Gemma Arterton reveals she did not want to play Tamara Drewe at London premiere

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11 April 2012
The Weekender

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British actress Gemma Arterton revealed that she did not want to play the lead role in her latest film, Tamara Drewe, when she was first offered the part.

The 24-year-old did eventually agree to take the title role in the film, a comedy based on Posy Simmonds' graphic novel.

Set in the English countryside, it is a comedy about a young newspaper journalist torn between two lovers.

Speaking at the UK premiere of the film at London's Leicester Square, Arterton said: "I didn't actually want to play Tamara when I first read it because I didn't like her.

"She's a femme fatale but she's really lost, she's desperate, she's a very modern woman. I know a lot of women like Tamara Drewe.

"It's good to play people that you don't understand originally because you have to work out why they do the things that they do."

Arterton, who was dressed in a floor-length cream Gucci dress, was joined on the red carpet by a host of British talent including Dominic Cooper and Tamsin Greig, who both star in the film, and director Stephen Frears.

She added: "I remember Stephen Frears saying to me, 'I just don't know why Tamara does that', and I said, 'It's because she's a woman, she doesn't really know why she's doing it either'.

"I don't think he ever begged me to do it or anything like that but he just said, 'I won't do it unless you do it' which was quite scary."

Frears agreed that he was lucky to secure Arterton for the role.

He said: "She is a very witty woman, Gemma. She's gorgeous, witty and a very good actress. She just had everything I needed, really."

Cooper, who plays one of Arterton's love interests in the film, said shooting Tamara Drewe was very different to working on a large-scale Hollywood production.

He said: "It was wonderful to be working in your own country with people who you have respected and whose work you have watched for years. And to work with Stephen.

"There are so many aspects that are wonderful about the big Hollywood thing and there are things that aren't.

"There is so much more time that you have to polish a large, expensive production. With this, essentially, you are doing things very quickly which often makes for more creative invention, and therefore you have to be quite daring with what you are doing and just go for it."

Tamara Drewe is released in cinemas nationwide on Friday.

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