Something’s really weird, kind of blurring between reality and then stuff that we were shooting. So obviously there was a sort of element of it being kind of quite emotionally charged anyway, but because of the nature of the scene as well, it was meant to be an emotional scene, but it ended up just becoming quite real. I mean, I can’t go into too much detail because I don’t don’t want to spoil anything, but particularly the season finale, it happened to be, and I don’t know whether it was by design or fortuitous that we ended up filming scenes, some of Nate’s last scenes on the very last day of the whole shoot, and bearing in mind, because we generally don’t know if that is it, that might be the end of the whole thing. NM: Oh no, there’s definitely some… they’ve not been out yet, but in episodes 10 and 12 in particular, there’s some difficult scenes and so they were genuinely difficult. MN: Was that the biggest challenge for you, channeling that energy, or was there something else? And so not in a pretentious way, but I tried to channel as much of that kind of energy into the performance, because that is exactly where he finds himself at the start of this season. He’s in a completely different environment and he’s just facing a whole load of new sort of challenges. He’s sort of almost got imposter syndrome. So I really tried to use as much of that feeling of abandonment in the performance of Nate, because I think he’s going through a similar thing. It was great to have lots of interactions with new people, but yeah, God, of course I missed hanging out in the locker room and getting to be on the sidelines with Jason and Brendan and Brett. Yeah, it was fun because I was obviously getting to work with other kind of characters, Anthony Head playing Rupert, who’s brilliant and so nice, and Eddie who plays Jade and Spencer who plays Derek. I know that sort of charted Nate’s downfall, but yeah, he’s out on his own. It felt like a very different role to certainly season one and even season two. Nick Mohammed: Oh, lots of fun because listen, it was very different. How much fun were you having in season three? Just sort of start, Nick, by asking, it doesn’t look like Nate’s having a whole bunch of fun at West Ham. Matt Noble: Nick Mohammed plays Nathan Shelley in the Emmy award-winning comedy series, Ted Lasso. SEE Watch more than 400 interviews with 2023 Emmy contenders He’s out on a limb … It was great to have lots of interactions with new people, but yeah, God, of course I missed hanging out in the locker room and getting to be on the sidelines with Jason and Brendan and Brett. “It felt like a very different role,” Mohammed stated in our webchat. The shift in storyline required the actor to stay away from many of his “Ted Lasso” cast members for much of Season 3, and essentially made Nate the new antagonist of the series. Mohammed plays Nathan “Nate” Shelley, who turned his back on AFC Richmond at the end of Season 2 and becomes head coach at rival club West Ham United.
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