The Enfield Haunting

The Enfield Haunting: Matthew Macfadyen Interview (Sky Press Pack)

Matthew Macfadyen

CHARACTER: Guy Lyon Playfair, 42 PROFILE: Paranormal investigator with experience in exorcisms


What attracted you to the project?
Timothy Spall and Rosie Cavaliero, both of whom I’ve worked with before. I worked with Tim on a Stephen Poliakoff drama called Perfect Strangers, and I did Little Dorrit with Rosie for the BBC. It always comes down to the script, though, which was well-written, fascinating and properly scary.

Were they the sort of scripts you could just rattle through?
That’s my litmus test, how quickly I can get through them. You know it’s a chore when you think, oh, I could be doing something else right now.

The Enfield Haunting isn’t just a jolty story about a mean poltergeist, either, is it?
No, it’s nuanced and beautifully written. It’s not a documentary, but a dramatic retelling, so there are bits which are teased and pushed in certain directions for the purposes of telling a story. I love everything to do with Maurice and his daughter. If it hadn’t been so delicately handled, it could have been quite naff.

How much did you know about the Hodgson case before you signed on?
I didn’t know anything about it and, stupidly, I didn’t read The House is Haunted, the book by Guy Lyon Playfair that the series is based on. I came straight from Ripper Street on to this and was a bit frazzled. They kindly organised for me to meet the real Guy, though, which was interesting.

What did you make of him?
He’s in his 80s now and absolutely fascinating. It’s always daunting when you play someone who is real, although I’m not doing an impersonation, that’s not the gig. I’m just taking what I fancy. Saying that, I hope Guy isn’t too horrified at what he sees. I’ll have to write a letter of apology.

The Hodgsons’ story is very divisive. Some people believe them, others think they made the whole thing up. What’s your take?
I have an open mind. I think the sensible stance to take in this situation is to be agnostic and go, I just don’t know. I’ve never experienced anything like it, but I know plenty of people who have and they’re not gullible. There was definitely something going on, it’s just unexplained. I’m certainly not in the ‘that’s all cobblers’ camp. That would be very short-sighted.

Going back to your character, how would you describe Guy?
My Guy is not the same as the real Guy. He’s an odd bod, eccentric and posh. We wanted there to be a contrast with Maurice, so even though he’s quite geeky, there’s also something raffish about him. He rocks up in a velvet jacket and long hair. He’s not brilliant socially, though, especially with the kids. The real Guy was very fond of Janet and the rest of the family and he became good friends with Maurice.

What is Guy and Maurice’s relationship like?
It’s fairly antagonistic at the beginning because Guy comes in under the pretence that he’s helping the Hodgsons out when, in fact, he’s been sent by the SPR, the Society for Psychical Research, to debunk it. Then he realises that something is indeed going on.

How impressed have you been with the younger members of the cast, especially Eleanor?
We were talking about this the other day, the grown-ups that is. Eleanor and Fern [Deacon], who plays Margaret, are superb. They make me feel like an old ham. .

Did you find any aspects of the shoot particularly challenging?
It hasn’t been challenging, it’s been fun because the writing is so good and you’re working with fantastic actors. Big scenes can be tough, like the time we shot a seven-page scene, but, then again, you tend to overthink shorter scenes. If you’re allowed to have a three or four-minute take, it feels like you’re doing a play. You forget the camera.

Talking of the camera, how did you feel about the man behind it, director Kristoffer Nyholm?
He’s a great fella and has got the loveliest energy about him. You can tell he actually likes actors. He’s interested and wants to talk. The shoot never felt rushed, like we were being shoehorned into a certain block of filming

ON DEMAND Episode 1 will be available to download on the morning of Monday 3 May. Episodes 2 and 3, meanwhile, can be watched on demand after the series opener has aired on Sky Living

Learn more about The Enfield Haunting which begins airing on Sky Living, Sunday 3rd May.

The Enfield Haunting: Begins Sunday, 3rd May on Sky Living

Sky Living has begun promoting the 3 part television series, The Enfield Haunting which will begin airing on Sunday 3rd May.  You can learn a lot more about the real life events that occurred in Enfield in the 1970's by visiting the official website.

You can also visit this youtube playlist and see the various videos and trailers that have recently been released.

The Enfield Haunting: Coming to Sky Living May 2015

Empire Magazine has an article in its April issue about Sky Living's upcoming spooky The Enfield Haunting which also states that the show will air in May.

Directed by The Killing's Kristoffer Nyholm, Sky Living's three-parter is a reawakening of one of Britain's most notorious paranormal events.  In the summer of 1977 more than 1,500 incidents were witnessed in one home by the press, police and [Timothy] Spall's psychic sleuth, Maurice Grosse.  It is very much, Britain's Amityville.

"The supernatural is always scarier in a normal setting," says Spall. "This isn't a Gothic castle, it's 1970s Enfield...  The story reminds me of a kitchen-sink Crucible: instead of getting rid of the thing, the 'helpers' end up exacerbating it.  The script scared the hell out of me-- I'd be very surprised if the show doesn't do the same."

The Enfield Haunting: First Photos

The first new photos from the new Sky showing of The Enfield Hauntinghave been released.  The show will star Timothy Spall, Juliet Stevenson and Matthew Macfadyen.

The show focuses on the ghostly happenings at a house in Enfield in the 1970's.  Matthew Macfadyen plays Guy Lyon Playfair, a sceptical but experienced investigator.

The Enfield Haunting will air on Sky Living in the spring.

For more photos, visit Radio Times.

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