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24 September 2014
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Messiah
Hugo Speer in Messiah

Messiah IV - The Harrowing

Starts Sunday 28 August at 9.30pm on Ö÷²¥´óÐã ONE



Hugo Speer as Jack Price


After 15 years in London, actor Hugo Speer, who plays police officer and grieving dad Jack Price in Messiah, has swapped the fast pace of city life for the peace and quiet of his native Yorkshire.

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"I moved back up to a little village near Harrogate in Yorkshire for a number of reasons last year. I enjoyed my time in London but I started getting this hankering for some peace and quiet, fresh air and some greenery," he says.

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"I wanted to buy my first home but didn't want to buy in London and my father's death at the beginning of last year spurred me on to move back home and make sure mum was okay, had support and knew I was around for her."

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It also meant that he could finally pursue his love of walking and birds of prey - a passion he developed inspired by a school project years previously.

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"I've loved birds of prey ever since I was at school and have always wanted to get into falconry," he says.

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"I love their majesty, power and grace and there is a falconry quite close to where I live so I will probably go there to train; although ideally I should be galloping across the moors on a big steed with my big glove, my falcon and the wind in my hair… a very romantic image.

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"I love my big stomps through the Dales," he adds, "but I don't see that as a hobby, it is just something I love doing."

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No sooner had he moved back than he was jetting off to Mozambique to film the role of Simon Broome, alongside Nicole Kidman, in the big screen movie, The Interpreter. The role as Kidman's brother is short and sweet though.

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"You need to get your popcorn in early as I get killed right at the start - otherwise you miss me," he laughs.

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"I do, however, appear in photographs and flashbacks throughout the film."

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Moving back to Yorkshire also means that Speer can at long last pick up his guitar and saxophone, which he's owned for three years, but due to work commitments he just hasn't had time for lessons.

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It also gives him an opportunity to follow his favourite football team.

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"I support Leeds who, it has to be said, have had a traumatic three years - but I remain loyal to them," he claims.

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"With a marriage you can get a divorce but with a football team you are stuck with them for life - but that's okay and they'll be back on form soon."

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Speer was also a fan of Messiah and when the script arrived he didn't think twice about accepting the part of Jack Price.

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"All of the Messiahs to date have been beautifully written, very dark and intense, and I just knew that this script was a great one and it clearly has good pedigree as well with Ken and Neil.

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"It was a great cast of people with high quality scripts so it wasn't a difficult choice, really."

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Jack Price is a Detective Sergeant working in CID who is friendly with Red and his team.

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After the suicide of his eldest daughter Isabel - a university student - Jack's life and marriage begin to fall apart.

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"Isabel commits suicide three weeks prior to the start of the first episode but Jack doesn't deal with it at all and suffers from incredible guilt, as all parents do when they lose a child, particularly to suicide… He feels a huge sense of inadequacy and failure," he says.

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"He turns to drink and finds it incredibly hard to communicate with his wife Rachel, (played by Helen McCrory), who is the Chief Pathologist in the mortuary.

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"The relationship between Jack and Rachel is tenuous and strained," he observes. "These two people are dealing with their grief in different ways and Rachel needs Jack to look after his two remaining children and her but he can't.

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"They have moments of closeness but Jack's doubts about Isabel's death pushes them apart."

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Following the string of murders that are happening with alarming regularity, Jack becomes convinced that the chief suspect in the murder investigation actually murdered his daughter Isabel.

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When a link is made between Isabel's university and the horrific death of a fellow student, Jack becomes obsessed and dogmatic with his theory.

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"He has a desperate need to blame Isabel's death on someone else in order to make it easier to deal with… a need to not feel that guilt or sense of failure," he says.

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When researching the role, Speer found he had to dig deep within himself to find the grief that sudden and tragic death can bring.

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"I spoke to a friend of the family whose son had committed suicide, but it was so very sensitive and deeply personal that I really didn't want to intrude.

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"Because I don't have children myself it is very hard to imagine what it is like to lose a child and the thought of losing a child through suicide is incomprehensible.

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"So I really did what most actors do and just plunged into my imagination to come up with anything that could link me to that degree of pain.

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"With dad's death, because he had been ill for a long time, it was a relief when he went and I was able to remember him as fit and vibrant instead of not having any quality of life.

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"So whilst I was deeply saddened I really felt he had been set free and it was better to remember him like that.

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"Like all the other characters in Messiah, Jack's journey is a really painful one. Everyone goes through their own hell in order to come out the other side, just as Dante wrote in The Inferno," he observes.

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He does confess to not having read the whole text and despite delving into it here and there during his research he wished for some helpful aides.

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"I could have been doing with one of those handy Brodie's notes on Dante that we used to have at school," he laughs, "but unfortunately I couldn't find one."

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Having recently appeared in the Ö÷²¥´óÐã's The Rotters' Club and currently filming the role of Sergeant George in Bleak House for Ö÷²¥´óÐã drama, Speer remains one of the UK's busiest young actors.

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But he does remain committed to his NO STRINGS charity work which was set up by pals Johnny McGlade and Neil Morrissey.

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"Our seminal project was landmine awareness in Afghanistan and we got the best support from Cathy Mullen and Michael Frith, who are two of the original Jim Henson's puppet team.

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"We also had a large Afghan community who helped write the puppet play, which was loosely based on Pinnochio. However, with the project ready to go, the most frustrating thing is that we can't get into Kabul or Harat because it is too dangerous.

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"So, with that on hold for the time being, we have another HIV Aids awareness programme underway for Africa and are busy fund-raising at the moment. Perhaps the falconry and guitar will have to wait for a while," he laughs.


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