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Sea of Souls
Interviews with actors Bill Paterson and Archie Panjabi, stars
of the BBC's shortly-to-be-released new X Files-style television series,
'Sea of Souls'.
Parapsychology:
The study of mental phenomena, such as telepathy, clairvoyance and
psychic healing which are beyond the scope of normal physical explanation
The car rounds an unknown bend and suddenly you absolutely know
what you are going to see - and there it is, exactly as you predicted.
The phone rings and before you pick it up, you know who is calling.
A loved one is severely ill, but believes some external power can
save him -and it does.
Coincidence,
a trick of the mind, a fluke - or glimpses of powers beyond our
knowledge, a whole range of extraordinary possibilities that, if
harnessed, could change our world for ever?
One man's truth is another man's hocus-pocus and that is where
Dr Douglas Monaghan and his team come in. They make up the fictional
Parapsychology Unit at Clyde University that is at the heart of
Sea Of Souls, a new drama for BBC ONE which looks at the power of
the paranormal.
From voodoo to cult rituals, past life experiences to telepathic
twins, the trio of bewitching storylines featured in Sea Of Souls
tap into the public's growing fascination with all things paranormal
as Douglas Monaghan's team of parapsychologists endeavour to explain
the inexplicable.
"Our series is rooted in the work that these units do all
over the world," explains writer David Kane.
"They look at things from a scientific point of view and try
to explain why people choose to believe the paranormal over the
rational. There are powerful reasons why they want to believe. That
is what is so interesting.
"People have always wanted to believe there is more to the
world than we can see and understand and the more people become
disillusioned with organised religion, the more they will need to
believe in these things."
The characters featured in Sea Of Souls cover a spectrum of beliefs
which echo the world's continued fascination with all things paranormal.
Research fellow Andrew Gemmill errs on the side of scepticism;
post graduate student Megan Sharma desperately wants to believe
in the paranormal and the team leader, Dr Douglas Monaghan, is caught
somewhere between the two extremes.
Together, the mix of beliefs propels the team on a mission to uncover
the truth.
"I consider myself to be a bit like Monaghan - I want to believe
but need proof," Kane admits with a laugh.
"People are always gripped by these kind of stories and so
am I if they are told in an intelligent way and treated seriously.
Although a lot of the stories came straight from my imagination
and the facts were checked afterwards."
BBC Scotland's Head of Drama, Barbara McKissack, feels the time
is ripe for a series about the paranormal.
"We've reached the 21st century and a lot of the universe's
external mysteries have been uncovered," she explains.
"Now the world is divided into people who have faith and those
who don't and many of those who don't are looking for explanations
- the human mind is the last major uncharted territory.
"What we wanted to do was show the different beliefs that
are around and what the stories are saying is, 'This could be you,
or someone you know'."
Casting was crucial to make the series work and McKissack is delighted
that Bill Paterson is playing Monaghan.
"He needed to be Everyman, but also a very credible figure
of authority. Bill doesn't appear like a rarefied academic, his
humanity shines through - as it does in real life.
"Archie Panjabi and Peter McDonald bring energy and freshness
to the team between them, with Megan's enthusiasm and joy at the
discoveries that they are making as a lovely counterpoint to Gemmill's
immense cynicism."
David Kane, who has written successes such as This Year's Love
and Ruffian Hearts, concludes:
"We want to do what parapsychologist units do, give people
the choice - the audience will have that choice to say, 'That didn't
really happen, it's all in the mind', or they could go down the
paranormal route. It will be interesting to see which way they decide."
More details at www.bbc.co.uk/seaofsouls
Interview: Bill Paterson plays Dr Douglas Monaghan
The
past life of Bill Paterson is crowded with characters from doctors
and policemen, to lovers and losers. But it only goes back as far
as his birth in Glasgow in 1945 -and no further. No re-incarnation
concerns for him.
The in-demand Scots star has never been drawn to the dark side.
"I'm open enough but I'm not one of nature's fantasists, I'm
not a paranormal person," he declares stoutly. "I'm much
more interested in the practical, the hands-on and the factual than
in the metaphysical.
"But that has helped me to play Monaghan, who may be an expert
but who also has doubts and concerns - he's not some sort of loopy
mystic."
Instead, as head of the Parapsychology Unit at the fictional Clyde
University, Dr Monaghan is a consummate professional, the safe pair
of hands when life slips from the norm into the nightmare.
He is a man who hides the scars of personal tragedy but whose warmth
and understanding endear him to people on the edge.
"I like him," says Paterson simply. "At my age there
is the danger of that cliché of the slightly crumpled and
rumpled man being a bit grumpy going through life and four divorces
later, a tendency to hit the bottle. But Monaghan is not like that.
"I can understand his life - he has lost his wife and child
and that has left him scarred. That is a major back-story, a very
powerful thing. But I like his company.
"He's not unlike me - he's a bit of a technophobe, not very
good with machinery.
"We don't see much of his home arrangements, but I think he's
probably a bit lonely. Although they do keep bringing in these lovely
ladies who come to me with their problems," he laughs.
"Siobhan Redmond, Rakie Ayola and Michelle Collins - who can
complain?"
Scenes for the series involved turning part of Almeria in Spain
into a Druse village in Lebanon, where locals are totally convinced
about re-incarnation.
But it left Paterson feeling as though he had passed into a future
life - in hell.
"We were there at the height of the summer and it was 45 degrees,"
he recalls. "I've filmed in hot places from Java to the Khyber
Pass, but I've never been anywhere that was so searingly hot."
Paterson may be sceptical about the paranormal, but he does admit
to the odd bit of superstition.
"I do have attitudes to places and think that inanimate things
have a life. I even talked to the little trailer I was in while
we were filming. It's as though it's known me for quite some time
now and has a life - we affect each other.
"I also have this superstition never to do things in the same
order when I appear on stage. I know lots of actors who have the
opposite superstition - they have to do things in the same order.
I make sure I never do."
Although he now dismisses it as an odd coincidence, Paterson also
reveals that he once had an alarming premonition.
"I suppose you'd call it ESP, " he says. "It concerned
the actor Alex Norton who I've worked with thousands of times on
stage from the late 60s onwards.
"I had this strong feeling that he had been involved in an
accident with the wheel falling off his car -and discovered that
the wheel had fallen off his car at exactly the moment I had dreamed
about it. Luckily he wasn't injured."
Paterson - star of Danielle Cable: Eyewitness, The Crow Road, and
Doctor Zhivago - also admits to a 'beyond the norm' relationship
with his wife, theatre designer Hildegard Bechtler.
"We are always having experiences of thinking exactly the
same thing at the same time, or trying to ring each other at the
same moment - it's almost embarrassing," he grins.
"I know that many people experience something like that and
the temptation is to no longer believe it's just coincidence, but
that something else is going on.
"But maybe we all used to have this sense of awareness and
modern life has pushed it away.
"Then there is the absence of the power of formal religion
in our culture. The Church and State used to be such solid rocks
in our lives, even up until my childhood.
"Then it disappeared into the background and for a time was
thought not to be needed.
"Add to that the fact that we have more leisure time to explore
the internal, we are not so caught up in the daily grind, so now
we are seeking spiritual and psychic support."
Seeking Dr Monaghan's support are people trying to make sense of
the seemingly senseless.
"We deal with three subjects which - for most of us who don't
have any real knowledge of the paranormal - are the ones that will
always intrigue us, especially the second storyline, re-incarnation.
"Then there's the question of identical twins and how much
of life is nature or nurture.
"The third one takes us into the very different realm of Muti
voodoo killings and is quite dark.
"But these things are not science fiction, they are quite
down to earth paranormal experiences.
"The strength of the series is that we keep within the realms
of an academic investigation. We are led by accident, but inexorably
towards being caught up in dangerous and deadly deeds. We are not
pushing them.
"I feel it is closer to Tales of the Unexpected by Roald Dahl,
than The X Files. It's much more human and ordinary - and that makes
it more disturbing."
Despite his admitted technophobia, Paterson's research for Sea
Of Souls led him to the internet. But he admits that he didn't delve
too deeply.
"I didn't want Monaghan overburdened with too much jargon,"
he explains.
"I want it to feel truthful, so that if the filming was stopped
at any point and someone asked me, 'What are you talking about here?
Why are you doing that?', I would like to have an answer. That's
my criteria of research. I don't want people to think, 'Isn't he
a clever bugger!'.
"But Sea Of Souls does pose lots of really important questions
and I think viewers are going to be caught up in the debate about
just what is true and what is 'in the mind' &."
Interview: Archie Panjabi plays Megan Sharma
Deeply
spiritual actress Archie Panjabi makes no secret of the fact that
wherever she goes she carries a small, gold amulet - a gift from
her Guru in Malaysia and a potent symbol of his protection.
"It is always with me. I really don't know what I would do
if I lost it," she admits.
"It may sound strange but it is really important to me. I've
always been quite psychic and believe there's a reason why things
happen and that we need to learn from them.
"I think that is especially important in this business, it
chews a lot of people up. It's one of the hardest professions in
the world to maintain any kind of stability.
"But my spirituality helps with that - and you're not considered
some kind of sissy when you start talking about your paranormal
experiences now."
Panjabi was introduced to her Guru by an aunt and has since visited
him as often as she can and frequently keeps contact by phone.
"Anytime I'm down I phone him up and he always seems to be
in touch with my gut instinct and knows what's on my mind,"
she explains.
Panjabi believes that she has more in common with academic psychologist
Megan Sharma than any other character she has played.
"I am becoming more and more open to the whole area of spirituality
and alternative ways of looking at things and I think I have that
in common with Megan.
"In fact I based her very much on things I already had in
my own life - more than any other characters I've played. There
were so many parallels.
"'If she sees a lot of evidence then she does get excited
and her gut instinct is usually quite right. That is down to her
being an intelligent and spiritual woman. Women always have a sixth
sense and a certain instinct and Megan definitely brings those qualities
to the group.
"She has all the intellectual abilities, but is more streetwise
than the other two. Her social skills are the biggest attribute
to the unit - because even though they are dealing with the paranormal,
they are dealing with people.
"Megan is much more aware of people's emotions and it's often
her who's able to scoop out the truth from people."
Panjabi draws other parallels between herself and this enthusiastic
postgraduate student of parapsychology - she believes they have
both had their battles to fight against other people's expectations.
"Megan is very bright and knowledgeable and has been selected
by Monaghan to join him in the parapsychology unit as a team member
and she is thrilled.
"But I think maybe a lot of her friends laughed at her choice
of profession because they were mostly lawyers or bankers. They
would have scoffed at parapsychology, just thinking of the odd séance
on a wet Wednesday afternoon. That just makes her more determined
to be a success.
"In my case, I went to university to study management before
I became an actress and a lot of my friends and friends of my family
said, 'How can you want to be an actress?'
"But I think it is vital to fight to do something you want
to do despite not gaining your community's or your friends' approval
- they all wanted to be doctors and lawyers, 'proper' professions.
"Luckily my parents were not against my ambition, they've
always been very supportive. But they were adamant that I went to
university first.
"I went to Brunel University and very much wanted to go on
to do a PhD in management, but then my acting career started to
take off.
"In those days when you switched on the box there were hardly
any brown or black faces so they worried that I wouldn't be able
to make a living. They saw it as a very risky profession."'
Panjabi began getting small roles in series such as London's Burning
and The Knock. Then she had the bright idea of writing to the cast
of EastEnders for advice.
"I got this lovely letter from Nick Berry who suggested I
got an agent through The Stage newspaper. That's what I did and
things really began to take off. I really wasn't aware how the whole
business worked until then.
"At the time there was just a handful of roles on TV being
played by Asians, so I was very lucky. I've still not met Nick to
thank him personally. I owe him a lot."
One of Panjabi's biggest personal triumphs is the fact that, as
an Asian woman, she won the role of Megan who was not written as
an Asian character.
"When the BBC went out to cast Megan, they didn't go out to
cast an Asian Megan,"' she explains. "It is so refreshing
to be able to be seen for a part where there is no reference to
ethnicity.
"I believe one of the most important ways of combating racism
- and trying to get people to accept everyone for who they are -
is to just cast from a group of people and see which one is right,"
she argues.
"It has been wonderful to get roles in the films Bend It Like
Beckham and East Is East. But playing Megan has a different quality
about it - it's been a really good feeling to know I'm here strictly
on merit."
Panjabi lives with her partner Raj in north west London and helps
him run a high class, bespoke tailoring company.
"It gives me the chance to put my management skills into practice,"
she laughs. "It is also more glamorous than acting, believe
it or not. Raj gets to travel all over the world."
Now the couple are hoping to start a family and Panjabi has been
getting a little bedtime story practice in ahead of time.
"I am one of the new characters in the brand new series of
Postman Pat," she says delightedly. "It has been a joy
to do - and just a little different from the world of the paranormal."
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