Me and my motors: Anna Friel
Open-tops do dry my hair beautifully
Anna Friel, 29, was born in Rochdale,
Lancashire. She attended a theatre workshop in Oldham, but her career took off
when she played lesbian Beth Jordache in Channel 4’s Brookside. She courted
controversy again in the late 1990s by dating Robbie Williams and partying with
Kate Moss and has starred in films including Rogue Trader, opposite Ewan
McGregor, and A Midsummer Night’s Dream with Michelle Pfeiffer. She has a baby
daughter with fellow actor David Thewlis and lives in Windsor . Anna Friel is so
intent on waving hello when she parks her new Saab convertible that she
inadvertently backs it into a post. When she realises what’s happened she
lurches the car forward in a panic and leaps out to inspect the damage. She
breathes a sigh of relief — there’s no sign of a scratch, just a bit of wood
dust on the bumper.
“Don’t put that in the interview, I’ll die of embarrassment,” she says,
squealing with laughter. “I’m a very good driver usually. I’ve never even had so
much as a knock before.”
Blame it on a lack of sleep. Her baby daughter Gracie has been disturbing her
twice nightly for the past nine weeks. But when she picks her up and strolls
over to her favourite spot by the river in Windsor, where she lives, she looks
remarkably composed for someone who hasn’t had a full night’s rest for weeks.
Baby Gracie is the primary reason for buying the Saab 9-3 Aero. Having always
hankered after a convertible, Friel read in Which? that Saab produced the safest
model in the range she was looking at and that sealed her decision.
Born and raised in Rochdale, Friel shot to fame at age 16 playing Beth Jordache
in Brookside and bought her first car, a Peugeot 106, a year later. She moved
from soap star to sex symbol after making British television history by planting
the first on-screen lesbian kiss. When she left the series 10 years ago she
remained in the public eye for all the wrong reasons: her party-girl friendship
with Kate Moss and romantic entanglements first with Robbie Williams and then
Darren Day.
But in 2000 she moved out of London seeking a quieter life in Windsor and soon
afterwards met the recently divorced David Thewlis, an actor whose credits
include Naked, Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban and Kingdom of Heaven.
“We’re definitely going to stop taking film projects at the same time as each
other,” she says. “At least in Gracie’s early years we’re going to aim to
accompany each other on set and make sure one of us is always available to her.”
Despite winning huge success on Broadway in 1999 playing in the stage version of
Patrick Marber’s Closer (taking the part played by Natalie Portman in the film),
Anna has failed to make the kind of impact on the cinema screen that will secure
big roles from casting directors — something she hopes will change with her new
film, Goal! Someone must believe in the success of the movie because work has
begun on filming the sequel and a third instalment is planned for next year.
Friel is due to return to work in a few weeks and gossip columns have been rife
with comments about her figure and reports that she is trying to lose weight for
nude scenes in the sequel.
“It makes me so angry because there isn’t a shred of truth in what’s being
printed,” she says. “Someone asked a producer what would happen to my character
in part two, and the reply, clearly a joke, is that I’m going to be having a lot
of sex and nude scenes. The next thing I know I am being accused of being an
irresponsible role model to young women. But no one actually called me to check
whether the reports were true.”
As their first joint investment she and Thewlis split the cost of a BMW X5 three
years ago, but Thewlis is the one who drives it, leaving Friel to cope with his
older Mini. Up until now this hasn’t been a problem — she’s quite enjoyed
nipping around town in a smaller car — but since there isn’t much room for a
pram she’s been keen to switch to a larger car.
“The Saab drives really well,” she says. “I didn’t want another BMW or a
Mercedes because everyone has one of them. I never liked the old Saabs, which
were very straight, but the newer model has got sleek curves and that’s very
important to a woman.
“I used to have an MG and I love having the roof down — it’s the sexiest way to
dry your hair. But I never felt very safe in it. It was tinny and light as
though it could come off the road at any moment, so I’m relieved the Saab feels
so chunky and solid.”
She is careful, she says, to prevent her natural caution on the road (she has no
points on her licence) from extending to nagging when she is in the passenger
seat. Thewlis — whose father used to drive racing cars — knows London like the
back of his hand so won’t tolerate any advice or directions from the passenger
seat, she says.
“That’s one way guaranteed to get him cross,” she says. “At the moment we’ve got
a bit of an argument going about the indicator — I always put it on to let
drivers know I want to pull out, but he only puts it on when he actually moves
out, having waited for a space first. We debate who is right and who is wrong
and I think I’m right because I’ve done the driving test more recently.”
She is surprisingly open about intimate aspects of her life — even to the extent
of explaining why she won’t open her mouth to smile for the photographer. She is
wearing braces to close gaps in her teeth brought on by mouth sores that her
doctor has told her are due to a hormone imbalance.
“They’re really big and horrid — look,” she says, peeling back her upper lip to
reveal lumps between her teeth. “I’ve had to have them cut out without
anaesthetic four times and now they have created gaps in my teeth so I’m wearing
braces. I feel sorry for every teenager who ever had to endure them — they are
so painful.”
Nice to know that Hollywood hasn’t glossed over her northern directness.
On her CD changer
I usually choose something classical: orchestral music by Debussy, or a Bach
concerto. Driving is my thinking time and music like this doesn’t get in the
way. I’ve also got into X&Y by Coldplay, although I didn’t like it at first