Actor Jamie Dornan guiltily admits to stalking women in London. Here’s why

By Charlie Sawyer

Updated Jan 5, 2024 at 03:22 PM

Reading time: 1 minute

53340

Jamie Dornan has been taking method acting to a whole new level. The 41-year-old actor, best known for his roles in the Fifty Shades franchise and Oscar-winning Belfast, once admitted to having “stalked” women on the London underground in preparation for his starring role in the TV show thriller The Fall.

Dornan, who played a sadistic serial killer and stalker in the series, revealed in an interview with the LA Times in 2015 that, in preparation for the role, he “followed a woman off the train one day to see what it felt like to pursue someone like that.”

The actor continued to state that he kept his distance from his target, and once she reached her stop, lurked behind her for a couple of blocks. The resulting feeling helped Dornan understand his character’s compulsion on some level.

“It felt kind of exciting, in a really sort of dirty way. I’m sort of not proud of myself. But I do honestly think I learned something from it because I’ve obviously never done any of that. It was intriguing and interesting to enter that process of ‘what are you following her for?’ and ‘what are you trying to find out?” Dornan continued.

The Fall, which also starred Sex Education’s Gillian Anderson, was filmed and set in Northern Ireland and received positive reviews from critics and the public. On Rotten Tomatoes, 95 per cent of 20 critic reviews were positive for the series one. Its consensus was: “Less sensationalistic and more provocative than most police procedurals, The Fall is unapologetically sexy with pressure-building tension driven by plausible characters and motifs.”

While method acting is nothing new, I think going as far as to stalk someone through the streets of London might be taking it slightly too far Jamie babes.

Dornan is currently starring in a new drama thriller series The Tourist, with the second season having just dropped on the BBC.

Keep On Reading

By Sofia Gallarate

Gang stalking: Everything you need to know about online paranoia and conspiracies of organised stalking

By Louis Shankar

From Donald Trump to Matt Hancock, reality TV is ruining democracy one viral show at a time

By Abby Amoakuh

What is soft swinging? And why is the term trending on Mormon TikTok?

By Charlie Sawyer

Madison Beer opens up about reconnecting with the person who leaked her explicit photos as a teen

By Fatou Ferraro Mboup

Belgian court lets convicted rapist go free so he can become a gynaecologist

By Eliza Frost

What is Shrekking? The latest toxic dating trend explained 

By Abby Amoakuh

Chappell Roan faces backlash from TikTok moms for likening motherhood to hell

By Eliza Frost

The Summer I Turned Pretty’s Chris Briney is at the centre of a new love triangle, but this time for an audio erotica story 

By Eliza Frost

All the Easter eggs from the first episodes of The Summer I Turned Pretty season 3

By Charlie Sawyer

Here’s why Coca Cola is the most boycotted brand on the planet

By Charlie Sawyer

Odd Muse founder Aimee Smale fights back against fast fashion controversy on TikTok

By Eliza Frost

Kylie Jenner now follows Timothée Chalamet on Instagram, but he doesn’t follow her back

By Charlie Sawyer

Transformers director Michael Bay officially confirmed to direct movie about viral Skibidi Toilet meme

By Eliza Frost

Skibidi, tradwife, and delulu are among new words added to Cambridge Dictionary for 2025

By Eliza Frost

Bad Bunny is not touring the US due to fear of ICE raids at concerts

By Charlie Sawyer

McDonald’s hit with new mass boycott. Here’s who’s behind it and why

By Charlie Sawyer

President Trump and JD Vance angry over the DNC setting up a taco truck outside RNC headquarters

By Fatou Ferraro Mboup

Jeffree Star makes inappropriate comment after Kanye West posts disturbing incest confession

By Charlie Sawyer

Why Sabrina Carpenter’s sexuality is praised and Lola Young’s is picked apart

By Fatou Ferraro Mboup

Could the next pope be Black? Peter Turkson’s papal bid could rewrite over 1,500 years of Vatican history