Helen McCrory as Rachel Price
When preparing for her role as Messiah's new Chief Pathologist, Rachel
Price, Helen McCrory drew a line at attending a real
autopsy despite being offered the opportunity.
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"I walked into make-up one day for tests and opened a pathology book,
literally took one look and shut it straight away. I just couldn't bear
to look at it any more.
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"It wasn't so much that I am squeamish - although I am - it was
more to do with the fact that these are people who are someone's daughter,
mother, brother and that was the main difference between the character
and myself," she says.
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"I would look at them as a series of bodies hacked to bits whereas
Rachel can look at the bodies and see corpses as a series of clues to
help solve the crime, so I didn't think it would be helpful to me at
all to attend a lab," she adds.
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"I did, however, meet with a team of pathologists who advised me every
step of the way and one in particular who was with me throughout the
mortuary scenes which we all found enormously helpful.
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"Our director, Paul (Unwin), really went out of his way to listen
to the advice of the pathologists and make the scenes exactly the way
they should be in order to be authentic.
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"In one of the scenes where the actor, who is obviously alive, is lying
naked on the slab with his prosthetic torso opened up I had to put my
hands into a cavity filled with chopped liver and that wasn't very pleasant.
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"I couldn't look at it, at which point the director came over
and whispered to me that I had to look as if I knew what I was talking
about! I thought I could just get away with saying I felt something!"
she laughs.
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Rachel is married to DS Jack Price (played by Hugo Speer), and a close
friend of Red. Having recently lost her daughter through suicide Rachel
has decided to deal with her grief by returning to work.
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"Pathologists are highly-trained doctors who tend to lean towards the
more academic end of medicine," she explains.
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"They are very precise and very exact people because they spend a lot
of time by themselves and tend to be loners.
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"Rachel has a certain detachment from life but when we meet her she
has just lost her eldest daughter and you really see her in those first
weeks trying to cope with the loss of not just her daughter physically
but her husband emotionally."
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As Rachel is left to deal with her two remaining children, their grief
and her own, Jack falls into a cycle of drinking and despair that he
finds impossible to get out of.
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Rachel's decision to return to work is based on her ability to rely
on her professionalism as a mechanism of coping with her pain.
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"I think everyone has that ability, in times of crisis, to be immediately
drawn towards what you do best as a means of dealing with stress - whatever
that might be - and in Rachel's case it is twofold: her work and her
relationship with Red.
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"She has a huge sense of loyalty to Red and his empathy and frustration
with not being able to move forward in the case drives her forward constantly
to try and find clues on the victims' bodies to help him.
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"In the same way that Red empathises with the victims and puts himself
in their shoes," she continues,"in a similar way, Rachel's pathology
has now changed because she has been through grief and has started to
understand that these are not just bodies - these are people with family
and maybe that makes her a better pathologist.
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"It is her confidence and her own readiness to help Red that brings
her back to work."
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Playing Rachel was a dichotomy for McCrory.
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"On the one hand there is a side of Rachel's life that is full of pain
and self-loathing; whilst on the other, her professional life is becoming
closer and closer to the murders that are occurring. As often happens
in times of stress, you begin to see the world in a very different way
- which is what happens to her.
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"Suddenly this woman who could work on body after body, dissecting
and cutting up corpses, is for the first time so close to death herself
that she is examining her whole relationship with her job.
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"She was a difficult character to play in that wherever she is,
either at home or work, she is immersed in this unquenchable pain."
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Having never lost someone to suicide meant that McCrory couldn't draw
on personal experience and had to find the pain within to play the role.
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"I read a few books that had been written about people who had been
left behind by suicide and researched the role that way. It was difficult
to comprehend. I avoided talking to people about it.
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"But you don't have to have a huge imagination to know what kind
of grief comes with suicide: enormous self-loathing, hatred and that
feeling of letting everyone down."
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Rachel's relationship with Jack is deeply affected by their daughter's
suicide. It is a huge stress on the family which pulls their relationships
apart.
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"While Jack is in anger, Rachel is in grief and she finds it a betrayal
that he won't help her grieve because of his conviction that Isabel
was murdered," she says.
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Despite knowing Ken Stott for more than ten years - they first met at the
National Theatre - they have never worked together until now.
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"I have been a fan of Messiah from the first series and the production
standards and writing are of such a high quality that it was impossible
to turn down.
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"And I've known Ken for ages - since we worked together at the
National ten years ago - and we've always wanted to work together, so
it was the perfect opportunity. Plus I thought it was a really interesting
role."