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Matthew Macfadyen: "There's something quite lonely about Arthur. He's had this austere childhood in which he's been constantly judged by his awful, cold mother, and he's been packed off to the East to work in a job he doesn't enjoy. Now he's back and, after what his dying father has told him, he has this feeling there's something that needs to be put right in his family. As for Amy, yes, he's slow off the mark - but I think a lot of people have been in that position where you're thrilled when someone arrives and sad when they go, yet it only gradually dawns on you why. Not that Arthur is some innocent: he's a man of the world, and his great talent is he can talk to anyone." (Image © Radio Times/Mike Hogan) |
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