Interview: Reece Shearsmith Discusses The New Series Of Inside No. 9

Interview: Reece Shearsmith Discusses The New Series Of Inside No. 9

Steve Pemberton and Reece Shearsmith return with an eighth series of their award-winning anthologies.

From the top deck of a London bus to a remote lakeside cabin, from online dating to late-night summonings, all life (and death) is here. Thrills, spills, chills and kills from the fertile minds of Shearsmith and Pemberton.

The stellar line-up for series eight includes, Amanda Abbington (Sherlock, Mr Selfridge), Anita Dobson (EastEnders), Asim Chaudhry (People Just Do Nothing), Claire Rushbrook (My Mad Fat Diary, Secrets & Lies), Frances Barber (Camille, Uncle Vanya), Leon Herbert (Salome's Last Dance, Batman), Mathew Horne (Gavin & Stacey, Bad Education) Menyee Lai (Stay Close, The Tower), Moyo Akandé (Guilt, The Cry), Robin Askwith (Bless This House, The Madame Blanc Mysteries), Samantha Spiro (Sex Education, Game of Thrones), Sheila Reid (Benidorm), Phil Daniels (House of the Dragon, Quadrophenia) and Ayda Kiiza in her first TV role.

In the first episode, Mother’s Ruin, East End villains Harry and Annie Blackwood were rotten to the core and did some truly horrible things when they were alive. What secrets have they taken to their grave? Their sons, played by Shearsmith and Pemberton, have a plan to find out. The guest stars are Anita Dobson and Phil Daniels.

Inside No. 9, Thursdays, BBC Two at 10pm. Catch up on iPlayer here.

 

Interview with Reece Shearsmith

 

What can people expect from series eight of Inside No. 9?

 

Once again, series eight is six very different stories. Some silly, some frightening, and some this time around quite gory, which is something that we haven’t done before. As always, lots of surprises, twists and turns.

 

Now you’re on series eight, does it continue to get harder coming up with brand new ideas, locations, themes?

 

Locations are the easy bit to come up with. The nine on something is the easiest part but the story and what happens, that’s everything. To come up with something now that we feel like we haven’t done before – that's getting harder. We’ve now got to be mindful that we’re not repeating ourselves or doing  the same story but not as good as past one we’ve done. It gets harder but that’s the challenge.

 

What’s it been like working with the guests starts for this series?

 

It was really nice to get very quick and very enthusiastic yeses from Anita Dobson and Phil Daniels when they said yes to Mother’s Ruin, because they’re perfect for the parts. We never write the parts with anyone in mind but when we finally came to casting it, and to get back ‘yes, we’d love to do it’ it was great. It felt really pleasing to think they were going to be bringing life to those characters and they did, so that was really thrilling. We’ve got some great people again this year.

It was great to work with Amanda Abbington again, playing my wife now on film and on the stage because we were doing a play together at the same time. Asim Chaudhry was brilliant in his episode; everyone was really brilliant and they all brought something to it. No one has ever come in and we’ve thought ‘oh that’s not how we imagined’ or if they have done that, they’ve made more of what we’ve given them, and that's always great – better than what we imagined. 

 

Do you have a favourite character you’ve played in series eight and why?

 

I quite liked the episode that's called Paraskevidekatriaphobia. It’s about a man that’s terrified of Friday the 13th, which is a real phobia, and he spends the day of Friday 13th just trying to not have anything  happen to him and as you can imagine, some things do. The escalation of that and the man's terrible day as things get worse and worse was a fun part to play. So, the part of Gareth in that episode I enjoyed doing, it was quite slapstick and I like doing physical comedy.

 

Do you think people will be surprised with what you’ve put together in these new episodes?

 

I think people will be, rightfully, excited. The idea of doing the bus episode was almost like a fan joke that we should do. People always give us ideas for number nines and the most obvious one you can probably think of is doing a number nine bus, we’d had it a lot and thought we’d go ahead with it – that'll be a fun one for people to get their head around when they finally see it.

The gore of Mothers Ruin too, and there are some that are more thoughtful and a bit more reflective and people like those ones. People loved Bernie Clifton's Dressing Room and The 12 Days of Christine, they are very moving ones. I think we’ve got some in this mix that have got that sort of feel as well – there might be sleeper hits that we can’t quite work out yet. 

Pictured: (l-r) Frances Stone (ANITA DOBSON), Reggie Stone (PHIL DANIELS), Harry (STEVE PEMBERTON), Edward (REECE SHEARSMITH)

Credit: BBC/James Stack

Interview supplied by publicists

 

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