Hannah Waddingham’s ‘Ted Lasso’ character helped her heal from past ‘controlling, verbally abusive relationship’

Jason Sudeikis has more or less become synonymous with his titular Ted Lasso character, but the line between fiction and reality is also a little blurry for Hannah Waddingham—in a less obvious but very powerful way.

"The greatest thing about this job is that it has allowed me great catharsis from a controlling, verbally abusive relationship that I'd had [in real life], that people looking at me wouldn't think that I'd experienced," Hannah Waddingham, who plays AFC Richmond owner Rebecca Welton, told Entertainment Weekly for its The Awardist podcast.

"So when it got to those scenes in the gala, when [Rupert] is saying, 'Very brave choice' with the dress, I've had that in the past," she continued. "And also the bit outside the gala when Ted comes to find her ... There's the bit about '[Rupert said], 'Eat this, wear that, and I listened,' that monologue that Jason was tweaking up until the last minute, informed me more than anything else about where I needed to take Rebecca."

Rupert Mannion (Anthony Head) is Rebecca's controlling ex-husband. When she takes over AFC Richmond, her intention behind hiring Ted (Sudeikis) is solely resentful. Ted Lasso is an unassuming American football coach with no knowledge of English football. For most of the first season, Rebecca is secretly setting Ted up for failure—and by extension, hoping to tank Rupert's beloved former team.

The scene Waddingham is referring to comes in the fourth episode when AFC Richmond holds their annual fundraising gala for underprivileged children. Rebecca is nervous about giving the speech because "Rupert was always very good at the public speaking part." Rupert crashes the party mid-speech to one-up her and, later, manipulatively insults her. Eventually, Ted finds Rebecca crying alone outside.

"I used to think his blunt honesty was noble, rather than what it really is, which is just the cruelest way of hiding his own insecurities," she tells Ted, and he hugs her. "He'd say, 'Wear this, eat that,' and I listened. But now I'm alone. I'm alone, Ted, just like he said I would be if I left. I don't want to be alone."

Waddingham has found empowerment through Rebecca in many other ways, too, as she discussed in Variety's new cover story alongside co-star Juno Temple:

Ted Lasso premiered last August and last week broke the all-time record for Primetime Emmy nominations for a freshman comedy with 20, including a nod for Waddingham in the outstanding supporting actress in a comedy series. 

The highly anticipated second season arrives at Apple TV Plus on Friday (July 23).

Watch Waddingham's full Awardist appearance as well as the Season 2 trailer below.

More must-reads:

TODAY'S BEST
The most influential movies ever made
20 period pieces you should watch
Longtime ‘SportsCenter’ anchor announces he is leaving ESPN
Second chances: Notable bands and musicians who experienced a career resurgence
The 25 most entertaining horror movies
The 20 concert tours you can't miss in 2024
20 albums turning 50 in 2024
The 20 greatest heist movies
20 movies that should be adapted into musicals
Super Bowl LVIII halftime show takeaways
Brad Pitt shades Eagles while praising Philly superfan Bradley Cooper
The 20 best modern rom-coms
20 performances that thwarted audience expectations
Comedy gold: 20 funny films that won an Oscar
23 actors that need to have a renaissance
The best karaoke songs from the 2020s
20 great movies that didn’t get nominated at the 2024 Oscars
The 25 best movies about high-school sports
The 23 best films of 2023
The 50 best albums of 2023

Want more sports news?

Join the hundreds of thousands of fans who start their day with Yardbarker's Morning Bark, the best newsletter in sports.