Showing posts with label shayne ward. Show all posts
Showing posts with label shayne ward. Show all posts

Friday, 15 February 2019

Shayne Ward gets hairy for horror role


Shayne Ward, who payed Coronation Street's Aidan Connor, will be starring in a new horror film based in Lincolnshire. The film is called Skendelby and tells the frightening story of an ancient evil archaeological curse lurking within the estate of Skendleby Hall in Lincolnshire.

Shayne said: “I am absolutely delighted to be joining a great cast and crew on an exciting new British film. The script is brilliant and I can’t wait to get going. I loved making my last film and the part I have landed has huge potential. I hope the film will be a big hit and I know audiences love the horror genre and will be keen to support an all British project.”

The film is expected to be released in 2020 with filming set to begin in April this year.

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Friday, 10 August 2018

Shayne Ward grows beard for new film role


Shayne Ward, who played Aidan Connor in Coronation Street, has revealed to Inside Soap magazine this week that he's about to start shooting a new movie.

He's starring in a film called Stairs. It's a psychological thriller where Shayne plays a squadron leader. He's even grown a beard for the role - and there are some great photos of him in the magazine as they lead with the Corrie cast and their Inside Soap awards nominations. 

Shayne also says he'll be off to Vietnam soon to play some music shows too.

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Monday, 7 May 2018

Shayne Ward interview: Aidan's final scenes air tonight


How did it feel to film your exit scenes?
As an actor I was honoured to be given the responsibility of this storyline, what actor would give up that opportunity. It was a decision that was made between us all and was totally storyline led, they sat me down and said they were thinking of exploring this issue and I understood the importance of it. At the end of the day I could have said no, that I couldn't do it. But I thought about it and talked it through and there was a greater pull to want to do the storyline. I will miss playing Aidan and working with the fantastic people on this show but it is a massively important storyline to tell.

What research did you do?
I met with Samaritans and I was able to talk through everything, they were across all the storylines as were CALM. It helped answer a lot of questions, I learned lots of things from them and realise that every story is different. This is Aidan's story, it is not based on anyone else's story but it is telling an all too common story. They encouraged me to ask anything. Knowing that they were advising on the scripts gave me great confidence to play the story out. I know Aidan, I have played him for three years, I was able to have some input into the final episodes following my meeting with Samaritans as I wanted to be true to Aidan.

How did you find playing the scenes?
It was difficult playing those scenes because I know how important it is to tell a story like this, it has to ring true for the viewer. There needed to be honesty in it so I had to really look into everything that Aidan has been through. Obviously you do draw upon stories that you have been told but I had to take everything into account and try in some way to understand everything Aidan has been through and what has brought him to this point.

I had quite a few emotional scenes and it is important to be able to get out of that mindset and shake it off at the end of the filming day. I have always been able to deal with a lot of pressure, it helps being from such a big family, this going back to my singing days. I was 21 when I did The X Factor, I had been working from the age of 16, so when The X Factor came along I was more prepared for the pressure that brought. I am one of seven and I always felt like one of the older ones. I was the one they took advice from. So when I did this storyline and came out of it I was able to step away from the pressure.

You can do a scene like the ones I played and you can remain in that day place and I could have stayed feeling very down and knowing how serious the storyline was, I could have added pressure on myself but I believed in what I was doing and hopefully it will be so helpful to people that it will be something that my daughter will be proud of. So for me it was all about looking to the future with her at the forefront of my mind. She is my happy place.

Are you good at talking about your feelings?
Trying to find the right balance with Aidan I brought a lot of myself into playing him so I could give true performances but there is also a lot about him that is very different from me. I am a talker, I believe in talking. It is something I try to instil in my friends and family if they are going through hard times. I ask them to talk to me about it, or to each other. If you are left alone with your thoughts and demons it puts you in that dark place and it is hard to get out. That is what this storyline is about, a lot of men think it is a weakness to talk and it isn't. It is a pride thing, men bottle it up - but have pride in talking and admitting how you are feeling. I have sat there with my own thoughts and it doesn't work, talking about them is what helped me but sadly Aidan doesn't, he doesn't want to burden anyone, he is too proud to speak out.

Will you watch tonight?
Yes, and my family have said that they want to watch it, and that is the point, if they didn't want to watch they would be falling into the bracket of ignoring the issue and staying silent so I am very pleased that they want to watch it. Hopefully it will spark conversations amongst viewers, they might be difficult conversations but they are important ones.


If Aidan's storyline is resonating with you, there is help and support available now. Samaritans offers a 24 hours a day, 7 days a week helpline support service. Call them FREE on 116 123. You can also email jo@samaritans.org. Further information can be found at www.mentalhealth.org.uk.





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Sunday, 6 May 2018

Catherine Tyldesley interview: Eva and Aidan's final goodbye


How did you feel when you first heard about the storyline?
I am 100% behind this storyline and I understand why the programme wanted to do it with Aidan. Aidan is so loved and it appears everything is going well for him and on the surface he is happy. I believe this is what happened and it can be very hard to spot the signs that someone is struggling to the extent they are considering suicide. I feel it is important to highlight it in this way, because I really don't think it is talked about enough at all. Men do not talk as much as they should and this shows in the figures of the number of men who tragically have taken their own life.

Aidan and Shayne are men that people can identify with. If the storyline can encourage someone to speak out and talk about how they are feeling as a result of watching this story then surely that is a good thing.

Obviously I knew it meant the end of Shayne's time with Coronation Street and I was very sad that he was going to be leaving, but when you get to my age everyone in some way has been affected by suicide. There are several people that I know who have been lost to suicide and I think most people have had some experience of the tragedy of someone taking their own life.

Can soaps play a part in getting these messages across?
Soap are the perfect way to get this issue out there to ensure it's talked about. How often do you access information unless you are in the doctors or a community centre. But seeing something on television is more accessible and you only need to see the increase in men coming forward as a result of David's rape storyline to see the difference we can make. If we can use Coronation Street as a platform to highlight this issue then that is amazing.

Are you pleased to be part of this story?
I am so proud to be involved in the storyline and honoured that Kate Oates put her trust in Shayne and I and the rest of the Connor family to tell this story.

How did you feel about Shayne leaving the show?
We clicked from day one, and we have just been inseparable ever since, so personally I'm gutted that we're no longer working together, but I understand completely why this has happened. Whenever we had down time we just had a giggle. He is like my brother and he is such a team player, and no one has a bad word to say about him. He is such a gentleman and he looks after everyone, cast and crew. He is a genuine soul and I do feel lost without him.

What happens when Aidan comes round to see Eva at the cottage?
Eva doesn't know why Aidan has come to the house. She has previously told him about the baby and had hoped he would want to make it work, but his reaction was such that she backtracked and said it wasn't his child. Deep down he knew she was telling the truth, but he couldn't deal with it. Unbeknownst to her, he is struggling so much mentally that he just can't cope with the news. Wrongly, he thinks that everyone is better off without him, including his child.

When he comes to the cottage he knows, having seen the baby and witness Toyah's reaction, that Susie is his baby. She is shocked when he arrives, but hope starts to build within her and she believes he has come to see her because he wants to try and make a go of their relationship. She tells him that she loves him and he says he loves her. By the time he leaves her mind is racing and she is convinced he wants her back. She thinks she is going to have to tell Toyah she wants the baby back. It is her dream come true and when she finds the engagement ring that he has left behind it seals it for her.

She has no idea what his real plan is and by the time she returns to the Street the next day she is too late and is devastated by what he has done.

They are very emotional scenes. What were they like to film?
The scenes asked for Eva to cry, but I didn't have to try. I replayed all the scenes we had ever played together in my head, all the wedding scenes, the lovely moments between Eva and Aidan and the tears just flowed. I enjoyed working with Shayne so much and I had all those memories to drawn on. The way the journey has been strutted is compelling and I didn't have to try and dig for those emotions, because they were already there. The scripts are beautifully written and it wasn't difficult to feel the emotion that Eva was feeling.

That said, they were incredibly tough to film, because it felt very real. Shayne's final scenes on his last day of filming were just the two of us out on location at the cottage and it was very emotional. We were both wiped out afterwards.

How did you and Shayne plan the scenes?
Shayne and I talked a lot about the storyline and how it would play out. We have worked so closely together for such a long time and known each other's characters inside out and we knew instinctively how we wanted to play it. Whenever we had spare time we rehearsed, because we wanted to put everything we had into those scenes.

Will Eva blame herself moving forward?
She believes she is responsible, but she is not to blame of course. However, she is riddled with guilt. The reaction of Eva and the Connors is so important in this story. We've been grieving and crying in pretty much every scene, and your body thinks that is real.

Eva's life is full of secrets and she is feeling terribly guilty. It is eating away at her because she has given away Aidan's baby and now she doesn't have either of them. She keeps thinking back to what they had together.

Is this one of the best storylines you have been involved in?
Yes, 100% and it's definitely the most important storyline we could be telling. This narrative began a year ago and to working on such an important story before I leave Coronation Street is a privilege and an honour.


If Aidan's storyline is resonating with you, there is help and support available now. Samaritans offers a 24 hours a day, 7 days a week helpline support service. Call them FREE on 116 123. You can also email jo@samaritans.org. Further information can be found at www.mentalhealth.org.uk.




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Monday, 30 April 2018

Aidan's suicide shock: what to expect


Just a short one from me after quite an emotional day. There will be more of a write up in due course. Myself and fellow blogger Ruth headed to a special screening of next week's episodes, due to air on Monday and Wednesday.

By the time that this blog is posted, viewers will have had fifteen minutes to take in how Shayne Ward will exit his role as Aidan Connor. Undoubtedly there will have already been hundreds of tweets flooding in saying this is too dark for a family show. But please wait for Monday night.

Today I have watched some of the best episodes of Coronation Street in years. I cried, and I laughed. There are some really, really touching and sensitive moments. Kudos to Shayne Ward, Cath Tyldesley, Richard Hawley, Samia Ghadie and Georgia Taylor for their breathtaking acting. Keep an eye out for Helen Worth's wonderful, reflective scene too.

This is such an important story, and it needs to be told. Hats off to Kate Oates and the team at Coronation Street.



If Aidan's storyline is resonating with you, there is help and support available now. Samaritans offers a 24 hours a day, 7 days a week helpline support service. Call them FREE on 116 123. You can also email jo@samaritans.org. Further information can be found at www.mentalhealth.org.uk.





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Shayne Ward interview: Aidan Connor to take his own life


How did Aidan reach this tragic point?
The thing is everybody is going to be thinking were there any tell tale signs that Aidan was feeling suicidal? You can't pin it down to one particular thing that has happened to him over the years. He has always been quite troubled. But it isn't always possible to spot a person is struggling to cope with life.

I had to figure out when and why Aidan had reached a point were he felt this was his only option, the path that he was going to take. I feel that it was because of all the problems that he caused, a lot of them not on purpose and some were down to his own actions. He lost his relationship and as a consequence he lost the factory and everyone lost their jobs, I have figured out that one thing Aidan can't do is escape his own mind, he is short tempered with people. But he could never explain why he was angry or annoyed, he just was and he really did feel, wrongly, that everyone would be better off without him.

How long had he felt this way?
He had actually planned to do this sooner but then Carla was sick and needed a kidney he saw this as a way to finally do something good, to help someone, but by this point he had decided that he was going to take his own life and posted the later, but when he found out about Carla and he intercepted the letter the next day from the postman outside his dad's flat. He stopped his family seeing the suicide note and he didn't go ahead with his plan at that point. There was a moment in the hospital when he was crying his eyes out, but tragically he kept all of that from his family, so there were no tell tale signs for his family to see. He didn't talk to anyone about how he was feeling. Everyone around him was so happy that it had been successful. He didn't want to burden anyone with his thoughts.

He wants to get everyone their jobs back and make the factory a success. To be given the whole empire of Underworld after everything he had done to that business was overwhelming for him. Now it is all on his shoulders, it is incredible but what if he messes it up again, that is something that has plagued Aidan ever since we first saw him. He has always wanted to prove that he is like his dad and that he can carry on the empire but he just seems to trip up along the way and that is his biggest fear - what if I do it again?

Tell us about the moment when he realises the baby is his
Toyah has been acting awkward around Aidan in regards to the baby. He knows Eva has gone away to have a baby, he thinks it's Adam's baby and that door is shut. But when Susie comes into play, Toyah is acting really weird around him. He can't work out why and there is a moment when he tells Toyah the baby is beautiful and she gives him a strange look. He thinks it is a bit odd and there is a scene in the pub where someone goes to pass the baby to Aidan and Toyah steps in to stop him and he realises that it is now twice that she has behaved weirdly with the baby around him. When she goes behind the bar, she turns and they lock eyes and he sees it in her eyes, the moment is so tell tale. The truth dawns on him that it's his baby. Eva has gone away, no one has seen or heard from her and she hasn't returned any of his calls. This baby is now on the scene and he knows from the way that Toyah has reacted that there is something going on.

What happens when he holds the baby?
Aidan decides to go and find Eva, and he goes to call her but he isn't able to face her rejection again so he cancels the call. Johnny spills red wine on him so he goes to try and find some paper towels and sees Toyah and tries to ask about Eva, but she gets defensive and he doesn't want to arouse suspicion. But at that moment he feels the need to find out if he feels a connection to the baby and that is really sad, because he holds the baby. You see the sadness in his eyes as he realises that he can't be there for this baby, he loves the baby and he doesn't want to let the child down, he in his mind has let everyone else down and he thinks he will do the same again. He feels that everyone, including his child will be better off without him. When he holds her she is the most beautiful thing in the whole world but he just passes her back to Toyah. He thinks he would ruin this child's life.

Why does he go to see Eva at this point?
She doesn't know why he is there but he is not there to have it out with her, he just wants to see her. She is confused and when he says that he has seen the baby, she starts to get panicky and apologises, but he says she has nothing to apologise for, he knows everything she did is because of how he treated her. She breaks down and he tells her that he thinks what she is doing with the baby is the right thing. Johnny breaks the moment by calling him, so he says goodbye and tells Eva that he loves her.

What happens in his final scenes?
He is sat in the pub and he is completely numb sat with his family who are completely unaware of his terrible state of mind. The last time we will see him is when he is back at the flat alone and he breaks down.

How did you feel when you were asked about playing this storyline?
I am honoured to have been trusted with a storyline like this, it shows the confidence that Kate Oates and the team had in me to be able to play it. When you get given a storyline like this it is a decision that is not taken lightly, I have played it with as much honestly and truth as I could. I am very proud of what I have done in my three years on the show and on this storyline in particular.

Aidan is an 'everyman' figure, he is someone men can identify with, which is important in telling this story. We hope that anyone who recognises something of themselves in Aidan, will realise they can, and really should, talk about how they are feeling.

They should realise this is not the only option, they can and should talk to someone, rather than suffer in silence and potentially let things get worse.

Talking could have helped Aidan turn his life around. It could have brought him relief from what he was going through. This what his loved one would have wanted. Suicide is a very permanent response to what are usually temporary problems.

We all know someone who has maybe felt like Aidan did, someone who found it hard to talk and we have all heard stories like Aidan's when it was too late, when people looked back and wished they had spotted the signs, but it isn't always possible. If we can encourage someone who is feeling low, who is having the sort of thoughts Aidan was having, to realise they need to talk, then we have achieved what we set out to do with this story.



If Aidan's storyline is resonating with you, there is help and support available now. Samaritans offers a 24 hours a day, 7 days a week helpline support service. Call them FREE on 116 123. You can also email jo@samaritans.org. Further information can be found at www.mentalhealth.org.uk.





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Sunday, 18 February 2018

Faye Brookes reveals details of Shayne Ward's Corrie exit


Faye Brookes, who plays Kate Connor in Coronation Street, is interviewed in The Sun's Fabulous Magazine this weekend.  She talks about her personal relationship with boyfriend Gareth Gates and also about her co-star Shayne Ward, who plays Aidan Connor.

Asked about Shayne leaving Corrie, Kate says this which I found very interesting as it hints that his leaving might not have been of his own decision.  But I guess, in the acting profession, nothing is ever taken for granted.

Anyway, Kate says this about Shayne Ward leaving:

“I still feel really sad about it, and I think he’s probably going to be upset about it until he goes. It’s a difficult thing to deal with but I totally understand why they’ve done it. I’m absolutely devastated that he’s going, but I also realise you have to go with the changes.

“He is like my brother off screen, too, and probably the only person I truly confide in at work. He came in at the same time as me, he has the same background as my boyfriend, and he gets me and he gets Gareth. But he will take the bull by the horns and go with it.”

Did it make her worried about her own future?

“Oh yeah. It’s the first question that popped into my head. None of us are safe, because Shayne is really good at his job and he’s loved. But if there are some who maybe take it for granted or have become a bit complacent, it really does make you pull your socks up. I don’t want to go anywhere. I’m working my bum and I hope they’ll keep me there for a very long time.”

You can read the full interview here.


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