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Here's why Sinéad Keenan almost turned down Unforgotten

Dubliner Sinéad Keenan almost turned down the chance to star in the ITV crime-drama series Unforgotten because she was "nervous" to replace Nicola Walker.

Keenan stars alongside Sanjeev Bhaskar in the ITV show's fifth series from next Monday, but she initially refused to read the script.

"I said, 'No, no. Thanks very much, no'," Keenan revealed.

"I said, 'Who's going to be the gob***** to follow Nicola?'"

A role to remember - Sinéad Keenan as DCI Jess James

Warning: spoiler alert!

Walker's much-loved character, Cassie Stuart, was killed off at the end of the fourth series of the hugely successful cold case murder-drama.

Thankfully, Keenan did read it, and she stars as new DCI Jess James - boss of DI Sunil 'Sunny' Khan, played by Bhaskar.

Keenan - best known for playing Nina Pickering in the BBC supernatural drama Being Human and her BAFTA-nominated performance in the ITV true story Little Boy Blue - said: "What I was mainly nervous about was following Nicola Walker, because who wants to do that?

"She's so brilliant and you almost have to forget about her (to do the role). I'm a different person. I'm a different actor. It's a different character. If I thought about it too much, well, I wouldn't have done it."

The dramatic finale of the fourth series, by screenwriter Chris Lang, left viewers distraught as Cassie was killed in a random accident - a surprise to viewers, and Bhaskar too.

The way they were - Nicola Walker and Sanjeev Bhaskar in Unforgotten

"I was shocked four times. I was shocked when I was told. I was shocked when I read the script. I was shocked when we filmed the scenes. I'm shocked when I watched it. So I kind of get why people were shocked," said Bhaskar.

For Bhaskar, who rose to fame on the BBC's Goodness Gracious Me, Sunny's grief for his former colleague and long-time friend Cassie was interesting to play as an actor.

He said: "Watching Chris's version of Sunny; he's a 'steady Eddie', he's kind of a rock, he was there for Cassie. When Cassie was falling apart, he was able to hold it together, but we all have the capacity to lose it, to be really nasty or vicious.

"Chris basically thought, 'OK, what is going to take Sunny to have that kind of outburst?' And that was an interesting thing to explore because I hadn't seen that side of him before.

"He was somebody who would, I thought, just be able to get up, push it down and go, 'OK, I'll deal with that later'.

"I think grief particularly is incredibly confusing, you know, because it's not one thing. It's not just sad."

Tensions are high between Jess and Sunny at the start of the new series of Unforgotten

Cassie's replacement on the force, Jess, has a rocky start. She gets some news in the first episode that blindsides her and she clashes with Sunny, so tensions are high.

"Sunny is grieving, the team is grieving, not just a colleague, but a friend," Keenan said. "And she's doing a dreadful job.

"I can only imagine from Sunny's point of view, it's like, 'Well I've lost one of my best friends, and this is who you choose to replace her with?'"

The new DCI's first case is the discovery of human remains in a chimney breast of a renovated house in Hammersmith, London. The team don't know how long the body has been there and Jess is initially reluctant to take on the case.

Just like the previous series, the structure sees several disparate antagonists who are possible suspects.

Unforgotten returns to ITV1 on Monday 27 February

The story delves into the lives of characters including Jay, played by Rhys Yates (The Outlaws, Silent Witness), Tony, played by Ian McElhinney (Game of Thrones, Derry Girls), and Martina Laird (Summerland, The Bay) as Ebele.

Sunny's investigating team are back too, with Jordan Long as DS Murray Boulting and Carolina Main as DC Fran Lingley reprising their roles.

Keenan described Bhaskar as "a dream", saying: "Honest to God, in between scenes, you sit down and fold your arms and just wait for him to entertain you with his anecdotes."

Bhaskar said of his new co-star's introduction to the cast: "Sinéad was in exactly the same position as her character Jess, that status coming into this kind of group of people that knew each other and got on really well, from which there was now a beloved member who was not going to be part of (it). That's a horrible thing to come into."

Thankfully, they bonded over a mutual appreciation of cheese ("Sinéad's a cheeseaholic") and Bhaskar sings the praises of his new - and former - co-star.

"I've been really lucky to work with incredibly strong and talented women throughout my entire career - and married one of them (Meera Syal).

"But on this particular series, Nicola and now Sinéad are just brilliant at what they do and are humble about it, and there's no ego that comes with it."

Just like the previous series, the structure sees several disparate antagonists who are possible suspects

In writing Unforgotten, Lang didn't want to just create a gripping murder-mystery - he wanted to "hold up a mirror to the state of our nation".

He said: "When I first started conceiving series five, towards the end of 2020, I knew I wanted to write about austerity and what effect it had had on our society over the previous 10 years or so. I could never have imagined that our country would now be leaning into austerity 2.0."

Bhaskar added: "I think Chris has rooted it in reality. It's fairly regular people that you see in society who did something terrible, which is probably what most prisons are full of. Most prisons are not full of serial killers - but most detective dramas would have you believe most of them out there are."

Unforgotten returns to ITV1 on Monday 27 February.

Source: Press Association

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