Stylist - Mrs Moon
Transcription
Stylist - Mrs Moon
ISSUE 36 / 30 JUNE 2010 / W W W. ST YLIST.CO.UK E V E R Y W E D N E S DAY X I S S U E X J U N E X W W W S T Y L I S TC O U K 44 Welcome to Stylist 6 28 RECIPES, HAMPERS AND HOTSPOTS TO CREATE THE PERFECT PICNIC VANESSA PARADIS ON HER HOT NEW ROM-COM Ne ws 6 - 8 X S C O O P Win a boutique break in France and Victoria Beckham’s latest collection of sunglasses COVERARTROBRYANEXCLUSIVELYFORST YLISTMAGAZ INE 1 1 X E L S EW H E R E The Japanese get divorce happy and the US discover lesbian couples make the best parents Fa s h i on & Beau ty 2 1 X M O S T D E S I R E D with a new face spray and book in for a crystal pedicure Every week 3 4 XL I T T L E BL ACK B O O K From fashion to furniture, discover this week’s must-have buys Where to buy this week’s style Fe a t u r e s 3 6 X T H E WO M E N O F 7/ 7 Five years on from the London bombings we discover the stories of hope that emerged out of tragedy 4 0 X W H AT YO U R VO I C E R E A L LY S AY S A B O U T YO U Kate Moss for Topshop’s embroidered butterfly dress Why it’s not what you say but the way that you say it 2 2 X S O L A R P OW E R 44X THE ART OF THE PERFECT PICNIC From barely there bikinis to retro two-pieces, find your perfect summer swimsuit 2 8 X T H E L I F E AQ UAT I C Why it’s time to hit the pool for summer-long beauty 3 2 XBE AU T Y NOT E S Keep your make-up in place in the heat TAKE THE PLUNGE INTO SUMMER BEAUTY Mouth-watering recipes, beautiful destinations and luxury hampers – all you need for alfresco eating 50 X DRAMA QUEEN National treasure Keeley Hawes on acting, dealing with bad reviews and, er, knitting Most women spend a lot of time thinking about how they present themselves. We spend hours selecting outfits for important events, meticulously plan presentations and pick the right words to a friend in need or a partner… But bizarrely not many women spend much time thinking about their actual voice. It turns out, this is a mistake! Our voice is actually one of the most powerful tools we own, and according to new research, the thing that strangers judge us on the most. So this week we’ve looked at the fascinating research that proves we should be giving our voices as much attention as our wardrobes, plus we’ve investigated the ways in which you can change your voice to further your career and your relationships (page 40). Now that really is something to shout about. 4 X THE STYLE LIST 1 2 X WO R K L I F E Private investigator Helen Foster Clark on the art of surveillance 1 5 X T R AV E L Relax and unwind in a Lake Garda spa with a difference 1 7 X DAW N P O R T E R S H A R E S Is there anything worse than being humiliated on stage? No is the answer 52 X OUTGOING The biggest and best events happening round the UK 5 3 XG O U R M ET O N T H E G O Get summery with a tempting potato and chard salad 5 4 X6 0 - S E C O N D T H E R A P I S T Singer Macy Gray on the joys of being her own person Lisa Smosarski, Editor editor@stylist.co.uk To subscribe and get every Stylist delivered to your door, go to www. stylist.co.uk and click Subscribe Stylist is Britain’s premium women’s weekly and is available free every Wednesday in London, Brighton, Edinburgh, Glasgow, Manchester, Newcastle, Leeds and Birmingham, as well as in French Connection stores and selected airport lounges throughout the week. Stylist’s average weekly distribution is 410,674 copies for ABC period July 1, 2009 to Dec 31, 2009. W W W S T Y L I S T C O U K KEELEY HAWES: MOTHER, ACTRESS, LOVER OF KNITTING DRAMA QUEEN On-screen, she’s the star of dramas like Ashes To Ashes and new series Identity; off-screen she knits and keeps chickens. Stylist meets the two very different sides of Keeley Hawes W W W S T Y L I S T C O U K K E E L E Y H AWE S hen Stylist meets Keeley Hawes, the first thing that strikes us is that the actress rarely stops laughing. Sometimes it’s a shy, nervous giggle, but mostly it’s a big, unapologetic roar that fills the room – so infectious that it has Stylist laughing too. In reality, the 33-year-old actress is far softer and less serious than any of the characters she has played, whether it’s hard-boiled MI agent Zoe Reynolds in the long-running action series Spooks or feisty police detective Alex Drake in cult Eightiesset drama Ashes To Ashes. Wearing a crisp white shirt, cropped chinos and flat sandals when we sit down with her at London’s ITV studios, she looks glamorous in an understated Keira Knightley-by-day sort of way (in fact, there’s a definite resemblance). It’s Keeley’s new six-part TV series, Identity, in which she plays another police detective (this time at the helm of a unit investigating identity-related crime), that she’s here to talk to us about today. It’s a project she’s hugely passionate about. “Normally you only get to read one script before you say yes to a series. But with this show I got to read four episodes, and so I was certain the character, Martha, was someone I wanted to play.” While DSI Martha Lawson cuts a somewhat lonely figure in the series, the mum-of-three leads a comparatively charmed life in Twickenham, Surrey, with her actor husband and ex-Spooks co-star Matthew Macfadyen, their daughter, Maggie, five, son Ralph, three, and Keeley’s nine-year-old son Myles who she had whilst married to her ex, cartoonist Spencer McCallum. When she’s at home she confesses it’s the simple pleasures “like coming home when the cleaner’s just been”, that make her happiest, and sewing and knitting. Her house is “so full of patchwork you would laugh your head off,” she says, before throwing her own head back and doing just that… WORDSMEGANCONNERPHOTOGRAPHYLORENZOAGIUS/CONTOURBY GETT YIMAGESITVCOMREXFEATURES W You play a police detective again in this series. How does it feel different to Ashes To Ashes? I never really looked at Ashes as a police procedural role. That’s sort of the secondary thing about the show – the story of the week was always a little bit weak and you can usually guess who did it in the first five minutes. Identity is much cleverer in that way. I suppose it felt a bit like Spooks; the office-y nature of it and all that strutting through hallways… We hear your character DSI Martha Lawson is somewhat forceful… Yes, she is. She’s the one who originally gets the unit green lit because she thinks they need a specialist team to fight identity theft. As a character she was very appealing because she’s this strong woman – or so we think. I think lots of people, not just women, have their public face at work and their private face at home. On the surface she’s very together and in control, but then she goes home to this sad little flat and eats lots of takeaways. Do you feel you have a different persona at work to home? Yes, I do. But I think that’s quite nice. I like being a mummy and a wife who gets on my husband’s nerves or whatever. I love the fact I don’t go to parties every night and get shitfaced. fantastic. I love that sort of thing, but I’m more of a beans girl myself. You had three children by the time you were 30. Was that a conscious decision? This is going to sound really weird, even to me now, but I never imagined there was a choice. I grew up with my mother, who had four children very young, and I always imagined that would be how my life went. I just thought you had children when you’re young. [Pauses]. It sounds bizarre, and I’m not saying it’s right but it never occurred to me to be older. Has it hit you now…? That I had a choice? [Laughs]. Yeah, I sort of a no-no to be pregnant. People are afraid of falling off the radar, and so my actress friends have waited and waited. You can wait forever really. But as I say, it’s happening now, just as all mine are sleeping through! What do you think you would have been doing if you weren’t an actress? Possibly an interior designer or nurse. I don’t know. It changes week to week, usually with whichever script I read. It’s funny, my mum didn’t work and my sister stays at home with her family too. I’m a bit of an anomaly. Did they encourage going into acting? Oh yes, completely. I mean, they knew nothing about it – my dad was a taxi driver, still is. He does the black cabs, but they let me go to stage school. Is that where the elocution lessons came in? [Keeley attended classes from the age of nine] Yes, it was just a bit of voice coaching. It wasn’t like my parents said, “Go and speak properly, girl!” And it wasn’t like we were Cockney. We’re from central London so I had more of a London accent. I don’t get drunk and start talking like this [puts on Cockney accent]. Forget me-self [laughs]. And at family get-togethers, I don’t stick out like a sore thumb. Or at least, I don’t think… IN NEW ITV1 DRAMA IDENTITY WITH THE WIRE STAR AIDAN GILLEN WITH SPOOKS CO-STAR AND HUSBAND, MATTHEW MACFAYDAN “EVERYONE’S AFRAID OF A BAD REVIEW – I JUST TOOK IT SO PERSONALLY. I LET IT GET TO ME AND I SHOULDN’T HAVE” Do you enjoy being domesticated? Oh, I love it. I really do! [Laughs]. I’ve always got lots of satisfaction out of building a nest and making things lovely, but my mum is like that too, and my sister. And my daughter actually, but she’s five [laughs]. She’s very keen and makes the bed occasionally. But yes, I’m very into my hot-water bottles and things. We have chickens at home, and I love knitting. There’s this little shop near where I live called Mrs Moons where I’ve had time to go to lessons. Oh god, I’m so boring! [Roars with laughter]. Help me! No, go on! Why do you love knitting? I think… well, making your life cosy in that way, it’s something grannies have taken a lifetime to achieve. So why not take their lead now? What about cooking? Are you a pro in the kitchen? I’m not brilliant, but Matthew is suppose as I’ve got older. And it’s quite topical now – people having six babies at 59 or whatever – it’s made me think, ‘Crikey, I’ve got a nine-year-old. I’ve got three children and I’m 33!’ But I love the fact my son’s up to here now [measures against her shoulder] and he puts his arm around me. It’s lovely. You’ve talked about adopting. Is that something you’re still considering? We had a time when we were thinking about it a lot because we would like more. But then we both got very busy and I think it would have been silly. If you adopt a child you need to put your entire life into that. It would have become my full-time job. It’s something I think about, as I get more sensible. Are your friends married with children too? No. Hah! They’re only just starting to go down that route. That’s the other side of it – when you’re an actress it’s You’ve said previously that the negative press you received while starring in Ashes To Ashes mostly came from men [who claimed her character was unlikeable]. How did you deal with that? My personal flaws, as in the flaws I see in myself, have part-way been ironed out through the flak I got for Ashes. People didn’t like that character being in that particular show, because she was a woman and it [Ashes To Ashes’ prequel Life On Mars] had always been male-dominated. They felt like she didn’t fit in. So that kept me up at night. It was one of the worst times in my life. But looking back, if that’s going to be one of the worst times in my life, you know what, I’ve got a nice f***king life. I’m actually much stronger now – I wouldn’t be afraid of anything. What were you afraid of then? Everybody’s afraid of a bad review. I wasn’t even afraid, I just took it so personally. I let it get to me and I shouldn’t have. But it’s better now. It’s toughened you up? It’s toughened me right up [puts on Cockney accent]. Look how tough I am! But it makes me think, looking back… I was so upset. And life’s too short for that, isn’t it? Identity starts at 9pm on 5 July on ITV1 and is available to own on DVD from 16 August W W W S T Y L I S T C O U K