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Showing posts with label interview. Show all posts
Showing posts with label interview. Show all posts

Wednesday, June 11, 2008

Ben Barnes Interview

Published: May 8, 2008

LOS ANGELES — As jarring moments go, the action figure in his likeness was nothing compared to the billboard on the Sunset Strip. There he was, towering eight stories above the boutiques and rock clubs, with sword brandished, lips pursed and “The Chronicles of Narnia: Prince Caspian” emblazoned across his legs. “This has to be one of the weirdest moments of my life,” said Ben Barnes, the young British actor who plays the title role in the coming movie. He backed up to take in the advertisement’s full effect. “I have no comprehension of what’s about to happen to me, do I?”

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Murray Close/Walt Disney Pictures

Ben Barnes as Prince Caspian in the coming “Narnia” sequel.

Jamie Rector for The New York Times

Ben Barnes was picked as Prince Caspian after a casting director saw his work in the stage production of “The History Boys.”

Nope.

Mr. Barnes is a polite 26-year-old who, until Walt Disney Pictures came calling in February 2007, was struggling in all the typical ways fledgling actors struggle. Despite the splashy outdoor advertising campaign, he is in many ways still living that life.

He crashed at a friend’s apartment during a recent visit to Los Angeles. He has no publicist. Arriving for an interview at the Sunset Tower Hotel, he parked his rental car on the street because he was leery of leaving it with the valet. Despite being blessed with more than his share of tall, dark and handsome — and starring in a summer blockbuster — he frets that a woman he has a crush on is “utterly unattainable.”

His low-key life will change no doubt with the May 16 arrival of the lavish “Chronicles of Narnia” sequel. Mr. Barnes’s character is the swashbuckling descendant of pirates who must battle his evil stepfather for control of the magical kingdom. The movie, based on the C. S. Lewis children’s classic “Prince Caspian: The Return to Narnia,” is expected by some box office analysts to sell more than $300 million in tickets in North America alone. Prince Caspian is also at the center of “The Chronicles of Narnia: The Voyage of the Dawn Treader,” which Disney and Walden Media, the franchise’s co-producer, plan to release in 2010. Filming for that movie is scheduled to begin this fall.

For now, though, Mr. Barnes finds himself in a rare position in Hollywood: an unknown actor on the brink of certain global fame.

When Orlando Bloom landed his role in the first “Lord of the Rings,” nobody could say for sure whether the movie would catapult him to stardom. But “The Chronicles of Narnia: Prince Caspian” is as close to a sure thing any movie gets in Hollywood. The first film, “The Chronicles of Narnia: The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe” (released in 2005), sold more than $290 million in tickets in the United States and Canada and $745 million worldwide.

“I keep telling him to remember who he is right now,” Andrew Adamson, the film’s director, said, adding that “I’ve been through enough of this to know how what’s coming can really mess with you, good or bad.”

Mr. Barnes, no relation to this nonacting, nonsinging reporter, was coronated a Disney prince by accident. A London casting director saw his performance in the West End production of “The History Boys” three weeks before filming for “Prince Caspian” was to start. Mr. Barnes played the decidedly non-Disney role of a sexually aggressive boy who toys with his teachers.

Aside from “The History Boys,” the actor’s résumé included a bit role in “Stardust,” the fantasy starring Robert De Niro that flopped at the box office last year, and a television pilot (in which he played a high school quarterback) that never made it to television. But he had experience as a heartthrob: while studying children’s literature and drama at Kingston University (near London), Mr. Barnes played the lead in the school production of “Don Juan.”

Disney and Walden were looking for a particular type of actor, said Oren Aviv, president for production at Walt Disney Studios. The role called for dark features to contrast with William Moseley, the blond-haired actor who portrays Peter Pevensie, the oldest of the children who magically journey to Narnia. He needed to be able to pull off a believable Mediterranean accent. Horse-riding skills were important.

“We also needed somebody we felt could handle the pressure of going from obscurity to stardom,” Mr. Aviv said.

A few days later, in a phone call from California about 3 a.m. London time, Mr. Barnes was formally hired. “I just ran around my house screaming,” he recalled.

(The producers of “The History Boys” were not as thrilled, telling several London newspapers that they were considering suing him for leaving on short notice to star in a “children’s Disney movie.” They got over it.)

Mr. Barnes forgot he had fibbed about knowing how to ride horses until he arrived on the New Zealand set, where he was required to cross a river on horseback. He had told the producers his riding was “average,” but in reality he had seen a horse only once. “My mother still can’t hear the word ‘Ben’ and ‘horse’ in the same sentence without getting the giggles,” he said.

After three weeks of sword training, with riding lessons on the side, Mr. Barnes was ready. Ample eyeliner and hair extensions were added to give him more of a roguish appearance. Mr. Barnes said he studied Mandy Patinkin’s performance in “The Princess Bride” for inspiration on his accent. (Luckily, he also worked with a dialect coach, as Mr. Patinkin’s accent was not exactly authentic.) Mr. Barnes’s first foray with Hollywood a few years ago had very different results. He said his agent at International Creative Management lured him to Los Angeles with an offer to bunk in a guest room in exchange for free baby-sitting services. His first audition was for the part of a lifeguard who gets eaten by a shark.

“I walk in, and here are a half dozen guys literally comparing their calf muscles,” Mr. Barnes said. “I freaked out.” He ended up getting the part. “They decided to go with the sensitive surfer type,” he said, joking. But the project fell apart.

Mr. Barnes is slightly better known in Britain, but not for his acting. In 2004 he competed in a televised singing competition as a member of a boy band called Hyrise. Sample lyric: “When you touch me and tease me you’re leadin’ me on.”

During one clip from the show, viewable on YouTube in all of its synchronized, hip-swinging glory, Mr. Barnes gives a preperformance interview that is particularly mortifying in retrospect. “I’ve got a bit of a tricky note to hit tonight,” he says, “so I’m just going to tighten my belt, wear my cheeky tight pants.”

The remarks, Mr. Barnes said, were written by a producer.

“I learned a very important lesson from that,” he said. “Never agree to say or do anything that isn’t you.”

http://www.nytimes.com/2008/05/08/movies/08casp.html?_r=1&oref=slogin

Disney Featurette on Prince Caspian:

Friday, June 6, 2008

Interview - William Moseley

Interview - William Moseley

By Sean Lynch
Interview with William Moseley
Star of The Chronicles of Narnia : Prince Caspian

Chronicles of Narnia : William Moseley Interview

William Moseley gets to stretch
his acting muscle in
Narnia : Prince Caspian


After surviving an 18 month long audition process which landed him a role in "The Lion, The Witch & The Wardrobe", English born actor William Moseley is back for seconds in the follow up to the original hit which raked in over $750M worldwide.

Sean Lynch caught up with the upbeat 21 year old, a star in the making who possesses all the dashing good looks & poise of Prince William (minus the years of inbreeding), during his recent trip to Melbourne to promote his final appearance in the multi-million dollar franchise "
The Chronicles of Narnia : Prince Caspian".

You're about to head off to Heasville Animal Sanctuary after we're done here. Is that something you actually want to do, or is every visiting actor contractually obliged to get a photo with a Koala?

[Laughs]. I chose to go there! I actually have a friend here, and we we wanted to go to the Zoo in Sydney - but we couldn't end up going because we were to busy - so we just asked around today. We were told it was a really good place to go, there are some good wineries on the way [Laughs]. So I said - "Lets Go!"

Is that the sort of pull you have these days as a 'Disney Movie Star' that you can just demand to go places...

[Laughs] Yeah, pretty much. If I'm not busy, I'll often do it - I mean why not. They have a car available to you, you have a perdium, they give you your little living allowance, and you sort of say "Wheres the best place to go?". They say "You should go there". Alright I'll do it! [Laughs].

So what leg of the Narnia world tour is this?

Let me think this out, because this could get quite confusing...

I'll organise a Flow-Chart for us... [Laughs]

[Laughs] OK, so I did one day in London. Then I did a few days in New York. Then I did LA, then Mexico, back to New York, off to Japan, LA, Australia : Sydney then Melbourne, off to LA... Israel... England, Prague, Paris, London, Munich, Madrid... maybe Milan.

[Laughs] How easy was that! [Laughs].

So you're one of the few people in the world that can actually use the 6000 songs you can store on an iPod. Not many people can do that unless they're going on a three week jog...

[Laughs] The iPod has been getting a very good workout! Also reading a good book makes a big difference, and I'm reading a really good book at the moment so that helps.

I listen to a lot of Bob Dylan, I listen to The Rolling Stones quite a lot, Neil Young. I love Arcade Fire, some new bands like TV On The Radio - they're quite good. But I also love Podcasts. I always listen to the Ricky Gervais Podcast, it's absolutely amazing. 'This American Life' - so good, just fascinating, it blows my mind. That's like an hour DONE.

I actually download film reviews and trailers, that stuff is pretty cool. And one of the presents Walt Disney gave us was a bunch of these iTunes cards, so I just downloaded the whole season of The Wire. It's so good! And I just finished Rome - which was awesome.

I suppose we should actually talk about Prince Caspian. In real life, you seem like a pretty nice happy sort of dude but no offense, in this latest Narnia flick - your character has become a bit of an asshole [Laughs]...

[Laughs] I love it! I think it's awesome. You know, the character is different and I spoke to Andrew [Adamson] the director. And he said "Look, we're going to change your character and make him more complex". And I was like "OK". So I went and got an acting coach for three and a half months.

Wardrobe was really my first ever film and that was more of an experience. Whereas the second one was more, you know, "Acting". And so I worked with this acting coach on all this sort of in-depth stuff, using all sorts of personal things from my life, music, all those kinds of things to get into the right head space.

And I learned an incredible amount. Physically [the role] it was kind of tough, but it was fun. I got to learn how to chase a galloping horse at full speed and grab hold of the saddle, fly kick a guy in the head when he jumps towards me...

I'm impressed by that! That's pretty cool to see that with such a huge budget you were still able to do your own stunts...

I did nearly all of my own stunts myself. I'd laugh at my stunt double because he'd just be sitting around drinking cups of tea [Laughs] because he'd never get to do anything [Laughs]. Because I wanted to do all my own stuff - I wanted to. I wanted to do a 110 beat sword fight - I mean how many people can say they've done that on a battlefield?

Just the coolest and most fun shit you've ever seen.

I was so into it. I even worked with a Boxing Trainer in New York in this sort of underground 'Gleesons Gym', like under a carpark [Laughs]

Rocky style...

[Laughs] Rocky style! It was absolutely fantastic.

How did they respond to having a nice little English boy walk in?

[Laughs] Exactly! I kind of walked in the door, you know, trying to be hard. And I looked up and there were all these massive dudes and I was like "Oh Shit!". I'd have to be like [lowers voice] "Hey, hows it going?" [Laughs], you know, drop my voice a few hundred octaves.

After the success of the first film, was the novelty of the process not as exciting this time around? Are you a little more jaded these days?

No, because it still totally blows my mind. I mean, we flew around in this helicopter to this remote location in New Zealand. Which tourists can't even get there, because you can only get there by helicopter. Like they'd bring this crazy boat in, bring a tiny camera crew and we'd just shoot in the middle of nowhere. It was the coolest thing.

Georgie and Skandar [who play Lucy and Edmund in the film], because of their age, legally had to be only 30 minutes from the set. So we were literally living right in the middle of nowhere. So you could go out for runs and your running in the middle of nowhere, or you'd go out on a kyac, or go explore the mountains. It was just unbelievable.

We shot two thirds of the film on location, and the sets they built were like being on location anyway because they were so big. I think they were like the second biggest set ever built or something. I loved it and I was never jaded by it once, because it was simply the coolest thing you could ever imagine.

Chronicles of Narnia - Prince Caspian

Moseley performed most
of his own stunts


What about the enormous Press tours you go on? Do you ever think "I can't be bothered talking about myself today!!" [Laughs]

No - I like talking about myself every day! [Laughs]

No, I can kind of understand what you're saying - but I love to travel. I love to smell a different place, see a different place...

Smell a different place?

Yeah! [Laughs]. It sounds weird, but every place has a different smell. Like if you've ever been to LA it smells...

It smells like shit...

[Laughs] Well, that might be your own.. interpretation [Laughs]. But places do smell! Like, the air here is so clean and so nice. I love just getting immersed in a different culture, meeting different people. And that's why I don't hate doing publicity, because I get to meet different people. I get to take on their vibe, you know. The Japanese are very different to the Mexicans, the Mexicans are very different to the Americans, the Americans are very different from the Australians. So it's kind of awesome, because you don't often get that much in your life.

I mean, if you do travel, you kind of travel with a friend and you kind of don't really talk to people. And you kind of have to get you're knowledge from a waiter or something.

Back to Prince Caspian. How did you deal with the fact that you were no longer the main man there. Were you worried there was a new pretty boy on the set to lap up all the attention of the teenage girls [Laughs]?

Whats funny is, even though the film is called Prince Caspian - I kind of think I have the best role in the film. I hate to say it [Laughs] but I would not swap it. I got to do the big fight sequence, I got to do the big emotional sequence, I got to lead the charge into battle. That's pretty flippin' cool!

So it was kind of nice having another kid who was there in his 20's that we could hang out and have a beer together on the weekend and have a laugh. Like, we over quoted the English version of The Office way to many times...

The better version!

The way better version! But it's fun to kind of hand over the reigns to Ben for the rest of the Narnia films.

So you're not in the next one, is that true? Were you aware of that going into it?

Yeah, yeah, because it's in the books. CS Lewis didn't write him [Peter Pevensie] in. But actually its kind of nice, because I'm given this great passage into the acting world. At the end of this film it's almost like I'm going from Narnia [as the character] into the real word, but as William I'm going from Narnia into the real acting world. So its actually like a perfect way to go...

So at no point you whispered into Andrew's ear "You know, maybe I could come back to visit for dinner in Narnia in the next one?"...

[Laughs] No, not really. I mean sure, it might be fun to come back for a dream sequence or something [Laughs] but, you know, not for another seven month shoot! [Laughs].

So once you get back, life after Narnia, are you going to base yourself in Hollywood - or will you be staying in London?

Well I'm not really based anywhere right now. I was in New York, then I was in Prague...

You're like a Gypsy!

[Laughs] I know. A Gypsy! I literally am a traveling Pikey! [Laughs] I'm a glorified homeless person, I really am...

Before we go, is there anything you particularly want people to know about the new movie?

I just hope audiences like the film. Because so much work has gone into it, and I really do think it's a better film. It's more complex, it's more interesting and I think it kind of appeals to an older audience - an audience of our age...

Plus theres a whole bunch of underage kids brutally killing people in it! [Laughs]

[Laughs] If you're into that sort of thing... which you should be! [Laughs]. Like you've got Susan with a bow just nailing people [Laughs].

... You cut off a guys head!

[Laughs] I know! One minute you're talking to a giant Lion, the next - GONE! [Laughs].

THE CHRONICLES OF NARNIA : PRINCE CASPIAN is in cinemas from JUNE 5th, 2008

From www.webwombat.com

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The Many Versions of Love Stories 1. Boy meets girl, they fall in love, kiss and marry. They live happily ever after. 2. Boy meets girl, they fall in love, kiss and marry. The marriage sours, they part, and live happily ever after. 3. Boy meets girl, they fall in love, kiss and marry. Then boy finds out it's more fun to be girl... or girl finds out it's more fun to be boy, they part, change sexes and live happily ever after. 4.Finally, boy or girl meets God. It's love at first sight... The roads went rough, the tides rose high, the strong winds blew and the quake shook the ground... but they truly live happily ever after, forever and ever. 5. Try God's love... it's always happy forever after, and the story never ends. :-D