‘I like dark characters’

Currently appearing on the big screen as one of Thomas Hardy’s toughest heroines, Carey Mulligan talks to Susan Griffin about suffragettes, starting a family and getting her hands dirty
Carey Mulligan’s latest role is one of Thomas Hardy’s great heroines, Bathsheba Everdene, the fiercely independent young woman who inherits her uncle’s farm, and the actress reveals she couldn’t wait to get stuck in and get her hands dirty.

‘Lots of my mother’s side of the family lived on farmland, so I milked animals when I was younger,’ the 29-year-old, who is seen gamely wading into a sheep bath at one point in the new adaptation of Far From The Madding Crowd, says with a laugh.

The London-born actress, who shot to fame after being Oscar-nominated for 2009’s An Education, hadn’t read the book before seeing the script, nor watched the 1967 movie starring Julie Christie. ‘It’s never a great idea if you’re retelling a story,’ she explains. ‘But I will now we’re done.’

Thomas Hardy is not known for happy-ever-afters, but this story is relatively upbeat for the Victorian author, and explores Bathsheba’s relationships with three very different suitors: the rugged and steadfast shepherd Gabriel Oak (Matthias Schoenaerts), the mature and prosperous William Boldwood (Michael Sheen), and the dashing but arrogant soldier Frank Troy, played by her good  friend Tom Sturridge. ‘Bathsheba’s an incredibly modern woman. The decisions she makes are spontaneous. It’s her great quality but also her biggest downfall.’

CareyMulligan-May08-03-590With Matthias Schoenaerts in Far From The Madding Crowd

You could argue she’s manipulative too, but the actress was keen to portray her naivety and vulnerability, ‘and how she doesn’t really know herself, like none of us really do when we’re 18’, she notes.

Mulligan turns 30 later this month, but there will be little time to celebrate because she’s currently treading the boards in Skylight. ‘I’m working [on my birthday],’ she reveals. ‘I think it’s even a two-show day, so I don’t think it’ll be a big party.’

The production recently opened on Broadway, following a successful London run. ‘In New York, it feels as if it’s not as intimidating as doing it in London, where I know family members or friends could be out there every night,’ remarks the actress, who has a cold, but is ploughing on regardless. ‘I’m falling apart here!’

She’s looking forward to this new chapter and, laughing, admits she’s embracing ageing. ‘I spent a lot of my early 20s playing teenagers because of my baby face. My agent in the last couple of years has started to say, “You’ve been offered this part, she’s 19, you’re too old”, and I’m like, “I’m too old? Brilliant! I’ve never been too old”. All the great parts come now, I think, so I’m excited.’

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Mulligan, who lived briefly in Germany as a child, excelled at school. But despite her parents’ protestations, she decided against university. ‘You can’t stop someone doing something they want to do. I don’t think my parents could have stopped me trying to be an actor.’

Instead, she sent letters to Kenneth Branagh and Julian Fellowes, asking for advice on the acting industry. It was at a dinner hosted by Fellowes that she met a casting agent, which led to the role of Kitty in 2005’s Pride And Prejudice, but she doesn’t recommend this approach.

‘When people write to me, I say, “Go to university and get a back-up”, because it’s so difficult.’

By her own admission, she worked ‘manically’ in those early years. ‘I think that’s normal in acting. You just work and work, terrified of where the next job’s going to come from.’

But then, disappointed by her experience on 2010’s Wall Street: Money Never Sleeps, she heeded her agent’s advice to not go for a role unless she couldn’t bear the idea of someone else doing it.

CareyMulligan-May08-04-590As Daisy in The Great Gatsby

She’s subsequently starred in Steve McQueen’s critically-acclaimed Shame with Michael Fassbender, Nicolas Winding Refn’s Drive, alongside Ryan Gosling, and Baz Luhrmann’s The Great Gatsby opposite Leonardo DiCaprio.

‘I like dark characters, and it’s fun to do things that are difficult, because I’m very happy and have had a very lovely charmed life and lovely parents, lovely family and lovely education. That sounds like Schadenfreude, but it’s not that. It’s very easy to play things that you know, it’s when you have to play things that you don’t really understand that it gets fun,’ she reasons.

Mulligan is notoriously protective of her private life and rarely speaks of her husband Marcus, of the band Mumford & Sons, who she married in 2012. She does, however, reveal that she’d like to have children (‘Yeah, definitely’), and admits she’s in the ‘privileged position’ of being able to stop work for a period of time.

‘But I don’t think you can ever be worried about your career when it comes to stuff like that [having a family]. You have to have some perspective.’

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She’s gained a new outlook on promotional tours too, having once described chat shows and red carpets as cripplingly nerve-racking. ‘I think I took everything a bit too seriously. Ultimately, if you fall over on a talk show, it doesn’t matter, nobody cares. If there’s a bad photo, if you look a bit fat, you look a bit whatever, no one cares. There are much bigger things in the world.’

She’ll be on the campaign trail next year no doubt for her new movie Suffragette, which isn’t released until October but is already garnering awards buzz.

‘It’s a story about the militant suffragettes in London and based on real-life women, although the character I play is fictional.’

CareyMulligan-May08-06-590In Drive with Ryan Gosling

The cast includes Meryl Streep and Helena Bonham Carter, and Mulligan confesses to being ‘talent struck’ on set. The movie also marks the project she’s most proud of in her career thus far. ‘Because of the fact I feel lucky enough to be part of telling the story of what these women did,’ she explains.

‘It hasn’t been told, and is long overdue.’

Far From The Madding Crowd is in cinemas now.