Article Plan
My
article will be an interview with the actress, where she talks about her newest
TV show and it's links to feminism, relating back to my critical
investigation piece. In addition to this, all the typical codes and conventions
of Harper's Bazaar will be carried out through the article, with the actress
divulging the details of her personal life and the fashion and beauty brands
she can't live without. There will also be a quote of the actress central to
the article for readers skimming over the text, it should summarise the page
concisely and entice people to read more.
The
first draft of my article is as follows
My first sighting of Maisie Bass is across Gauchos in London, her choice
of restaurant for lunch. I arrive on time on what is already a surprisingly
swelteringly hot day. So when the 19-year-old actress tumbles through the door
15 minutes later, she looks flushed and flustered in the way that anyone might
who was running behind schedule and had been pounding the pavement in the
midday sun. She is dressed nicely: a white Isabel Marant blazer over a pink Zac
Posen top, with skinny Paige jeans, gladiator sandals and a white Narciso
Rodriguez bag in the crook of her arm. All of this I take in later; I am more
distracted now by the animated dumb show that ensues when
The waitress greets her. Confusion first, then distress rattle across
her face as she fishes out her phone and starts jabbing at the screen,
presumably to bring up the name of our reservation. It’s a sort of manic
behaviour I have seen before, albeit in heightened form, from her character on
Chase, though of course Daniella Mathews only manifests it when she has been blindsided
by a terrorist bomb or a Met police betrayal, or simply slipped off her meds
and spiralled into one of her episodes. I hurry over to introduce myself and a
minute later we are about to sit down when Maisie spins around and apologetically
disappears off to the bathroom. When she re-emerges – you’d think having cooled
off – she is just as charged up as before. Before I’ve even turned on the tape
recorder she’s already off on a feminist rant, so my transcript catches her in
medias res: “It just doesn’t make sense? How can any self-respecting woman possibly
wish to be represented in this way?” she questions as she reflects on last night’s
episode of ‘The Royals.’ But, before a feminist rant entails, I discourage the
subject topic and begin with a question. When I ask her what she most likes
about her new life, she doesn't miss a beat. ‘The money,’ she says, in her
husky, Bacall-esque voice.
Pause.
‘I’m joking. The work, the work…’
‘…In fact, I love the new platform I have to enforce feminist views and
display to all women that you can succeed in a man’s world without being
likened to a sexual object…’ and I couldn’t agree more. Maisie’s character
Daniella is consistently empowering herself; she is in a high powered job,
dictates the men around her and has a great deal of sex with various people.
Her role as director also allows her to get her message across, she continues ‘…I
wanted the public to understand that a show like this can exist, powerful
female leads are entertaining, female characters are beyond more than just a
male leads’ sidekick…’ and by switching those typical ideologies, the women are
protecting the men of the country. As a take another bite into my sirloin
steak, she shows me picture of her five year old brother Mason, who finds it
difficult when she’s away filming. She continues ‘ … He’s adorable, definitely a
potential heartthrob, hopefully a little bit of feminism will rub off on him,
I’m hopeful he’ll treat girls right” At one point, having wandered off topic, I
ask if I may jump back to a subject many readers are longing to know more
about, namely the next season of Chase. ‘Of course, of course. You may, you
may,’ she says with a flourish, the spirit of gallant silliness creeping in. I
see what she means, when comparing herself to Daniella Mathews. She cites a
common obsessiveness and restlessness, but also notes a key difference: ‘She’s earnest,
I’m earnest. But I’m goofy too.’
So what about Chase, the television series that earned her two NTA
awards and worldwide acclaim? To be fair, there have been moments, particularly
in the last season, which tested the patience of even the most diehard fan. But
at its best the show quickens the pulse and jangles the nerves like no other.