interview | niamh algar

coat. Sportmax
earrings. Bottega Veneta

There’s a particular steadiness about Niamh Algar, a calm at the centre of the whirlwind of her work. She’s long been a transformative performer, but as she speaks to Schön!, you notice something else about the Irish actor: a quiet focus and an instinct to connect that lingers long after the cameras stop rolling. Because if there’s a pattern in her work, it’s this: she’s not afraid of the complicated woman. In fact, she’s drawn to them. Her commitment to wholeheartedly grasp the psyche of her roles is a part of the gig she never takes lightly.

In ‘The Iris Affair’, Algar leads as a woman who isn’t built to be “likeable” or even understood in the traditional sense. Iris is sharp, composed, and unapologetically strategic, a character who forces the audience to lean in rather than judge. It’s a role that feels tailored to Algar’s instinct for nuance. Plus, that unmistakable Irish deadpan slips in just enough humour to take the edge off an otherwise action-heavy drama series, like a wink in the midst of the chaos.

bomber jacket. Calvin Klein
leather glove. HANDSOME STOCKHOLM
opposite
top + skirt. ERDEM
shoes. JIMMY CHOO

Niamh, tell me, growing up in Mullingar, Ireland, what was the reaction at home when you announced you were going to pursue acting?

It’s funny, I didn’t really tell anyone, to be honest. I moved up to Dublin and started working as a runner, and naturally fell into it as I was around lots of writers, and then eventually joined the drama society. When it came to my first film, I kind of  told my parents, “Oh, I’ve got this thing at the weekend, if you want to go to it?” So yeah, I more or less surprised them with it.

No doubt a smart way of going about it, especially as I know that the industry as a whole can be hard to grasp for a lot of the rural parts of the country!

Right.  There wasn’t anyone from Mullingar who had pursued acting as a career, or you know, had been working as an actor. So I think it would’ve been really difficult to try and explain. It would’ve been a hard sell for sure.

I’m sure they’re all rooting for you now, especially with your exciting role in Sky TV’s new drama series ‘The Iris Affair’.  What was it about that project that made you want to say yes?

Honestly,  everything about it made me want to say yes.  Neil Cross, whose previous work includes ‘Luther’, came up with this new series with a female lead at the helm. I thought this was a character that was really exciting and challenging, and I think any actor would throw their name in the hat. I was lucky to get in there at the start, and he never saw anyone else for the role.  The character was born out of Neil’s reaction to my reading a few of the scenes to him. Then he developed the script from there.  It was a project that was hugely appealing just from the range of the female heroine displayed within the writing alone. I knew it would be really fun.

top + skirt. ERDEM
shoes. JIMMY CHOO
opposite
coat. Moncler x Simone Rocha
shirt. Mark Powell
shoes. Steve Madden
tie. Dolce & Gabbana
tights. Calzedonia

 Before you started filming, did you have anything specific in the back of your head that you wanted to walk away having achieved with this project?

 I suppose to portray something unique to an audience that they haven’t really seen done before. It’s interesting because when I first read the first script, I thought, “This is like ‘A Beautiful Mind’ meets ‘James Bond'”.  It was very refreshing to read a script where my character, Iris, does something you simply wouldn’t imagine a woman doing, but you can easily see a man do the same very thing. And she doesn’t break down over it.  She’s always ten steps ahead and is essentially an action hero by mistake. Finishing filming, I had definitely ​​pushed myself in a physical sense, but more so, I wanted the audience to understand her enough to care about her.

She’s so complex, but you weirdly do end up rooting for her.

 Exactly. Even though she does terrible things, in her head, they’re justified.  Her ideology is quite unique.

The series has its fair share of action, and you worked with a stunt double for those scenes — was that a first for you?

I had worked with them before, but never for the duration of a whole project.  I think that the brilliant thing about working with stunt artists is that they help you find the physicality of the role. We would workshop how the character would run and fight. It had to come across like she was learning on the job. You know, she’s not Jason Bourne, but she has the capability to build up to that, and you really see her skills improve as the series develops.

The visuals of the series are just beautiful. Everything just looks all the more captivating under the Italian sun. Did filming in Italy  have any effect on how you played Iris?

When I arrived and met the whole creative team, I was able to see the world they had created. Everything was shot on location. It almost looks like a set sometimes, but it wasn’t. We definitely wanted to utilise the space as best we could, which in turn added to her character development.

cwoaaist.t cMooatn. cLlaeira x E Sreimnaone Rocha
shirt. Mark Powell
tie. Dolce & Gabbana
tights. Calzedonia
opposite
coat. SELENEE
shirt. Mark Powell
earrings. Bottega Veneta
heels. KALDA
tie. Dolce & Gabbana
tights. Calzedonia

You’ve played a lot of characters that are under immense pressure. What sort of research do you do to get into that mindset?

 In previous projects, with say, ‘The Virtues’, I spent time with a woman who was in a position where she’d been forced to give her child up for adoption. I sat down with her for a long while.  With ‘The Iris Affair’, I spent a lot of time speaking with Neil [Cross], and it was more solidifying a backstory for Iris. We looked at what her previous jobs might’ve been and why she’s immune to such violent acts.  It was more so trying to work out the psychology of this character.

 Besides Iris’s characteristics, was there anything you learned about yourself during this project?

 I’m a huge empath. I have to be for my job. I think that’s where Iris and I have such a huge divide. I tend to react in the moment, so I had to kind of learn how to switch that off. It was almost like finding the opposite of that and trying to emulate no reaction at all.  I learned so much from the writing alone,  from quantum computing to understanding processing powers and qubits. I had to really do my homework and figure out what those actually mean, so I could understand the huge moral questions that the series is founded on.

 I know you’ve also taken on another wildly exciting project, The Last Days of Rabbit Hayes. How did that come onto your radar?

I  actually got sent it about a week into starting Iris.  I thought it was one of the most beautiful things that I’ve ever read. So, after a day of filming in Italy,  I would come home at night and read the book on which it was based off of.  It was a great way to be able to switch off because Iris and Rabbit couldn’t be more different.  When I read the script, I had such an emotional response to it. Especially with it being set in Ireland, I could relate to it a lot.

coat. SELENEE
shirt. Mark Powell
earrings. Bottega Veneta
tie. Dolce & Gabbana
tights. Calzedonia
opposite
coat + jumpsuit. Lily Phellera
boots. Stylist’s Own
necklace. TOHUM
gloves. HANDSOME STOCKHOLM

Irish cinema has been having such a moment in recent years.  Why do you think people are so captivated by it?

We’ve always been incredible storytellers. Ireland’s currency is rooted in story.  I think the writers that we produce are incredible and have such a global reach.  When we were filming there, every studio in Dublin was booked out, which made it difficult to get equipment and crew, but it also made me feel very proud to see Ireland producing so much incredible work.

Would you ever like to get behind the camera? Is that something that appeals to you?

 I’d love to direct one day. I think if I were given the right script. I’m working on something at the moment, but it’s a long way away before anything would happen. But yeah, I would love to direct.

 What can we expect from the finale of ‘The Iris Affair’?

 The ending is pretty epic. Obviously, it’s a game of cat and mouse, and ultimately, is the mouse gonna get trapped? is the question. There is such an emotional climax to the show that I think will hopefully surprise people.

It’ll end with a bang?

 It’ll end with a bang. Exactly.

coat + jumpsuit. Lily Phellera
boots. Stylist’s Own
necklace. TOHUM
gloves. HANDSOME STOCKHOLM

‘The Iris Affair’ season 1 is out now.

photography. Damian Weilers @ Ray Brown Pro
fashion. Hannah Beck
talent. Niamh Algar
casting. Emma Fleming
hair. Chad Maxwell @ A-Frame Agency
make up. India Excell @ A-Frame Agency using Westman Atelier
photography assistant. Harry Forte
fashion assistant. Harley Graham
studio. Mill Row Club
interview. Patrick Grady