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24 September 2014
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A Class ApartÌý
Nathaniel Parker in A Class Apart

A Class Apart comes to Ö÷²¥´óÐã One



Nathaniel Parker plays Anthony


Nathaniel Parker, the actor who plays Anthony, the conceited headmaster of a prestigious private school in Ö÷²¥´óÐã One's gripping new one-off drama, A Class Apart, recalls how tough his own boarding school experience was at the start.

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"I remember on my first night at boarding school, as a young boy, I sobbed and sobbed and, to make matters worse, everyone else in my dormitory was sobbing, too!"

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Fortunately, the young Nathaniel's life soon became a lot happier.

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"It was a Quaker school, and it made me much more independent," recollects the actor, who has won millions of fans as the suave Inspector Lynley in Ö÷²¥´óÐã One's hit series of the same name. "The school gave me the ability to deal with my own feelings and not to rely on other people all the time. You learned to stand up for yourself and say what you believed in. Because of the Quaker influence, you also learned how to help others. All in all, the school provided me with so many invaluable lessons."

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The experience of such a school also stood Nathaniel in very good stead when it came to portraying Anthony. The arrogant headmaster of the upmarket public school, Haltham, sees an opportunity to further his career when he watches a local news bulletin about Candy (Jessie Wallace). She is a single mother who has chained herself to the gates of a good, local state secondary school in an attempt to persuade the authorities to admit her son, Kyle.

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With his eye, as ever, on the main chance, Anthony bets his scheming deputy, Charles, that he can turn Kyle from a failing "chav" into a respectable public schoolboy at Haltham. But in taking on this ill-advised wager, and playing with the future of a young boy, Anthony gets more than he bargained for from both Kyle and his feisty mother, and unleashes a mighty culture clash.

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Nathaniel says that he instantly "got" the character of Anthony. "I immediately understood him," reveals the successful, 44-year-old actor, whose brother, Oliver, is a well-regarded movie director, responsible for such critically acclaimed films as An Ideal Husband, The Importance Of Being Earnest and Othello (in which Nathaniel played Cassio and his wife, Anna Patrick, played Emilia).

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"Anthony starts off living very happily in that public school world. It's a universe surrounded by walls – it's like existing within a bubble. He's been at boarding school since the age of six and thinks, 'this is my world, I'm very good at it. People come to me with their problems because I understand it'. It's another version of Little Britain. But it is because of this very arrogance that Anthony eventually comes unstuck…"

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Nathaniel, the proud father of two daughters and a keen rider who owns shares in a couple of promising race horses, says he was delighted by the experience of acting opposite Jessie, previously best known as the vibrant Kat Slater in EastEnders.

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"She was fabulous!" beams the actor. "I had never met her or even seen her act before but I was so struck by her when we started working together. We immediately hit it off and developed a great relationship in which we wanted to help each other."

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The actor, who has also starred in Bleak House, The Private Life Of Samuel Pepys, Vanity Fair, Far From The Madding Crowd and Poirot, continues: "In seven years on EastEnders, Jessie clearly learned a hell of a lot and, by God, was she good! She has this incredible energy and sexiness that just blew me away. One day, John Yorke, the Ö÷²¥´óÐã drama executive, came down on set, and I said to him, 'Jessie should be doing the classics'. I was just bowled over by her."

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Nathaniel, who will soon be seen in two Hollywood movies - Flawless, opposite Michael Caine and Demi Moore, and Stardust, alongside Robert De Niro, Sienna Miller, Ian McKellen, Michelle Pfeiffer and Peter O'Toole - is equally enthusiastic about Tony Grounds, the writer of A Class Apart, who has, in the past, penned such memorable dramas as When I'm 64 and Births, Marriages And Deaths.

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"I've always wanted to work with Tony," beams the actor. "When I started acting as a 14-year-old, Tony wrote his first play for our group. He was just 17, and my dad said to him, 'be a writer'. That changed Tony's life. He writes really imaginative stuff, and I've been waiting for him to write me a part for years. He would joke that he refused to do so until I admitted to dyeing my hair!

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"So when I saw him at my older brother's 50th birthday party last year, I showed him my greying hair, and a month later I got this script from him. I was hoping for a gritty Ray Winstone/Mark Strong-type role, but it turned out to be this ruddy posh headmaster! It's a great part, though."

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Nathaniel says Grounds has hit the topical nail on the head in A Class Apart by tackling the issue of how to get your children into the best possible school. "As a parent, it absolutely struck a chord. At the moment, my wife and I are spending most of our waking hours talking about where our daughters should go to school next."

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Finally, the myriad Inspector Lynley aficionados will be overjoyed to learn that Nathaniel and his co-star, Sharon Small, have already shot two more episodes and are hoping to make more later this year. "I think the series works so well because it's based on novels written by Elizabeth George, an American who has a very clear opinion about British society," Nathaniel reflects. "It's like the Ö÷²¥´óÐã's equivalent of Inspector Morse and does really well all over the world. In fact, it's one of the Ö÷²¥´óÐã's top-selling programmes right across the globe. It must hit a chord."

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He closes with an anecdote that neatly sums up Inspector Lynley's global popularity, as the show is dubbed into different languages around the world: "We were shooting in Trafalgar Square in central London the other day and people from all over the world were crowding round me. It was lovely, but funny as well. Many of them said, 'it's amazing to hear your voice at last, we've never heard it before!'"

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