TV

Tom Brittney reveals all about Grantchester's new rock 'n' roll vicar

Tom Brittney has a big dog collar to fill. In the new series of Grantchester, he takes over from James Norton's skirt-chasing crime-fighting Reverend Sidney Chambers. Is Brittney's Will Davenport as much of a cad?

Was it odd joining Grantchester when James Norton was still in place?

I think it is a good way of doing it. Obviously, people are going to be quite sad about losing James. But I think the transition will make it easier for people to stomach. I imagine it is quite tough to see the role you are leaving being taken over, but he was open about it, saying he was jealous that I was going to get this opportunity because he had so much fun in Grantchester.

Are there any similarities between your character Will and James Norton’s Sidney? Is Will a bit of a shagger too?

He may be, we will see. Sidney rides a bicycle and listens to jazz, Will rides a motorbike, wears a leather jacket and goes boxing. Will’s part of the new wave of rock and roll kids coming in at the end of the Fifties.

Is it a prerequisite you have to play a full-on psycho before being the Grantchester vicar? Your character in UnREAL was every bit as nasty as James’s in Happy Valley.

Oh, I guess so, yeah. I didn’t think about that. He played a total psycho and I played a rapist before playing this lovely vicar. Maybe that is the best way of doing it. You bounce back the other way and can prove you are a good person.

Hey, I would love to be Bond

How long before your price for becoming the next James Bond comes crashing down with the bookies, like James’s did?

Hey, I would love to be Bond. I would love to be considered in that conversation. And apparently if you even talk about it, you put your name in the ring. You know, I worked with Barbara Broccoli on my first-ever film. So maybe she will be keeping an eye on my career. I have been doing Krav Maga lessons, I think I look OK in a tuxedo, and I am a raging alcoholic – no, just kidding – so, I tick a few boxes.

You have a half decent co-star as well in your big film coming next year, Greyhound, based on CS Forester’s The Good Shepherd

Yes, he is doing OK, up-and-coming actor Tom Hanks! That was incredible. He is a reason I am in this business. I remember vividly watching Saving Private Ryan and thinking I would love to be him. And now I have done a war film with Hanks. That he wrote.

Probably on a typewriter…

Probably on a typewriter! I find that a fascinating obsession he has with typewriters. It must be such an ordeal doing rewrites. He was everything I hoped. A movie star. He has a bodyguard with him at all times. So there is a distance when you speak to him. But when you work with him – and all my scenes are with him – he talks to you like a normal guy. I had to pinch myself every time we had a conversation.

How were the nerves before your first scene with him?

I cried! It was the first time I have ever been completely and utterly starstruck. I saw him and was thinking, ‘This is not real, this is not real’ and I just started crying! I knew whatever happens in my career I could always say I have done this. I went up to him and said,“I am Tom” and he said “I am Tom” and then did it in a British accent. He would also do impressions of himself on set. He would say [adopts Woody from Toy Story voice]: “There’s a snake in my boot!” Tom Hanks quoting himself. It was
just insane.

Did you have similar vibes first meeting Robson Green?

One hundred percent. Robson Green is someone I have grown up with. When we met in the third round of the audition process, he came bounding towards me, “Hey mate, I’m Robson.” I said, “Of course you are. You are TV’s Robson Green.” Robson Green and TV go together hand-in-hand. So I was starstruck meeting him too. And now I can call him a friend and co-star.

Would you rather sing or fish with him?

We had a little sing-song on set. He is very good with the Eighties , which is before my time, but I’d join in on the odd Duran Duran song. I’d play this game. If you say a couple of words from an Eighties song, he starts singing the whole thing. He wouldn’t know I was doing it, but subliminally he would start singing.

So if you say ‘gold’ while talking to Robson he starts singing Spandau Ballet?

Exactly that. It is a wonderful skill he has. I asked whether we can go fishing together. But he hasn’t been with James yet, so I think it is only fair that he goes first. James might get put out if the new guy beats him to it. I don’t think that is fair. You have to earn that.

Grantchester returns to ITV on January 11 at 9pm

Support your local Big Issue vendor

If you can’t get to your local vendor every week, subscribing directly to them online is the best way to support your vendor. Your chosen vendor will receive 50% of the profit from each copy and the rest is invested back into our work to create opportunities for people affected by poverty.
Vendor martin Hawes

Recommended for you

View all
Jenna Coleman on policing the town that MeToo forgot in The Jetty
TV

Jenna Coleman on policing the town that MeToo forgot in The Jetty

Spent star Michelle de Swarte: 'Someone had to tell me I was homeless – I was in such denial'
Michelle de Swarte
TV

Spent star Michelle de Swarte: 'Someone had to tell me I was homeless – I was in such denial'

Karen Gillan: 'It's better to tell the story of Douglas is Cancelled than not tell the story'
TV

Karen Gillan: 'It's better to tell the story of Douglas is Cancelled than not tell the story'

Supacell star Calvin Demba on race, male bravado and breaking the modern superhero formula
Calvin Demba, star of Netflix's Supacell
TV

Supacell star Calvin Demba on race, male bravado and breaking the modern superhero formula

Most Popular

Read All
Renters pay their landlords' buy-to-let mortgages, so they should get a share of the profits
Renters: A mortgage lender's window advertising buy-to-let products
1.

Renters pay their landlords' buy-to-let mortgages, so they should get a share of the profits

Exclusive: Disabled people are 'set up to fail' by the DWP in target-driven disability benefits system, whistleblowers reveal
Pound coins on a piece of paper with disability living allowancve
2.

Exclusive: Disabled people are 'set up to fail' by the DWP in target-driven disability benefits system, whistleblowers reveal

Cost of living payment 2024: Where to get help now the scheme is over
next dwp cost of living payment 2023
3.

Cost of living payment 2024: Where to get help now the scheme is over

Strike dates 2023: From train drivers to NHS doctors, here are the dates to know
4.

Strike dates 2023: From train drivers to NHS doctors, here are the dates to know