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29 October 2014
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Johnny Vegas as Moz

Johnny Vegas makes Ideal return to Â鶹ԼÅÄ THREE


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Johnny Vegas plays Moz

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"My social status has gone sky high in St Helens since doing all this Â鶹ԼÅÄ comedy and drama. I've just been invited to join the local bowling club!" - Johnny Vegas

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It has been an exhilarating 12 months for Johnny Vegas.

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A second series of Ideal for Â鶹ԼÅÄ THREE has quickly followed his appearances in two hit Â鶹ԼÅÄ dramas, which have introduced Johnny to the very different challenges of both Dickens and Shakespeare.

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"2005 was the year of the classics as far as I'm concerned and it really stretched me". Johnny played the part of Krook, an eccentric rag and bottle merchant with a passion for gin.

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"Doing Bleak House was terrifying. On my first day on set I mistakenly tried to do a cockney accent and even the people who love me no matter what, told me they hated it so I had to bin it quickly.

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"Not a great start when you're sharing a stage with talent like Charles Dance and Gillian Anderson."

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But even though Bleak House seems like a departure for Johnny Vegas, it turns out it was the perfect example of type casting!

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As Johnny explains: "My forte is playing drunks down the ages. When my agent rings me about a role, I don't ask what the part is, but what century it's in.

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"Now that they're making a second series of Rome, I'll probably get a call asking if I can fiddle and drink at the same time.

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"I actually had gout when I went for the part of Krook. I limped into the audition with a bottle of cooking sherry – a 'method' approach to acting that obviously worked on that occasion."

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It also paid off for A Midsummer Night's Dream in which Johnny played Bottom in the Â鶹ԼÅÄ's modern remake of the Shakespeare classic.

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"It's very different to doing stand-up. My problem is I always feel like an interloper when I do serious drama. Don't get me wrong, no-one ever makes me feel that way. It's my own paranoia coming out.

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"But when I'm a comic, I'm in charge. I know what works because it comes from the confidence of having been self-taught. But I don't have that same self belief when it comes to classical drama."

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Since appearing in both dramas, Johnny's social status in his home town of St Helens has risen dramatically.

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"I've been invited to a lot more dinner parties and the local bowling club wants me for a member. I've officially arrived at the pinnacle of St Helens society!"

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Working on Ideal was a welcome return to Johnny's comic roots.

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"Ideal is a really intense shoot and I can be on set for hours at a time.

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"With the dramas, I only had six minute scenes in ten hour shoots, so I spent the other nine hours hanging around texting people who have real jobs and checking the door to see if anyone was walking past - but no one ever was because they had proper parts!

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"I'm in 95% of the scenes in Ideal so the experience is very different. It's a relentless schedule. Three months of shooting, with 5.30am starts.

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"We had a week off in the middle of shooting this time around but as soon as everyone stopped, we all went down with six different types of flu and other unmentionable diseases.

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"I love working with Graham Duff. He's very open to ideas… This means he hasn't actually finished the scripts and needs other people to finish them for him!"

"Working on Ideal is a big laugh and nothing is sacred. Everyone takes the mickey. There's nothing vicious about it but no-one escapes either.

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"You forget how, for some cast members, it can be a bit daunting. Ben Crompton who plays scally Colin, who's always 'on probation', was really shy in the first series but came into his own in this one, because he'd got used to us all.

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"It was brilliant to work with writer Graham Duff again, who is very open to ideas.

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"What this actually means is he hasn't finished the scripts and is taking the organic approach. Roughly translated, that means getting other people to finish it off for you!

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"Seriously, he always asks for our suggestions and if he doesn't like them, then he'll tell you. And if he does, then they get used. A dream scenario for any actor."

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Johnny also has a genuine affection for the lead character.

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"Playing Moz [the hapless dope dealer] is a very comfortable character to play. I've got to know him really well now and I can predict how he might react in certain situations.

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"I feel sorry for him. He's trapped in his own little world which doesn't expand beyond the four walls of his flat - yet he can't leave the flat because he would lose business!

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"He's in a prison and his customers are the only visitors to his little cell and his only link to the outside world. It's actually a very sad situation."

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"I think the cast of Ideal is one of the best I've ever worked with…"

The cast of Ideal is extensive and this time around there are some newcomers to add to the regulars.

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Says Johnny: "This series, we have Jo Neary [playing Moz's new neighbour Judith] who is a brilliant addition to the cast.

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"I first met her when she appeared in a film of mine called Who's Ready for Ice Cream [Johnny's pseudo documentary on what makes good and bad comedy]."

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Johnny found himself in a cameo scene with Jo where "I managed to turn her stomach by stroking her hand and leering suggestively. Exactly the same approach which was called for in Ideal!

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"It's really hard to pick out just a couple of cast members when they're all individually strong.

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"I think it's one of the best casts I've ever worked with – they're all very talented and enthusiastic, without the cynicism that you sometimes find with people who've been in the business for a long time.

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"There are a lot of stand-up comics in Ideal which I think shows in how the gags are timed and delivered. Someone like Seymour Mace [who plays both Craig and his twin brother Steve] is a huge stand-up presence and someone I've been aware of for some time.

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"All the cast are a lot of fun to work with but this could be down to their individual drink problems. I'm the smokescreen and, because I'm easily led, people think I'm the one with the problem and it's simply not true."

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"I'm having a midlife crisis – I get Elle Decoration every month, I'm learning the cello and there's a vicious rumour circulating that I play Swing Ball."

With all the acting work flooding in, it would be surprising if Johnny found time to do anything else but he is a big fan of keeping his interests alive – and finding new ones.

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"I still get Elle Decoration every month and I started learning the cello just before Christmas. In fact, my tutor thinks I've absconded with his antique cello because I haven't been able to get to the last couple of lessons.

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"It's a very hard instrument to learn. I use very few muscles at the best of times and this uses muscles I didn't know I had! I think it's symptomatic of my midlife crisis. I can't afford a Porsche so the cello is the next best thing.

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"I've already suggested to Damon Albarn that there might be a role in Gorillaz for me when I get a bit better. I was a bit upset that he didn't immediately take me up on this.

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"Also I'm driving now. I passed my driving test at the second time of trying so I'm exploring 'man' stuff like car navigation systems to help me see the world – and get out of St Helens.

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"My first driving test was a nightmare. It was going fine until the test instructor decided to make small talk half-way through.

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"Suddenly she was asking me what films I'd been in and I panicked and said, 'Gladiator!'. I think she failed me for impersonating Russell Crowe."

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"I've seen the future and it's a pantomime and Big Brother 9…"

So what plans does Johnny have for 2006 and beyond?

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"I've been spending time recovering from taking hundreds of Big Brother calls." (Rumour had it that Johnny was to be in the recent Celebrity Big Brother along with George Galloway and Michael Barrymore).

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"It was all lies – I wouldn't touch it with a barge pole. Unless my career goes on the skids that is. In which case I might be combining it with bad pantomimes in Widnes.

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"The main thing is I'm getting positive feedback for my acting so we'll see if any other interesting parts come up. But I also want to return to doing stand-up.

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"It's got to the point where I've become frightened of live audiences. This is a really telling sign that I need to go back and earn my place on the comedy circuit again.

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"You can't be a proper comic unless you've been out on stage and felt the fear."

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