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The face is tantalisingly familiar, as is the name. Doc Martin fans will recognise Selina Cadell as Mrs Tishell, the overwrought pharmacist in a neck brace who had the unrequited hots for Martin Clunes in the ITV show.
Yet sheâs also the spitting image of one of TVâs best-known comedy stars.
Anyone who enjoyed the 80s sitcom Hi-de-Hi! will have spotted her resemblance to Simon Cadell, the holiday-camp comedyâs late-lamented leading man who played posh-boy misfit Jeffrey Fairbrother, the object of Gladys Pughâs rebuffed affections.
Like her mentor brother, she's equally adept at straight drama, taking the title role in BBC1's glossy new 90-minute mystery adventure The Lady Vanishes
Selina is Simonâs equally gifted little sister, and looks more like him than her non-identical twin Patrick, a commercials director.
âSimon was a huge influence on me, giving me so much advice; he was very, very special,â she says. Her beloved big brother died 17 years ago this month, aged just 45, after being diagnosed with non-Hodgkins lymphoma following triple heart bypass surgery.
He was also a heavy smoker, something Selina now thinks may have contributed to his premature death.
Our meeting comes just over a week after the publication of the Daily Mail interview with the late actor Richard Briers, in which he spoke of the lifelong cigarette habit that eventually killed him.
When I ask Selina if Simonâs own nicotine addiction was a factor in his illness, she says, âIâm not a doctor, but Simon smoked forever â" and Iâm sure it had an impact.
âHe left a big gap, especially for my mum, since my dad had already died. Yet I feel incredibly privileged that almost every week somebody who worked with Simon mentions him to me, so heâs alive in our hearts all the time.â
Three years Simonâs junior, Selina has carried on the family showbusiness tradition that began with their grandmother, Jean Cadell, who in 1935 starred opposite WC Fields as Mrs Micawber in MGMâs David Copperfield.
Selinaâs father John was a theatrical agent, and Simon was always keen to act. Yet Selina, now 59, initially rejected her destiny.
Simon with Ruth Madoc in Hi-de-Hi!
âFrom birth, Simon was declaring he wanted to be an actor â" and I resisted joining him at first, because it felt like I didnât exist in my own right. But I couldnât avoid it and eventually gave in,â she laughs.
Like her mentor brother, sheâs equally adept at straight drama, taking the title role in BBC1âs glossy new 90-minute mystery adventure The Lady Vanishes.
Rather than a remake of Hitchcockâs film, itâs an adaptation of 1936 novel The Wheel Spins, upon which Hitch based his story. Selina plays the key role of tweedy spinster-with-a-secret Miss Froy, who disappears after befriending socialite Iris Carr (Tuppence Middleton) on a train.
The character was played by Dame May Whitty in the film. âDame May gave an iconic performance, and of course people will make comparisons, but our version of the story is very different,â Selina points out.
And she is up to the challenge. By right of talent alone, she ought to be as big a name as her brother, yet Selina has eschewed stardom to achieve a better work-life balance.
Three months before he died, Simon admitted his illness had forced him to readjust the pace of his âworkaholicâ life. In an interview he likened his profession to a ârat-raceâ which required tunnel-vision in order to succeed.
But mother-of-two Selina, who combines acting with drama teaching, says sheâs never felt the pressure to push herself. âShow business is a very cruel world if you give yourself up to it. I donât have goals like, âI must be famousâ, because I have another life alongside acting â" my teaching and my family. I love my family, theyâre absolutely key to my life.â
Her marriage to fellow actor Michael Thomas has produced two children: budding actors Edwin, 25, whoâs appeared in ITVâs Lewis, and Letty, 20, who is acting in student plays. Clearly proud, Selina nevertheless worries about the pitfalls for young performers.
âI saw the Denzel Washington film Flight recently, and there was a beautiful girl naked in the opening scene. I bet Denzel wouldnât appear naked. It makes me furious that the women are nude, yet the men are covered up. Itâs never been a problem for me though, I have to say,â she smiles.
âShow business is a very cruel world if you give yourself up to it. I donât have goals like, âI must be famousâ, because I have another life alongside acting â" my teaching and my family. I love my family, theyâre absolutely key to my life'
Sheâs adamant her career has lasted because she wasnât conventionally pretty. âQuite often the young beauties get cast for ten years then have to prove themselves in a different way. My drama teachers told me I wouldnât get work until I was 40.
'They were wrong â" I got good parts pretty quickly â" but itâs a hard thing to hear when youâre young, because you want to be the beautiful girl, donât you?â There was a time, she admits, when she told her agent she felt stuck in âdrab lesbianâ roles. âI donât want to be limited in what I play. And Iâve succeeded, because now I either play very down-to-earth parts or very eccentric parts.â
Which is why she so admires the varied career of Sigourney Weaver. The two have been friends for four decades, since Sigourney came to London to stay with one of Selinaâs friends.
âWeâre very, very close; I adore her,â declares Selina. â She hasnât allowed herself to be stereotyped.â They even coach each other, most recently for the 2006 film Snow Cake, in which they both appeared. âIf you get to be very well-known like Sigourney, directors donât direct you very much. So itâs useful to have someone you trust to bat things around a bit with.â
But that proximity to such an A-lister has convinced Selina sheâs happier away from the spotlight. âStars donât have any privacy. Simon was so recognisable with that lop-sided smile that people would yell out âHi-de-Hi!â wherever he went.â
Sadly for his lookalike little sister, the actorâs no longer there to respond with his customary good-natured âHo-de-Ho!â
The Lady Vanishes, tomorrow, 8.30pm, BBC1.
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