of shots, just pages and pages of dialogue.
“At the end of the series Susan finally says ”I’m not going to feel guilty for wanting to be true to myself – I want to be the woman I was before I became the mother and wife”. I’d love her to be true to herself if we went to a second series, to become a different woman to the point where the kids are a bit freaked out. That would be really good fun - almost like having a mid-life crisis.
“What attracted me to the role is that I’ve never played an older character before. In the show I have grown up kids - in real life I’d have been 10 years old when I had them. Jason has two teenagers as well and said “I can’t believe they’re meant to be my kids - I still feel like them” and I’d say “well how do you think I feel”. When I was first brought in to discuss the part, I said “the only thing I’m concerned about is that I don’t look old enough - I’ve got quite ‘cheeky’ cheeks and a girlie face”, which sounds like it’s a real benefit, but obviously not in this case. But they said that, at the end of the day, it’s a heightened reality and even the harassed mothers are supposed look fabulous. And they can always make some tongue in cheek reference to my age in Moving Wallpaper. Boundaries are being pushed and the public will know that and be in on the game.
“People are so media savvy now. I think it’s great because you’ve got a show for the cynics of Echo Beach: everything is answered and there is nothing people can say that’s not already been said in Moving Wallpaper. It’s also great that we as actors send ourselves up - at first I thought that was quite a dangerous concept because I’m going to be ‘Martine McCutcheon’ but not saying my own words. It’s almost like having an alter-ego. All the things you’d like to be able to have a laugh with as ‘Martine’ could be completely misconstrued, but you get to be another ‘Martine’ in Moving Wallpaper, which was brilliant fun. I loved appearing in Moving Wallpaper - my only gripe was you have double the workload. Just as you think “oh brilliant I’ve got the day off” the Moving Wallpaper producer would say “oh by the way - you’re in the back of shot looking at your fan mail. It’s the first shot of the day: a five o’ clock pick up!” But you’ve got to be able to laugh at yourself. You’ve got so little control about what is said about you that if you didn’t have a great sense of humour, you’d be in trouble. As an actress I’ve never been under any illusion – you are in a bit of a meat market. You are a product.”













January 5th, 2008 at 4:22 pm
[...] Eastenders actress, Martine McCutcheon has revealed that she had serious doubts about accepting her role in new ITV soap, Echo Beach when [...]