Wednesday, February 15, 2006

Interview: "Seriously Sexy" by Gini Brenner (Kurier Austria)


Archived completely due to unavailability on the internet

Interview thanks to Christina.
Translation German to English thanks to Anja

At the latest since Bridget Jones Colin Firth is the screen dreamguy at second glance. In Nanny McPhee he shows his fatherly side – a magical enjoyment for small and big girls.
 
"The worst guys get the best women“ – one of the eternally valid movie laws. Always but then when Colin Firth takes part in the movie. No other is so seductively reliable: In the face of his sensational sex appeal in both Bridget Jones movies even a experienced misbehaved charm-terrorist like Hugh Grant had to surrender.
But also during the exclusive interview in the luxurious Soho Hotel in London the 45 year old Brit proves that reservation is the absolute opposite to boring.
Being an hour alone with Colin Firth in a hotel suite might not be dangerous – but it is quite exciting indeed.
 
Nanny McPhee is your first family movie. How did you get your part of the father?
"Emma Thomson and I know each other for a long time. She asked me whether I would like to participate. She thought the character of Mr. Brown was made for me. I read the script and was really enthusiastic about it – but "my“ character I didn’t like at all in the beginning."
 
Why was that?
"Well, he is such a terrible coward. He loves his children before all but he cannot show it. He escapes in loads of work and expects someone else to take over his parental duties. Over this he ignores that the kiddies suffer a lot more over the sudden death of their mum than he does. But I have come to understand him: The movie takes place in a "Once-upon-a-time-"idyll and back then for men it was even harder to show their feelings than today."
 
You have three sons [the 15 year old Will with Meg Tilly as well as Luca, 4, and Mateo, 2, with his wife Livia Giuggioli]. Have they ever thought of such wild pranks like the Brown kids?
"No, thank God" (grins). "Will lacked the partners-in-crime and the other two are still too small. We will see what awaits me here"....(laughs).
 
And how about you? Were you a bad child?

I have never wantonly played tricks on someone to be able to laugh about him – I have rather tried forbidden things out of curiosity. But basically I was very good.

Many actors fear the filming with kids. In your case it even were seven of them....
"It were even eight! The baby was played by twins. And we even had a donkey in an important character on the set. It is said you have to beware of kids and animals at the business (laughs). It needed getting used to it but it was wonderful."
 
In which way was it wonderful?
"Well, firstly the laws are rather strict for kids on the set. Which is quite right by the way. Actually in my opinion the things permitted for small kids are even too many. In any case a child is only allowed to work a few days per week and just for some small hours with long breaks in between. And that with such a big bunch of children is terrible of course. Often it took days until one scene could be halfway completed according to plan. Director Kirk Jones was on the edge of reason on many occasions. Real kids have other priorities but costs of the set or a filming timetable and quite rightly so – but for successoriented adults it’s rather hard to understand that (laughs). Children always want to know everything exactly. One day when Kirk was rather worn out by the continuous questions he placed a new rule: “From now on you are only allowed to ask really, really important questions. Ok.?” All kids nodded keenly. And at once the first small hand shot up. “I do have a really important question!” Kirk sighed: ”Spit it out.” And small Raphael said with completely serious expression: “Which kind of sausage will be on the sandwich that I will have to eat in the next scene?” We all burst out laughing but for Raphael it was a real problem!"

You often play reserved characters with whom it sizzles beyond the surface. Why?

"This I’ve been asking myself quite often (laughs). For one part I have a rather average face/Visage that is more suitable for not so shining heartbreakers. On the other hand my big idols were actors who could express a lot with little means – like Paul Scofield for instance or Alec Guinness .... and funny enough I’ve came to understand that a lot of women regard just this reserved acting very appealing. Probably they think that behind this quiet facade unbelievably much is going on."
 
And is that so?
"Sometimes – but surely not always what you expect."

Your character in the BBC miniseries Pride and Prejudice made you a heartthrob in the U.K., since the Bridget Jones movies you are that internationally...I’m surprised myself. I would never have dreamed of becoming a sex symbol. Fame has caught up with me late – when I was offered the part in Pride and Prejudice I was 35. I remember well what my little brother Jonathan commented: “They want you as Mr. Darcy? Shouldn’t he be ----cough-, sexy and attractive?”

Bridget Jones 3?
“I am often asked whether there will be a third part of Bridget Jones. But I can hardly believe that. How should the story continue? Maybe Mark Darcy will develop into a heavy drunk and Daniel Cleaver will become sensible....”

Thursday, February 9, 2006

Interview: "Nobody at home calls me Mr. Darcy" (Metro NL)

Archived completely due to unavailability on the internet
This Dutch interview is translated to English by Debby.

Colin Firth, the actor who got his real break by playing the charming and tender, but very stiff Mr Darcy in Bridget Jones Diary, plays at the moment a desperate father of seven very naughty children in the film Nanny McPhee.
Metro talked with the Englishman about the film, his image and paparazzi. He doesn't like to talk about his private life, but he tells us a little bit about his relation with Sylvia Millecam.

It's very cold in Amsterdam, the city which Colin visits with fellow actor Emma Thompson for the Dutch premiere of Nanny McPhee
(1 February 2006)
. But Colin is sick and suffers from bronchitis. Still he makes time for interviews in a hotel room at the Keizersgracht.

Did a lot of photographers follow you around Amsterdam this time?No, this time it's a bit disappointing (smiles). Last year that was different. Someone with a camera followed me all afternoon. Eventually I went back to my hotel, because I didn't feel at ease. 

Do the paparazzi follow you around? 
They are not interested in me. They were for a while, when I got married. It's hard to tell what it does to you, but it is exceptional offensive to have pictures made you didn't ask for. I don't care if they place a picture of me with a vacuum cleaner. But if they make pictures of my children, I can't control myself.

About Nanny McPhee. I think it was hard to play with 7 children at the time.
It wasn't that difficult. In the film they play a bunch of horrendous children, but they are not related. They're actors. Whatever you say, the 14 year old doesn't spend time with the baby off set. And besides that, we worked with one or two children while the others were in school.

In the film there's a great scene where you throw with cakes. Emma Thompson (Nanny McPhee) was in David Letterman's show and she threw a cake in his face. Is she a tough woman?
Emma is really great. She's a very clever and honest woman. I took the role of Mr Brown mainly because of her. She wrote the script and wanted to put in some of her idea's about a family. By the way, this scene looks more spectaculair than it was to shoot. It took us three hours to tape one scene in which one person threw a cake. Trying to stay spontaneous is not easy then.

In Nanny McPhee you play, like in Bridget Jones Dary, a charming shy person. Rumors go that you are going to play a serial killer in the new Brian de Palma film. Are you happy that you can get rid of this charming though reliable image?
No, I killed so many people in so many films. In Trauma I killed a woman by putting a spider in her mouth. In Master of the Moor I killed lots of women with blonde hair, and so on. It doesn't give me a feeling of relief to play a bad guy. Maybe it is for you to see me as killer, but that doesn't work for me. The audience created that image around me, not me. And by the way it is not sure yet if I do the new Brian de Palma film.

Does it bother you that the image of Mr Darcy is still around you?
I don't try to escape from it nor to confirm it. I take what I can get. And as long as no one tells me: we don't want you to play that part because we think you can only play a shy character in a romantic comedy, I don't feel restricted. I can keep my image at a distance. I mean, nobody at home calls me Mr Darcy. And if I read something about myself I have the feeling that I read about someone else. I know that my work is in front of the camera and I love to tell stories , I like getting good critics, I want the film to be a succes and I want the applause, but then I want to go home.

You were on the big screen a lot, don't you feel like directing a film yourself?

You know, the problem with actors is that they are a bit spoiled by short term contracts. If you take a part you go for it, nothing is more important than the film you are working on. The people you work with are all great and the moment the shooting is over it is heartbreaking. But two weeks later you forgot all about that. Probably because something else comes along .A director works on a film two or three years at least. After twenty years of acting I am used to short term contracts.

To finish this interview, recently the book "Sylvia Millecam op gevoel" came out in which was said that you had a relationship. Did you really had one?

I met Sylvia while we were shooting the film Dutch Girls in 1985. During that period we were very close and I adored her. We kept in touch for a while but not the last 10 to 15 years. When I heard, two years ago, that she had passed away I was very shocked. Sylvia was a delighted person,a walking theatre performance, great.

*********

Nanny McPhee.
In the film Nanny McPhee Firth plays a father of seven naughty children who are desperate in need of a nanny. this is easier said then done as the children got rid of all their nannies. But then Nanny McPhee with her magic stick arrives.

Firth facts:
Firth is born on 10 September 1960 in Hampshire, England.

Had his first son Willy with actress Meg Tilly in 1990.

Married documentary film producer Livia Guiggioli in 1997 and has 2 more sons with her: Luca and Matteo.

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