Why Game of Thrones’ Liam Cunningham doesn’t want to be called a movie star
The Irishman who plays Davos Seaworth in the hit HBO series reveals how being an electrician in Africa led him into acting and why he would rather be known as an actor than a movie star
I was walking home from school when I was about 17 with two friends, and they took a left into an electrical shop. While we were chatting away they grabbed a couple of forms and I was handed one. My mum found it and made me fill it in. I got called for an interview, and that’s how I ended up being an electrician for 11 years. There was no career plan. Still isn’t.
The longest I’d been away from my family was a week – and then when I was 22, I hopped on a plane for the first time and went to live in Africa. It was in 1984, four years after Zimbabwe’s independence. A lot of the whites were leaving the country and, of course, they had stolen all the skilled jobs.
I used to do network electricity, high-voltage stuff – I was covered in rubber to stop me dying. They didn’t have people to run the network: I got invited over, and I went.
I came back from Africa at 25. Having been with 16,000 elephants, looking after the national park, which is the size of Belgium – when you go back to driving a yellow van around Dublin, it just doesn’t have the same glamour.