Anna Friel is Pushing Daisies on ITV1

But if Ned and Chuck ever touch she will die again – this time for good!
Together they investigate unexplained murders with the help of Emmerson Cod (Chi McBride) in a forensic fairy tale that has had rave reviews from all the American critics.
Anna Friel says:
"We all knew it was something special when we first got involved with the project but we didn't realise other people would recognise it so quickly. It's inventive and something very special on TV that people haven't seen before.
“The most difficult thing is explaining the show to people, particularly in England. They say, “I’m sorry? What is it you’re doing in America?” It sounds kind of weird.
“It’s one of those shows that you really, really do have to watch. I just describe it as a modern romantic fairy tale.
“I knew from reading the script that it was going to be wonderful, but I didn't realise how wonderful. We have to wear sunglasses on set sometimes because it's so bright. It gives the show that story book illustration feel or a forties-style romantic comedy.
"I think the true sense of romance in this series is particularly special and goes back to all those 30s or 40s movies where all you're waiting for is one kiss at the end, I think people love that. And I also think it makes them laugh.
"We actually did try going for a week with no touching at all on set," Anna says.
"We didn't do too well. We're both - particularly me - incredibly tactile. By day three I was dead three times."
Anna had a surprising influence for the character of Chuck: "I base the character on my daughter Gracie," she says. "She's experiencing life for the first time. She has a wonderment and sense of excitement. But to maintain happiness and a spirit and energy like this for seventeen hours a day, five days a week - has been far more testing than I could ever imagine."
Another surprising thing about the series is that Anna plays an American.
“When I work, I stay in my American accent all day. We don’t get driven to the studio so I drive myself to work and, from the minute I arrive on the set, I’m American Anna. Then, at the end of the day, I go back to my own accent. The crew think it’s funny when I speak English. They say, “Why are you talking in that silly accent? What is that accent?” If I phone my mum when I’m at work, she doesn’t like me talking in an American accent. I don’t know why I stay in the accent all day – it’s just become a kind of superstitious discipline now.”
Lee Pace plays Ned and has previously taken lead roles in the movie The Good Shepherd and Soldier’s Girl (for which he was nominated for a Golden Globe) and starred in Bryan Fuller’s previous TV series Wonderfalls.
“What I love about Ned is that he’s someone who gives life. He’s a good guy. He’s a good-hearted person. He brings positivity and generosity to people. His life is complicated, and he lives a very sheltered, funny life, but he’s got a gift. He’s not one of these antiheroes who’s going to destroy his life and everyone around him. We’re putting something out into the world that is a good thing.
“Pushing Daisies is about love and life. It’s about someone who can bring people back to life, but can also inadvertently kill people. What I think we’re going to see Ned gain through the course of the series is an appreciation for how good it is to be alive. That’s the addition that Chuck makes to his life – it’s good to be alive, it’s good to be out of The Pie Hole solving these cases. He learns how good life can be, how important this gift is.
“It's a great adventure," says Lee, "It's so much fun to play as it gets more complicated. Bryan and the writers are making this world so rich. And I am so appreciative of working with someone like Anna. She works so hard and is not one of those actresses who is happy to just look pretty in front of the camera."
Bryan Fuller – creator, writer and Executive Producer of Pushing Daisies comments,
“My main motivation really was just to do something fun. And I think talking about relationships and the nature of relationships is something that a lot of fun can be had with.
“We’re going to go a long way to do everything we can to get them to touch each other that’s not flesh-to-flesh. And I think if the show will end – hopefully it will never end, but if it does end – it will end with a kiss.”