The actress says she feels grateful to be a woman working in the TV industry now – rather than in the era of Jilly Cooper’s Rutshire Chronicles
Emily Atack has told how playing Sarah Stratton in Rivals has made her realise how lucky she is to be a woman working in TV with a baby in the present day – rather than in the 80s.
In the show her ambitious, bed-hopping character Sarah is now the co-host of a gossip show, Uncensored, alongside her role on the daytime sofa with lover James Vereker.
But her boss, Corinium TV’s Lord Tony Baddingham (David Tennant), is not happy when he finds out she is pregnant – telling her it is “hugely inconvenient” and suggesting she has a termination.
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In real life Emily, 36, gave birth to baby son Barney, with partner Alistair Garner, in June 2024 and says she feels “lucky” compared to the women of 30 to 40 years ago.
Speaking at a screening of the new Disney+ series last week, she said it had helped her to play the role. “Well, I’m actually so glad that I went through a pregnancy and a baby before doing this because I really, truly, authentically was able to find that emotion. I was still very hormonal!
“Just having a man say those words to you even! David Tennant, loveliest man in the world, but when he’s that character, Tony, he is so terrifying. It really was genuine and I was watching it back and just seeing the panic in my face.
“It makes me feel very lucky in my life and in these times. I mean, we like to think we’ve moved on, not in all areas, but I have had a baby and I am doing TV shows and I’m not being sacked, so that’s good.
“So I do feel very lucky. But I was very much able to authentically go there and be like, ‘oh my God. I can’t believe women have had to go through that’, you know?”
For the second series of Rivals she says that the men, including Tony and MP Rupert Campbell-Black, think they are in control but it’s the women of fictional Rutshire who end up quietly coming up trumps in the power play, particularly TV producer Cameron Cook (Nafessa Williams) and Tony’s wife Monica (Claire Rushbrook).
She explains: “I think what’s lovely about it is that these men are really, really powerful with their helicopters and their money and their obvious power. But the secret power is with the women.
“That’s where the writing is so beautiful because it’s kind of hidden and it’s not obvious. And I think, throughout the series, you will see that the secret powers of the women really, really kind of come through and f*** all the men up.”
Fans of the Jilly Cooper bonkbuster will also be thrilled to hear that there is more to come for Freddie and Lizzie, played by Danny Dyer and Katherine Parkinson, who started a passionate fling at the end of series one. This is despite a scene at the start where she feels guilty for cheating and says she needs to stay away from him because Its “hurting my heart”.
Katherine, 48, laughed: “Well, they don’t stay away from each other for very long! It’s not just her own situation, her own marriage and her much younger children, but Freddie’s got these children at that tricky teenage age. I think it hits her, what am I doing getting carried away? A woman in her late forties sort of being giddy.”
The actress, who is married with two kids in real life, added: “She sort of pulls herself up. But then, you know, Freddie says things…”
– Rivals returns on May 15, Disney+

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