Jodie Comer reveals she told Killing Eve bosses to ‘take out’ scene including her Scouse accent

Jodie Comer has revealed that she told Killing Eve bosses to ‘take out’ a scene in series two that included her Scouse accent.

The Liverpudlian actress, 27, who plays assassin Villanelle in the BBC series, has admitted that she found it ‘too gimmicky’ using her own dialect. 

Jodie insisted that despite her character’s multiple disguises on Killing Eve, a Scouse accent will never be one of them.

No Scouse accent! Jodie Comer has revealed that she told Killing Eve bosses to ‘take out’ a scene in series two that included her Scouse accent

She told The Sun: ‘I’m afraid Scouse will not be making an appearance on Killing Eve. In season two, it got written into one episode.

‘I asked them to take it out because it seemed too gimmicky for me. I was like, “We know she does accents, but Scouse feels too much like a wink to the camera!”.’ 

It comes after Jodie’s co-star Fiona Shaw gushed about her wife Dr Sonali Deraniyagala, saying when they met for the first time time it was as if she ‘just met [her] life.’

'Gimmicky': The Liverpudlian actress, 27, who plays assassin Villanelle in the BBC series, has admitted that she found it 'too gimmicky' using her own dialect (pictured in show still)

‘Gimmicky’: The Liverpudlian actress, 27, who plays assassin Villanelle in the BBC series, has admitted that she found it ‘too gimmicky’ using her own dialect (pictured in show still) 

The Killing Eve star, 61, has been happily married with the author, 56, since 2018, and she talked about their first encounter in an interview with The Daily Express on Thursday when she initiated the meeting after reading Sonali’s book Wave.

Sonali’s memoir detailed the tragic loss of her husband, children and parents during the Indian Ocean tsunami in 2004, which Fiona was so moved by she knew instantly that she wanted to speak with the author. 

Fiona explained: ‘I was so surprised she was that person, not the person in the book. We spent half an hour chatting. And when I left I thought, “I have just met life”.

Sweet: It comes after Jodie's co-star Fiona Shaw gushed about her wife Dr Sonali Deraniyagala, saying when they met for the first time time it was as if she 'just met [her] life' (pictured in 2019)

Sweet: It comes after Jodie’s co-star Fiona Shaw gushed about her wife Dr Sonali Deraniyagala, saying when they met for the first time time it was as if she ‘just met [her] life’ (pictured in 2019)

‘When I met Sonali my name was up in lights on Broadway – the pinnacle of what actors want. But I was so weary of the entire thing. 

‘I was tired in my bones and I didn’t want to say it to anyone. So maybe this was at the right moment.’

Fiona went on to explain that she knew soon after meeting Sonali that she wanted to live with her, and was delighted when she discovered that the economist thought the same way.

Gushing: Of their first encounter, Fiona said: 'When I met Sonali my name was up in lights on Broadway – the pinnacle of what actors want' (pictured in 2019)

Gushing: Of their first encounter, Fiona said: ‘When I met Sonali my name was up in lights on Broadway – the pinnacle of what actors want’ (pictured in 2019) 

The actress described their relationship as a ‘beautiful thing’ to happen to her in later life, as she claimed Sonali brought ‘everything to [her] life’ like companionship and laughter. 

In an interview with Good Housekeeping in April, Fiona claimed it ‘took a very unusual person’ to marry her as she detailed her and Sonali’s home life.

‘I’m married to a very unusual person, but maybe it took a very unusual person to be willing to marry me,’ she said.

Moving: The actress described their relationship as a 'beautiful thing' to happen to her in later life, as she claimed Sonali brought 'everything to [her] life' (pictured in April 2019)

Moving: The actress described their relationship as a ‘beautiful thing’ to happen to her in later life, as she claimed Sonali brought ‘everything to [her] life’ (pictured in April 2019)

‘Sonali’s children, parents and husband were all killed in the Indian Ocean tsunami of 2004, and I’m very cognisant of that. 

‘Its sorrow doesn’t dominate our life, but it definitely defines it. I understand the value of things by being with Sonali.

‘She lives knowing that at any moment the world could end because she lost her world. It has brought me into land, I suppose, about lots of things; a lack of arbitrariness about life,’ she concluded.

The couple now have homes in Islington, north London and Chelsea, in New York’s Manhattan district. 

Sonali was on a Christmas break in her native Sri Lanka along with her economist husband Stephen Lissenburgh, their sons, Vikram, five, Nikhil, seven, and her parents Gemini and Edward. 

They were staying at the Yala Safari Beach Hotel in the south of the country, which was directly in the path of the tsunami.

As they spotted impending giant waves surging towards them, Sonali and her husband grabbed their children, rushed out of the hotel and attempted to escape in a jeep, not even having time to collect her parents from a nearby room.

As the family tried to race away they became submerged in a 30 feet wall of water.

Candid: In an interview with Good Housekeeping in April, Fiona claimed it 'took a very unusual person' to marry her (pictured with Jodie Comer and Sarah Barnett in April 2019)

Candid: In an interview with Good Housekeeping in April, Fiona claimed it ‘took a very unusual person’ to marry her (pictured with Jodie Comer and Sarah Barnett in April 2019)

Tragically, she was the only one who survived. The bodies of Vikram and her parents were found several days after the tsunami while Stephen and Nikhil were discovered months later in a mass grave and were identified through DNA tests. 

The devastating loss sent Sonali into years of depression during which time she contemplated suicide and also abused alcohol and prescription pills, as she confessed in Wave, a moving memoir she wrote in 2013 about her struggle to come to terms with what had happened. 

The book won a host of awards and was described by some critics as one of the best ever written about coping with tragedy and family loss.

In addition to her heartache, it also contains extensive sections of the happy family life Sonali enjoyed, from her son’s obsession with cricket and wildlife to spending moments with her husband and their holidays in Sri Lanka.

Moving: Of her wife's grief, Fiona said: 'Its sorrow doesn’t dominate our life, but it definitely defines it. I understand the value of things by being with Sonali' (pictured in April 2020)

Moving: Of her wife’s grief, Fiona said: ‘Its sorrow doesn’t dominate our life, but it definitely defines it. I understand the value of things by being with Sonali’ (pictured in April 2020)