Happy Valley performance 'born of fear', says star

Lancashire was formally made a Commander of the British Empire, on Tuesday
- Published
Bafta-winning actress Sarah Lancashire has said her award-winning performance in gritty TV drama Happy Valley was "born out of fear".
Lancashire, 60, who rose to fame as barmaid Raquel Wolstenhulme in Coronation Street, won two leading actress Baftas for playing no-nonsense Sergeant Catherine Cawood in the BBC series.
Her decades-long "brilliant and intangible" working relationship with writer Sally Wainwright influenced her role, but she said fear was key to her performance.
Discussing the role at Windsor Castle on Tuesday, after being formally made a Commander of the British Empire (CBE), Lancashire said: "That was just born out of fear, abject fear, of feeling quite off-piste.
"Literally it was a leap of faith, jumping off the cliff at midnight in the dark.
"But knowing that somebody has the confidence in you and the belief in you - Wainwright is deeply persuasive as an individual, which I absolutely, really admire, I'm very grateful, always."
Lancashire starred in Coronation Street from 1991 until 1996, appearing in more than 260 episodes.
She and Wainwright first met when they were "cutting their teeth" on the soap opera.
The pair later collaborated on the BBC comedy-drama Last Tango In Halifax, for which Lancashire won her first Bafta in 2014 for her supporting role.
They worked together again on Happy Valley, which ran from 2014 to 2023.
Asked what made playing Sgt Cawood so terrifying, Lancashire said: "The setting of it, being asked to play something which I had no knowledge of at all - absolutely no knowledge.
"And knowing that the level of research that was available to me was going to be quite limited in the time available.
"But in actual fact - as Wainwright always said - it wasn't a procedural drama, it was not a police drama, it was a family."
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- Published10 September 2023