Billie Piper plays Rose Tyler
Landing the part of Rose Tyler, the latest in a long line of time-travelling
companions for the Doctor, meant more to Billie Piper than anything
in her career to date - including seeing her debut single top the charts.
"When that happened, I was in the midst of this mad pop frenzy and
I didn't really have time to enjoy the moment," recalls the pop star-turned-actress
or actress-turned-pop star-turned-actress, as she would prefer.
"It's only on reflection that I can think how great it was, but at
the time I couldn't feel it. It all happened very quickly - I was only
15 and completely numb to that success, which is a shame.
"But the thing about acting is you have to be living the moment all
the time, so you can enjoy it all the time. I'm just happy to be feeling
it this time round."
Still only 22, Billie has packed a lot into her life, including pop
stardom and marriage to media mogul Chris Evans, but she now feels she
is finally doing what she was born to do - act.
"As a child, I always wanted to be an actor and I studied drama and
did workshops when I was growing up in Swindon," she says.
"I didn't just want it to be my hobby, I wanted it to be my life and
to throw myself into it completely, so I got a scholarship with the
Sylvia Young Theatre School in London.
"It was always my mission to be an actor - I just got sidetracked somewhere
along the line!"
Billie was asked to do a demo-tape for a new record label keen to find
a new young female solo artist and, as she recalls, "it just snowballed
from there".
"I did it because I love music," she says. "I was never really that
confident as a singer but I saw it as a stepping stone and hoped that
it would open doors for me in the future as an actress.
"I know there have been times when the whole pop thing has gone against
me in terms of getting roles, but I also knew I would just have to apply
myself."
To that end, Billie went to Los Angeles to re-start her acting studies
in relative anonymity, then came home and began auditioning.
"The main reason I got parts was because I always considered myself
to be an actress and it was only news to everybody else. So I think
it was my passion and conviction that got me my first couple of jobs,"
she says.
A role in the 大象传媒's contemporary version of Chaucer's Canterbury Tales
in 2003, opposite TV heavyweights James Nesbitt and Dennis Waterman,
made people sit up and take note of Billie's talent.
And when it came to trying to land the part of Rose in Doctor Who,
she had an ace up her sleeve.
"I had a first audition and was then called back to read opposite
Christopher (Eccleston) so the producers could check out the chemistry
between us.
"That was really quite scary, but I'd met Christopher before because
we were going to be partnered up to do another TV drama.
"Nothing ever came of that project, but at least we'd been out for
a drink before and enjoyed each other's company, so that definitely
helped."
Billie sees Rose as more of an equal to the Doctor than his previous
companions.
"The new series keeps the essence of the old Doctor Who, but one of
the ways it has updated it is in the relationship between the Doctor
and Rose.
"I think they're on a par with one another, more like partners, and
the audience sees everything through Rose's eyes," explains Billie.
"She's human, the Doctor's an alien, and she's experiencing all these
alien situations throughout the series. At times, the whole thing is
slightly overwhelming for her, but she can cope with it and match the
Doctor.
"He is constantly challenging her, trying to broaden her horizons,
and she's trying to show him how to be more in touch with human emotions.
"The series is a great balance between science fiction, which can be
a bit detached, and real, genuine emotions. I don't think I would have
done it if it was strictly sci-fi, as much as I've enjoyed being chased
by monsters!
"I get my biggest buzz from working opposite Christopher when Rose
and the Doctor are having 'domestic' kind of conversations. But the
creativity of the plots and their characters, the sets and the whole
look of the series is amazing."
Billie admits that she sees a younger version of herself in Rose, especially
the way she relies on her instincts and intuition.
"She's only 19, and when you're that age you don't tend to analyse
things as much, you tend not to think so much about the consequences
of your actions.
"That's what I like about Rose - everything about the Doctor's world
is so brand new to her, and she's relying on her instincts all the time
and I love that."
Billie adds: "If Rose had been older she might not have gone off in
the first place with this strange man who calls himself the Doctor and
abandoned the life she knows.
"But when we first see her she's so bored and looking for excitement.
She feels trapped and doesn't want the kind of mundane life she's living.
But then she meets this guy who totally shakes up her world."