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23rd November 2013
03:45pm GMT

Did you shed a tear when reading the script? (We know we did watching the film!)
Like I said, you read a lot of scripts but it’s seldom that you laugh out loud or have a tear. I certainly welled up reading this, I really did. I just thought it was so tragic and yet it didn’t feel, for a second, that it was as manipulative as the same story could have been if someone else had written it. It felt very respectful of people’s pain and very respectful of the journey of a human being from childhood to adulthood and then when I saw the film and that bit at the end... I had a little tear.
Your character has a beautiful relationship with his daughter Ginty (played by Annie Rose Buckley). Did that come easily?
Kind of, it wasn’t like they stuck us in a room together... She was really easy going and it was a really sweet shoot because form start to finish its heart was in the right place. Getting on with her was a dream. We had a good few laughs doing it and while all the dialogue for the scenes was written out, the blockage for them wasn’t so we got to have a little fun for example the scene in the garden with the chickens and clothes line.
And how do you think fans of Mary Poppins are going to find the film?
I don’t know. People always find issue with stuff but I would find it hard to pick too many problems with it. I think it shows that the book was written from a place of even more love than anyone who may have thought in the past that it was purely a piece of fiction written by somebody who loved the character. It’s actually written more from a place of love because the characters and situations were inspired by and compelled the writer to write from the perspective of her childhood. She was trying to fix, through the imagination, the world she couldn’t fix in real life.
Speaking of the musical, did you have a favourite song?
Not really, I wasn’t the biggest fan. That’s not to say I was an un-fan. I was actually obsessed with Willy Wonka and the Chocolate Factory.
We think this is one of your best roles. Do you feel that’s a fair comment?
I think it’s easily one of the better pieces of work I’ve been involved with. I’d use the whole ‘no comment’ thing if I was in America but as far as my own work goes, I think the film is beautiful and I am genuinely glad to be a part of it. I’ve done a few things that I’ve had to go and promote and it’s been tricky because you’re promoting something that you don’t really believe in and I hope I don’t have to do that again... But this is easy because, if somebody comes in and doesn’t like it, I believe it’s a beautiful story with its heart firmly in the right place.
Last but not least, can you tell us what comes next for you?
I actually have nothing lined up at the moment. I’ll do some more press for this and then go across the pond to relax with the boys (Henry and James).
Disney’s Saving Mr Banks will be released in cinemas nationwide on November 29th.Explore more on these topics: