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It feels like the whole world and their nan has caught the Line of Duty bug.
A bit like the Friends reunion show, it sure feels like it’s been all anyone’s talked about for the last month or so. It may just be lockdown boredom, but the proof is in the stats: the show’s popularity has almost doubled over the last year, with figures showing the first episode of the sixth series broke BBC records with an all-time high audience figure of 9.56 million.
So, as the sixth season of the hit BBC crime drama nears to an end, we’ve turned into our own detectives and delved deeper into the show’s history. Keen to discover what truly happens behind the scenes? Keep reading.
*Warning* Contains spoilers!
8 Line of Duty facts we bet you didn’t know
1. Can you spot Jed Mercurio?
Did you know? Line of Duty writer Jed Mercurio made a secret cameo in one of the episode So, can you spot him? Spoiler alert: probably not.
In 2020, Mercurio tweeted that he was the one driving the grey Golf in front of Lennie James and Gina Mckee. His Tweet shared: “No one on set knew the route we’d recce’d, so Lennie followed me through the streets of Birmingham while they filmed the scene in the car behind”.
Who knows – maybe in future episodes, Mercurio will make more of an appearance. For now, we’ll be paying close attention to who may be behind the wheel…
2. No one knew Martin Compston was Scottish
Scottish actor Martin Compston, who plays Steve Arnott in the series, is a fan of method acting, whereby you continue to stay in character even when the cameras stop rolling.
For the entirety of Line of Duty filming, it’s been reported that he spoke with a London accent. When they finished recording season six, it’s reported that Martin surprised the whole crew with his native Scottish dialect.
3. Lockdown weight gain for DI Arnott
When the UK – and subsequent world – was first hit with coronavirus at the beginning of 2020, Martin Compston returned to his home in Vegas.
During the lockdown, he himself says he ‘ate too much and drank too much’, meaning that when he returned to filming, his iconic DI Arnott waistcoats no longer fitted.
“That was a really tough day, I was bursting out of everything,” he shared. Vicky McClure, who plays Kate Fleming in the series, teased that Martin ‘had to get an exercise bike for his flat and [only eat] soup for two weeks’.
4. One messed-up audition led to a huge success
Vicky McClure, aka Kate, has revealed she was certain she wasn’t going to be casted in the show after her audition.
McClure told GQ :“I remember my audition being a shocker. I hadn’t learned my lines, and I missed my mouth when I went to have a drink of water and it all went down my top”.
McClure was still cast as detective Kate Flemming – we guess her audition was one to remember…
5. A different EastEnders nickname?
DI Matthew ‘Dot’ Cottan originally held a nickname referencing another classic EastEnders star.
Fun fact: Craig Parkinson, who plays Matthew Cottan in the show, was supposed to be called Matthew ‘Babs’ Windsor, named after the soap-opera legend Barbra Windsor.
Which one do you prefer? Personally, we’re surprised Matthew ‘Phil’ Mitchell wasn’t considered..
6. Plus sudden name changes
After the filming of Season One had wrapped, the production team made the decision to change the name of Lennie James, who plays Tony Gates, to, ahem, Tony Gates.
His original character name has never been revealed, nor has why the crew deemed it so important to change at the last minute. If you watch earlier episodes carefully, you can actually notice camera cuts when Gates’ name is said. Interesting…
7. Real family members were in the show, too
Martin Compston’s real wife has appeared on the show, but unlike Jed Mercurio, you can actually spot her.
Tianna Chanel Flynn made her cameo as Tina Watts. Sadly, you only saw her photo on a dating profile – but this does mean that Martin’s dog is next to her in the appearence, too.
As well as Tianna making an appearance, Vicky McClure’s nephew Kai makes a camea as the son of her character, DI Fleming. Now that is one cool aunt.
8. Rejection, rejection, rejection
This one’s interesting. It’s been widely reported that when writer Jed Mercurio first pitched his idea for Line of Duty to the BBC, he was met with rejection. He waited nine months before BBC 2 picked it up for one season.
Six seasons on and it is one of the biggest crime dramas the BBC has ever aired. Sounds kind of like J.K Rowling’s Harry Potter story to us, which proves one thing, and one thing only – never give up on your dreams.
Tune in to the finale of Line of Duty this Sunday at 9pm. Reporting by Rosie Grant.
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