Emmerdale

Emmerdale’s Dominic Brunt talks working with actress wife, what ‘drives him insane’ on set and getting through to bigots

Interview picture for Emmerdale star Dominic Brunt showing him in character as Paddy and with his wife Joanne Mitchell
Dominic Brunt chats to Metro.co.uk (Picture: Metro.co.uk/REX/ITV)

He’s been one of the most popular faces of Emmerdale for 27 years – half of his life – and Dominic Brunt has told Metro.co.uk how he never takes his role as Paddy Kirk for granted.

In our in-depth chat, the actor tells me how he still gets nervous, drops some gossip about Paddy’s wedding to Mandy Dingle (Lisa Riley), discusses working closely with TV actress wife Joanne Mitchell, his most bizarre fan experience, and what drives him mad on set.

Do you still get ‘pinch me’ moments that you’ve been in the role of Paddy for 27 years?

All the time. Me and Mark [Charnock, who plays Marlon] talk about that constantly. I came from an engineering background, I was a welder, so I don’t know what the alternative was if I hadn’t thought, “I’ll give it a go for a few years and see what happens.”

It’s just been brilliant and we still absolutely love the job. I was 27 when I joined. I’ve been doing it for half my life now!

It still makes me nervous. I really like getting the scripts. I never go upstairs and ask what the storylines are because I like getting the scripts. It never passes me by, how lucky I am and what a privilege it is to be in the job. It’s incredible, really.

Do you remember first coming in? You were originally in it for eight episodes

I was in for eight episodes and then they just continued it. I left for four months. I did the episodes and left and they wrote me back in after about four months.

Do you keep up with how fans respond to Paddy? He’s consistently one of the most popular characters

I joined Twitter a while ago, I think Danny Miller put me on to it. Because it’s light and shade I can’t really take the shade – the meaner side of it is a bit much to handle, really. I’m not sure if it’s a force for good or not. It’s certainly split people into packages, hasn’t it?

Paddy smiles at Mandy outside the salon in Emmerdale
Dominic still gets nervous about playing his beloved alter-ego (Picture: ITV)
Dominic Brunt and Lisa Riley in an early scene over two decades ago as Paddy and Mandy in Emmerdale
27 years! Dominic has played Paddy for half of his life (Picture: ITV)

If it’s right wing you have to believe this, if it’s left wing you have to believe this. I don’t think the world was ever like that but now you’ve got to think people who have the opposite opinion of you are baddies and you are a baddie to somebody else.

Even with soaps I remember sitting watching with my relatives and people watching going, “I like him / I don’t like him / I like him now but I didn’t used to like him / I hate her / She’s great.”

It’s that polarising thing of social media and watching soaps like that, that I kind of stay away from. I think if you read all the reviews you only remember the bad ones, the ones that really sting and get in you, so I stay away from all that. I do occasionally post something, but it’s not a daily thing for me.

We’re heading towards Paddy and Mandy’s wedding which is almost exactly to the day 25 years since their last attempt. Was that deliberate?

We didn’t realise until somebody came and told us – I think if they’d engineered it that way it would have been mentioned in the script. So I think it just fell like that and someone went, “Do you know what, it’s 25 years since…” But we don’t actually mention it.

It feels more amazing that it’s just coincidence!

Exactly. I like things like that. When Lisa Riley left for all those years we stayed in contact all the time. She’s been a really good, strong friend of mine for years and it’s just lovely to be working with her again.

Dominic Brunt and Lisa Riley as Paddy and Mandy in their wedding outfits, Emmerdale
The actor wastes no time in declaring that Mandy is Paddy’s soulmate (Picture: ITV)

She’s just absolutely crackers, she drives me insane but in the best possible way! Never a boring day.

Over the years you’ve formed some good friendships. That must make going to work a lot better

Exactly. And it’s people who want to do well, who put the script first. Like Lisa is completely selfless – same as Mark and everybody else I work with. They want what’s best for the scene rather than what’s best for them. It’s like if Lisa does something that’s really funny, I’m proud of being part of that scene rather than thinking she’s got the laugh and I haven’t.

It’s never been like that, whereas I’ve done jobs before which is the competitive side of it where you think, “I didn’t know it was a race really.”

It’s been said a lot in cast interviews I have done, that it’s like a family there

Definitely. I think because there’s a group of us that work together who’ve been together for that long, it kind of transcends anything that’s like that. There’s no bickering or politics or anything like that, because all that was smoothed out decades ago. Everyone comes with an amount of respect and wants to do really well now.

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