The Lazarus Project star on avoiding typecasting, finding “opposition” within characters and season two of his Sky time travel thriller.

By Morgan Jeffery

Published: Wednesday, 15 November 2023 at 09:00 AM


You’d be hard-pressed to think of an actor who has offered a greater diversity of characters on-screen of late than Paapa Essiedu.

In the last 18 months, he’s played high-strung politician Isaac Turner in the BBC’s technophobic thriller The Capture, a charismatic demon in an episode of Black Mirror and app developer turned time-travelling hitman George in The Lazarus Project, which returns for a second season today (15th November).

Pushing for that breadth and variety of roles has been a top priority for Essiedu and his team, he tells RadioTimes.com.

That’s something that’s always been very high on my list, because people will try and typecast you, particularly as a young Black actor, a young Black male actor.

“They’ll try and make you into a very certain type of thing. Or they’ll try and say, ‘Oh, this is what Idris [Elba] did,’ or, ‘This is what Lennie James did,’ or David Gyasi, or David Oyelowo… ‘You should do that, as well.’

“The reason why they have gone on to have the careers they have is because they’ve been individual, and they’ve been conscientious in not allowing people to tell them what to do, and make them do the same thing again and again.

“That’s certainly what I intend to do. I feel like, as actors, we’re so lucky to work with so many different collaborators – writers, directors, other creatives. The choice is there, the ability to make choices is there. We’ve just got to be brave enough to do something that you’ve not done before and see if that sticks as well.”

In and of itself, Essiedu’s part in The Lazarus Project allows him to showcase a whole range of different shades as a performer – as an ordinary joe recruited into a paramilitary organisation that uses time travel to prevent extinction-level events, and later abuses said powers in an effort to save the life of his girlfriend Sarah (Charly Clive), he gets to be an action hero, a romantic lead and a calculating antagonist.

The series, from Giri/Haji‘s Joe Barton, earned a positive reception from critics and audiences when it debuted last summer. “We were so chuffed with the response that it got, and the amount of people that watched it and the things that people said about it,” says Essiedu.

“It was amazing to be able to be given another bite at the apple and have the chance to develop it a bit further.”

The climax to the first season surprised by throwing a temporal curveball – while the first eight episodes were concerned with the concept of time-loops (think Groundhog Day, but with more car chases), the follow-up will delve deeper into the premise of “true” time travel, transporting the Lazarus squad back in time in an effort to avert the annihilation of Earth.

Few could’ve seen this reinvention of the show’s format coming, and Essiedu admits he’s given up trying to second-guess writer Barton’s plot twists. “Joe’s mind just operates with such boundless abandon, you know?”

He’s not alone – the cast of The Lazarus Project have a WhatsApp group where the complexity of the series’s convoluted timelines are often a hot topic. (Questions like “What year is tomorrow?” are not uncommon.)