Emerald Fennell attributes 'absolutely amazing' career to 'working non-stop'

admin admin | 09-06 00:16

Saltburn creator Emerald Fennell has said her "absolutely amazing" career break has come after years of "working non-stop".

The screen writer said she did not have "even a moment of maternity leave" while working on BBC series Killing Eve and the black comedy film set in the noughties.

Fennell was speaking on the Perfect Day With Jessica Knappett podcast when she also spoke about being nine months pregnant while working on Promising Young Women.

She said: "I'm on a little break basically, in the last five years, nearly six years, actually, really from the start of Killing Eve season two, to a month ago or six weeks ago, I’ve been working non-stop, as well as having two children, and not really having even a moment of maternity leave or anything like that.

"I was nine months pregnant (when directing Promising Young Women), I gave birth three weeks later. Three weeks after principal photography.

"And then straight to the edit. I was like, it’s fine, (it’s) what happens in anyone’s life, but particularly in a woman’s life, is that you know the two things tend to come at the same time, don’t they?

"You’ve spent 10 years, 15 years working to get to the stage and that’s also at the time when you kind of you know if you want to have children sort of the time when you kind of need to start thinking about that. So it’s inevitable.

"I actually think what was really great for me in lots of ways is it’s important to say, it can be done.

"It can be done. I spent a lot of my 20s anxious that it’s not possible to do this stuff, and it’s hard. It’s like gruelling. It’s physically hard and emotionally it’s not wonderful, but it is possible.

"This is the first time I’ve had some time off in five or six years and it is I’ve got to say, absolutely amazing."

Fennell also revealed she had been suffering from "intrusive thoughts, nightmares" and "night sweats".

She added: "If I could live my dream life, half of my time would be asleep.

"I would, and as it is now, I have four to five hours’ sleep and it is an absolute misery.

"It’s a combination of factors, it is children don’t sleep, intrusive thoughts, nightmares, night sweats, the horror, the existential horror of death.

"Things that might happen to the children, things that might happen to me. It’s just the nighttime, it used to be for fun and snogging and dancing and watching sexy late-night films.

"And now it’s just for the cold hand of terror around my neck."

Source: Press Association

Disclaimer: The copyright of this article belongs to the original author. Reposting this article is solely for the purpose of information dissemination and does not constitute any investment advice. If there is any infringement, please contact us immediately. We will make corrections or deletions as necessary. Thank you.


ALSO READ

Gold prices see drop in local and international markets

Listen to article In a major shift in the local gold market, the price of 24-carat gold per tola dec...

Bank of England cuts interest rate as UK inflation hits three-year low

The Bank of England on Thursday said it was cutting its key interest further after UK inflation hit ...

US Fed Reserve to cut rates amid economic uncertainty under second Trump term

The US Federal Reserve is expected to reduce its benchmark policy rate by a quarter of a percentage ...

Last 28th Māori Battalion veteran Sir Bom Gillies dies, aged 99

Sir Robert 'Bom' Gillies, the last surviving member of the 28th Māori Battalion, has died. He was 99...

RSA seeks new pokie consent after 'honest mistake'

Whakatāne's Returned Services Association has made a plea to council for help to reopen its gaming r...

Drugs, theft, safety fears: Tourism village's emergency housing motel impacts

A claim that emergency housing motels have not impacted tourism in Rotorua has been rubbished by one...