Review:
Features:
The force of Firth
He
became a heart-throb as Mr Darcy in Pride and Prejudice; now he's cast
as a modern Darcy in the film of Bridget Jones' Diary. But what Colin Firth
really wants to do is 'odd and grotesque stuff'
Interview by HELENA
DE BERTODANO
Good looks can be a
terrible cross to bear. Poor Colin Firth is repeatedly cast as the handsome
hero and yet this is not at all what he wants. "I've sometimes wanted to
play the stuttering masturbatory village pervert in something and nobody
wants me to do that, because they want somebody who's got a funny nose
and greasy hair."
Not a worry, I imagine,
that keeps him awake at night . . . He looks deadpan. "It's just that I
want to do interesting work," he says, with feeling. But there is no getting
away from it. Even if you slapped a wonky nose on him and greased his hair,
he is still going to be the man who won the heart of almost every woman
in the nation as Mr Darcy in Pride and Prejudice.
To judge by the reactions
of anyone (female) who heard I was going to interview Colin Firth, he still
has their hearts. There were a couple of snide comments from men, including
one who had worked with him on a film and said he was a "prat" and that
I should beware of his "totally transparent mock modesty".
After watching several
of his films in the name of research (it was hell but someone had to do
it), I did wonder exactly what all the fuss was about. He does not always
look quite as handsome as his Mr Darcy. In fact, he can look quite ordinary.
Never ugly, mind. In his latest film, Relative Values, based on the Noel
Coward play and due to be released on June 23, he plays the camp nephew
of the Countess of Marchwood. He looks suave and clean-cut but not, frankly,
drop-dead gorgeous.
"I actually asked to
play that role because I felt it was something I hadn't done before. Other
actors tend to be associated more with the camp, wry, pithy roles. I've
tended to be associated more with seriousness, earnestness, sullenness,
intensity or paranoia."
In the flesh, however,
he looks everything the most smitten Darcymaniac could hope for - and more.
He even has the sideburns. Although nearly 40, he appears as a younger,
slimmer version of Mr Darcy and is altogether much easier company. Instead
of glowering, he smiles, even laughs. Dressed in a blue flannel shirt,
jeans and black trainers, he is all good-natured charm and, yes, self-deprecation.
"I tend to think that
the 'looks' thing is attached to a particular role," he says, over coffee
at Soho House in London. His voice is strangely neutral - timeless, placeless,
not especially deep, not especially soft. "My looks aren't something that
come dazzlingly through in everything I do. I can be made to look one way
or the other fairly easily . . . I am still not recognised on the street
that much."
He admits that this
is partly because he deliberately tries not to attract attention. "I think
you can project these things if you want. I don't want to make a ludicrous
comparison, but I heard a story about Marlon Brando walking down the street
with somebody who noticed that he wasn't being recognised and who commented
on the fact.This is Brando in 1962. And Brando said: 'Well watch this.'
And he just did this [Firth straightens his shoulders and widens his eyes],
and within seconds people were noticing him.
The chap who was with
him said what he did was almost indiscernible. Now I can project the hell
out of myself and not get that effect in the street. Probably."
Firth insists that anonymity
is what he prefers. "I can't imagine who would want all that attention.
I can imagine the ego inviting power, respect, all those sorts of things.
I'm not hugely ambitious in those directions. As much as the next person,
I want to be approved of, but I'm not greedy for that stuff. It's not where
life's blessings lie as far as I'm concerned. To be bothered wherever you
go - it's not a rational thing to want at all."
For someone who claims
to be so diffident, acting seems a strange choice of career. He says that
all he wants is for people to think he is a good actor. But surely he has
to be known for people to think he is good? "I think the two things get
confused. To have people say, 'He is good' is far more valuable to me than
to have people say, 'I know who he is'. I would rather five people knew
my work and thought it was good work than five million knew me and were
indifferent."
Praise, however, has
not been heaped on My Life So Far, which opened last month and in which
Firth plays the eccentric inventor father of a boy growing up on a Scottish
estate in the 1930s. One critic dismissed Firth as "stiff, uneasy and miscast".
I ask if he minded. "Well, it's not nice. I'm very proud of what I did
in that film. I like my performance in it. I think some critics don't know
anything about acting."
For once, the affable
mask slips and he becomes riled, reeling off examples of critics who have
got their facts wrong. Shades of an angry Mr Darcy here, although perhaps
Jane Austen's character would have expressed himself less prosaically.
"I just think 'Do. Your. F---ing. Homework.' I do think critics are an
essential watchdog, but if they don't check their facts, it gets on your
tits."
Contrary to popular
belief, he says, he does not mind that he has become inseparable from Mr
Darcy in the public imagination. "I shook it off the day I walked off set.
Other people may not have done so, but it is not something I am uncomfortable
with . . . I thought it was fantastic, all that stuff about being a heart-throb."
And just to prove it,
he is returning to us as another Darcy in the film version of Bridget Jones'
Diary, by Helen Fielding, which he started filming last week. He plays
Mark Darcy, the on-off boyfriend of Bridget: Mark Darcy, of course, was
created by the writer Helen Fielding as a fantasy hero, based on Colin
Firth's television portrayal of Elizabeth Bennet's lover.
In the book, Bridget,
while waiting for Mark Darcy to ring, fantasises about Colin Firth and
watches endless re-runs of the scene in Pride and Prejudice where Mr Darcy,
tormented by his apparently unrequited love for Elizabeth Bennet, dives
fully clothed into a pond and emerges, his shirt dripping and plastered
to his chest. I ask Firth if he objected to his role in the diary.
"Nooo. I thought it
was great. Bridget Jones is part of literary lore now and actually to be
a part of it is enormously flattering."
In the sequel to the
diary, The Edge of Reason, Bridget interviews Firth in Rome. Fielding asked
the real Firth if he would take part in the spoof and he agreed. They had
lunch together in Rome as Helen Fielding and Colin Firth; then Fielding
switched on the tape recorder and became Bridget Jones, while Firth became
an exaggerated version of himself, deflecting questions about how many
times he had to change his shirt to re-shoot the pond scene in Pride and
Prejudice, and whether he might consider splitting up with his Italian
girlfriend. "Sometimes we were laughing so much about some of the
questions we had to
take breaks," says Firth.
To the dismay of Bridget
and many other women, Firth has since married Livia Guiggioli, a documentary
maker whom he met in 1996 while filming Nostromo. He has a reputation for
forming relationships on set: first Meg Tilly, his co-star in Valmont,
with whom he has a nine-year-old son, Will, and then Jennifer Ehle, who
played Elizabeth Bennet. He points out that this has only happened when
he has been unattached and, even so, very rarely.
"I think it's quite
extraordinary that people cast me as if I'm Warren Beatty: until I met
my present wife, at the age of 35, you could name two girlfriends. Yet
there's this extraordinary image of the man who goes off with his leading
lady all the time, when any 35-year-old man who can claim to have had two
past lovers is hardly a philanderer."
In the past he has emphasised
a fundamental feeling of rootlessness. Born in Africa, where his parents
were both teachers, he came to England when he was four. Later, he went
to a comprehensive in Winchester, where he had the uncomfortable sensation
of being an outsider, initially friendless and mocked for speaking with
a middle-class accent. "On the whole I had a happy childhood, although
I'm happier as an adult. But that element of rootlessness is still there
and probably will never not be there."
Marriage, he says, has
made a big difference. "I feel much more settled and peaceful." He and
Livia live in Barnsbury, north London, and Firth spends much of the year
commuting backwards and forwards from Los Angeles to see his son. He is
still on good terms with Meg Tilly and has said in the past that the relationship
broke up, not because they did not get on, but because he could no longer
stand the isolation of the log cabin in the middle of the forest that was
her home. "I had a kind of reclusive impulse at the time, but not that
reclusive."
He puts most of his
career down to luck. "I'm fortunate enough to be the height I am [six-foot-one-and-a-half,
he says]; I have a face which is fairly adaptable and castable in lots
of different directions; I am well-spoken enough - the kind of accent that
one was encouraged to learn in drama school, Received Pronunciation, was
basically my accent. My type happened to fit into a trend in the early
1980s for the public school type. I'm not a public schoolboy, but I was
able to conform to that."
He first came to attention
in 1983, playing a homosexual public schoolboy based on Guy Burgess, in
the stage version of Another Country (he took another role in the film),
and since then has never been out of work - although he claims he never
really wanted to take the lead roles. "If you don't mind haunting the margins,
I think there is more freedom there. It's like being a politician in opposition;
that's where you can be most sincere. But, of course, you sometimes look
at people taking lead parts and think
they've got all the
gravy."
Since Pride and Prejudice,
however, he has remained very much centre stage, at least in people's minds.
"I literally came into being with that role for a lot of people." Since
then he has played the Nick Hornby role of the Arsenal fan in Fever Pitch,
the cuckolded officer in The English Patient and the foppish, hard-hearted
Lord Wessex in Shakespeare in Love.
"I do think I'm a character
actor," he says. "There are a lot of character actors who look like leading
men or women. I'm not necessarily talking about myself here - I'm thinking
about someone else whose name I won't give, someone who is basically good-looking
and often cast as a leading man but whose skills are actually to do the
really quite odd and grotesque stuff. Unless you have the right mask, you
won't be given those roles and therefore you will not be given the chance
to prove your credentials in character
work. I do think a
little bit of that is true of me."
He mentions an article
he read recently which congratulated him on accepting the role of Mark
Darcy. "It said 'Thank God, he's finally smelling the coffee'. I wasn't
quite sure what that meant, but I took it to mean that I should just go
back to being Mr Darcy all the time for ever, that I should just own up
to the fact that this is all my life will ever amount to."
He sighs. "I want to
say, strenuously, that although I have never considered the Darcy thing
to be a problem, that is simply not going to happen."
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Copyright of the Telegraph 2000 |