'Shardlake' is a Tudor-era mystery series. It's also a win for disabled characters, its star says
Matthew Shardlake steps out of the pages of the late C
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Your support makes all the difference.Matthew Shardlake steps out of the pages of the late C.J. Sansom's popular historical mystery novels and into a new show, bringing with him disability representation.
āWe donāt see a lot of leading disabled characters,ā says Arthur Hughes, who plays the title character. āWell, we might, but they might not be played by disabled actors.ā
Shardlake is a clever lawyer who solves puzzles and problems during the reign of King Henry VIII. He is also disabled. The character is referred to as a āhunchbackā by a rude rival in the books ā an example of the attitude of the Tudor period, with no allowance or acceptance of differences.
āI really hope the disabled audience can see that and see maybe some of the parallels with the world we live in today. And also just to show that that a disabled actor can play a leading part,ā says Hughes, who was born with radial dysplasia.
Joining him in the show are Anthony Boyle, as codpiece-wearing rogue Jack Barak, and Sean Bean portraying Thomas Cromwell, the notorious and real-life political player who sends Shardlake on a mission to solve a murder at a monastery. The show airs Wednesday on Disney+ in the U.K. and Hulu in the U.S.
The cast spoke to The Associated Press about the importance of casting, the comfort of a codpiece and coldness of old castles. The interview was conducted before Sansom's death Saturday at 71. Answers have been edited for brevity and clarity.
AP: So who read the books?
BEAN: I read the first three but a long time ago. Forty years or so.
AP: Was the appeal that you already knew this world?
BEAN: Yes, when I found out it was based on C.J. Sansom's books, I thought, Iāve read those, you know. It was something I really wanted to be involved with and when I was offered the role of Cromwell, (I was) delighted.
AP: Shardlake himself, heās a great role.
HUGHES: It was a really, really enjoyable role. Heās a complicated guy. Kind of strong but vulnerable and compromised in many ways within himself, within the job heās got. But I think, ultimately, a really good, just man. And a great story to go through and an interesting world to navigate. It was a lot of fun. We had a ball.
AP: Heās also a very cool character.
HUGHES: Yeah, I found reading the books, heās a very interesting character, but thereās something a little weak and afraid and meek in him and actually, I wanted him to be stronger and stoic. Still vulnerable and lonely and isolated and maybe somewhat awkward, but I wanted him to have a kind of inner strength. This is a disabled man navigating a really difficult world for him and I think heāll need that kind of inner strength burning inside him.
AP: Codpiece.
BOYLE: Yes, letās talk about it. Itās something.
AP: Was it comfortable?
BOYLE: I sort of had to go to myself ā this is the leather jacket of the era. It was like getting your codpiece on and going out, like, this looks all right. Once I got over that hurdle, I loved it and I actually felt a bit naked without it. So I did take one from set. Itās in the wardrobe. Iām hoping if the show does well, people will watch it and it will be the new sort of fashion statement this summer. You know, everyoneās knocking about with codpieces.
AP: Youāve been jumping around historical periods quite a lot recently.
BOYLE: Someone said to me, Iāve done so many period dramas, it looks like Iāve got a face that just canāt comprehend the internet. And they just keep putting me in these sort of random period dramas because I look like I donāt know how to work Deliveroo.
HUGHES: Thatās brilliant.
AP: Thomas Cromwell is a really interesting historical figure ā what was your take on him?
BEAN: Iām not sure I quite liked him, but I admired his resolute character. Heās very headstrong and very, very sure about himself, about what he was doing. But he obviously takes a lot of pleasure in the dissolution of the monasteries and the robbing and everything that goes on changing the religion completely, to accommodate Henry VIIIās marriage to Anne Boleyn. And he sees Shardlake, he knows heās a very intelligent, very gifted man and itās an interesting relationship that we have.
AP: There was talk about doing something with this before, but with an able bodied actor. How important is it for you that Shardlake is represented properly?
HUGHES: I think having those leading roles, especially in this Tudor world that Shardlake lives in, which is built in ableism every day, but which is backed up by God and by everything that everyoneās taught. And also to show that that a disabled actor can play a leading part. And heās written as a disabled man and even some of the smallest things about growing up a bit different, looking different ā Shardlake will feel all those things and Iāve felt those things. Maybe I donāt have to kind of manufacture that so much.
AP: What was it like filming the 16th century? It looks really cold.
BOYLE: It was very cold. We were up there in freezing Budapest and I was wearing tights and a codpiece. All I can remember from the whole shoot, how cold it was. I remember riding horses, which was a laugh. We had a good fun on those didnāt we?
HUGHES: We did.
BOYLE: It was a good craic. Riding into Scarnsea on the back of these horses. The sets were amazing. It really did make you feel like you were in that time period. Looking round you didnāt really have to act that much because it was 360. We were on set. We were in the muck. We filmed these amazing locations, these castles and monasteries. And you didnāt have to do much thinking, you were just in it.