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Beyond the Brushstrokes: Chatting to Chris Harper

We spoke to Chris Harper, Coronation Street and Call the Midwife actor, about his upcoming role in ART.

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Just weeks before the curtain rises on ART at Norwich Theatre Royal, we had the opportunity to speak with Chris Harper, who plays the role of Serge. The Coronation Street and Call the Midwife star discussed his experience working on the production, his love for the stage, and his advice for aspiring actors. 

How would you describe ART, in a nutshell? 

It’s a brilliant and hilarious play by Yasmina Reza about three friends who discover they don’t see eye to eye in the way they assumed. They’re trying to get to grips with where they stand with each other, after all their shared beliefs have to be reexamined [when one of them pays a lot of money for an all-white painting]. So it becomes about working out how you stay friends with someone you realise is completely different to how you thought they were. 

It premiered 30 years ago. Is it still as relevant today?  

I first saw it when I was in my 20s, and roared with laughter, but now I’m in my 40s I realise I’ve got friends who voted Brexit, or don’t believe in vaccinations, or are into astrology. But that’s ok, because it’s going to have to be. We’ve been through a really divisive time recently and I think it’s a great moment to be re-examining this play and laughing at ourselves. It’s a play that brings people together, and I think everyone will recognise themselves in the characters. 

You’ve done a lot of TV work recently, so are you excited to be coming back to the stage? 

 I can’t wait. I’m really looking forward to playing to a live audience again. When Tom [Hackney, producer] asked me about doing it, I read the script and just sat in a cafe giggling. Then he told me who else they were casting – Aden Gillett and Seann Walsh – and they sounded great. So in the end I just couldn’t say no. 

Your character in Coronation Street, Nathan, was involved in some very heavy storylines. Is it nice to be doing something at the lighter end of the dramatic spectrum? 

That’s a good way of putting it! And yes, it’s very true. The Corrie storyline [which involved child grooming] changed my life, and introduced me to some amazing people. When they told me Nathan was going to come out of prison, I rang round the charities I was involved with to check they were happy with me bringing the character back. But they said absolutely, because they needed the oxygen that the storyline had brought them. It was a very emotional moment. 

What prompted you to become an actor in the first place? 

I was very shy as a child, and then did some stupid things as a teenager. But I feel like a fell in with the right crowd at just the right time. They were all really into amateur dramatics, so I began acting. I won an award, which felt like a real pat on the back at a pretty dark time. I subsequently studied English and art and trained as a teacher, but then realised I was going to end up a very unhappy middle aged man, so thought I’d better go back to the acting. 

The fact you studied art is interesting given the subject of the play 

I think the art world can be frustrating to people outside of it because it seems to be less about talent and more about who can talk the biggest talk. I used to come back from my degree and read Jilly Cooper novels and things like that, just to get myself out of that headspace. I took myself very seriously. One of my works was actually an all-white car seat, which is not that dissimilar to the painting in the play. 

Does it help you to relate to your character, Serge?  

I think Serge is also very serious about the world of art, only not as an artist but as a collector, using words like ‘deconstruction’. I get why he’s doing that, but I also understand why his friends call him out on it. That conversation is one I have regularly with my best friend, who’s a computer coder. He’s the loveliest man you’ll ever meet, but my God he can spot when I’ve climbed up my own behind! Like Serge, I definitely would be in to the white painting. 

Do you think art was a good influence on your acting? 

 Yes and no. I think art is very cerebral, whereas as an actor you have to be much more in your body. So as much as you understand it, and think about the text, it’s also vital to be sharing the story physically – as the old adage goes, show don’t tell. My first step at drama school was to be taken out of my head and into my dance shoes.  

You also teach alongside your acting – what advice do you give to aspiring actors? 

Keep it in your body, and read lots. And develop a side hustle! 

How do you unwind away from the stage? 

I love reading, and at the end of the ART tour I’m going on holiday to a location that was recommended to me by someone on Call the Midwife. I’ve been assured it’s somewhere that my wife and I can sit on the beach and read, while the kids play in the sea. I just thought, ‘that sounds ideal’. 

ART is at Norwich Theatre Royal between 12 – 14 Sep. For more information or to book, visit norwichtheatre.org or call the box office on 01603 630 000. 

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