DON'T YOU MEAN TIARA FITZGERALD?
If the pun was predictable, at least she has earned the right to be
crowned as one of Britain's princesses of screen and stage. At 29,
Fitzgerald has won a steady stream of accolades since she shot to
fame straight out of drama school, as Nancy in the film Hear My Song.
REIGN TO DATE
She stars this week in the 3 million pound BBC adaptation of Anne
Bronte's The Tenant of Wildfell Hall, a bleak tale about a woman who,
with her young son, runs away from a murky past to lodge in Wildfell
Hall and becomes the object of much speculation. She made her TV
debut as promiscuous Polly in Mary Wesley's The Camomile Lawn, and
played another offbeat Wesley heroine in the recently screened The
Vacillations of Poppy Carew. On the big screen, she has played
clergyman Hugh Grant's wife Estella in Sirens, and Grant's squeeze in
The Englishman Who Went Up A Hill and Came Down A Mountain.
BARE NECESSITIES
Never too coy about stripping for the camera, she seems to do it all
the time. "I'm not doing it as any kind of political thing. It's what
I believe, for me. But I respect that other actors don't have that
feeling because it's a delicate area," she says. "I would never whip
my clothes off willy-nilly, but I'm not about to close down,
either...It's quite liberating really. When you're nude on a set, and
you're working, you're not thinking about it, so it's probably one of
the only times in your life that you can be nude and not be
self-conscious, weirdly enough".
HOORAY FOR HOLLYWOOD?
"I don't want to live there and I doubt I ever will," she says. "As a
child, I had such a naive and idealistic view of Hollywood-it was
very much the Golden Gates and Gene Kelly dream-and when I went out
there it was the antithesis of that. I was so shocked by the
superficiality...If you're prepared to go for the facelifts and all
that, fine, but I don't see how anyone can be happy there."
SO BRITISH IS BEST?
"Americans think what we do is quaint and they love our costume
drama and heritage, so I'm quite happy to stay here and be quaint. I
really love this country and if I can work here I'm happy. People
make some of the best films in the world here: the problem is that we
haven't got the money. But so long as we embrace what we have and
don't try to emulate Hollywood-we're not about slick action dramas-I
really believe we can't be bettered. People work here because they
love it, not because of an extra dollar on the highest-paid actor
list."
The Tenant of Wildfell Hall, TV1, Sunday, 8.35 pm.