| The Independent
(UK)
19 December 2003
thanks Chris |
Colin Firth: Still sitting pretty
From Mr Darcy to Vermeer, Colin Firth seems drawn
to smouldering roles - but he thinks he's dead ordinary
By Fiona Morrow
There's something slightly cheesy about Colin
Firth. Not in the flesh, you understand, but in the idea of him. It's something
about the way middle England panted in unison when he strode out of that
lake in Pride and Prejudice.
"Ooh, Colin," you could hear them whisper,
faintly reproachfully. "You are naughty."
Now, I had as big a crush on Mr Darcy as the
next gal. I was 14 at the time, and I got over it as quickly as I did strawberry-mint
lip gloss. My Mr Darcy served his purpose and was then cast aside - and
Timothy Dalton never did it for me again. Ever. |
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Unlike the erstwhile Bond, Firth's career
is easily split into pre- and post-Pride and Prejudice. He started out
well. Another Country, Apartment Zero, A Month in the Country, Tumbledown,
Valmont: small but interesting projects, with Firth given the chance to
develop complex, often troubled characters. Mr Darcy changed all that:
suddenly Firth was bankable. He became an actor sought out by the high-end
heritage market of the British film industry. But for every English Patient
and Shakespeare In Love on his CV, there's a Relative Values or an Importance
Of Being Earnest. Bridget Jones's Diary was fun, but What A Girl Wants?
Love Actually? What more evidence do I need to muster? Definitely a bit
cheesy.
So I wasn't nearly as excited at meeting Firth
as perhaps I should have been. Certainly, every female with a pulse to
whom I mentioned the interview appeared to go glassy-eyed at the mere sound
of his name.
A tall, slim, rather diffident Firth arrives.
He's smiling and instantly affable, looking younger than his 43 years but
also less substantial than he does on screen. His is a handsome face, but
not extraordinarily so. We're in Luxembourg, on the set of Girl With a
Pearl Earring, the film version of Tracy Chevalier's bestselling novel.
Firth plays the 17th-century Dutch artist Johannes Vermeer, who becomes
captivated by the family maid, Griet (played by Scarlett Johansson).
It's a pretty torrid tale: Vermeer and Griet's
mutual attraction is repressed beneath the demands of social etiquette;
the slightest glance becomes weighted with meaning, the sexual atmosphere
building to an almost unbearable intensity.
Plenty of opportunity for Firth to smoulder,
then? "Oh, God!" exclaims Firth, aghast. "I hope it doesn't come across
like that. I don't consciously smoulder anyway - I never have." He pauses
for a wry little grin: "Smouldering is something that's kind of come to
me.
"Actually," he adds, not ready to let the
subject lie. "It was a bit worrying the other day on set. I was looking
at Griet and going through my own process and doing what I thought, you
know, was wanted, and afterwards I got a comment about my smouldering look
and I just thought, 'Oh, Christ'." He says it more in sadness than in anger,
as though really fearful that he is reduced to "one look".
Unfortunately, because Girl With a Pearl Earring
is a film of intent rather than action, Firth does vacillate rather between
a smoulder and a scowl. His limitations in the emoting department are not
helped by the fact that he's up against Johansson, an actress who can say
more with her eyes than any page of dialogue.
"Very few actors would decide to take on a
role and just do a look," comments Firth, a little dejectedly. "You hope
you can be elegant without speaking, and that once the film's cut together,
you come out in the wash the way you intended to."
Such concern is emblematic of his lack of
arrogance: he seems genuinely surprised and cheered by his good fortune
in doing a job he enjoys.
He became an actor, he says, as a last resort.
The son of academics, Firth lived in Nigeria until he was four, eventually
growing up in Hampshire where he attended the local comprehensive. His
posh accent is the product of "old-fashioned drama school RP".
"My father was worried when I decided not
to go to university," he recalls, "but only because he wanted me to be
able to find something that was stimulating from which I could make a living.
I lit on acting because there really wasn't anything else that seemed feasible."
Though he loved what he was doing, the decision
preyed on his mind for many years: "I did say to my dad later that I felt
like I hadn't fulfilled the family tradition and that I had missed something
by not going to university, by not following that path." His father, however,
sees it differently: "He told me that, considering all the things I've
learnt for various roles, I haven't missed out on much."
It soon becomes clear that for Firth, it's
the research that really gives him a kick: "I enjoy the homework very much,"
he says with a slightly embarrassed guffaw.
Girl With a Pearl Earring has certainly delivered
for him on that front: "It's allowed me to go to school, in a way," he
shrugs. "I like going to the galleries and pretending to be this bloke.
That thrills me."
The bloke himself remains an enigma: "Here's
a guy we basically don't know anything about, whom Tracy has written a
story about. And this story is told through the eyes of a girl who doesn't
know much about him either. I think," he says, after pausing for a moment
to think, "that what Tracy has done brilliantly, and what the production
has done so far, is to keep that mystery intact. I just hope I can continue
to do the same in my leg of the relay."
He rubs the side of his face, crosses his
legs and frowns: "Vermeer's only hint at a self-portrait is in a mirror,"
he ponders. "It's in the background of - I think it's called The Concert
[in fact it's The Music Lesson]." He shakes his head and shrugs: "The titles
are all so interchangeable... But anyway, it's basically two people standing
at a virginal at the back of a room, and there's a mirror above the instrument
which reflects [the player's] face and then if you look further you can
see the leg of his easel..."
He stops and pulls a sheepish face: "I've
never quite been able to make it out myself, to be honest, so I'm just
going on what others say. But there seems to be some kind of box and his
foot - so he's quite consciously hinted at himself, but kept himself out
of it."
As he prattles on happily, I realise that
the great sex symbol of the Home Counties is, in fact, a big kid, eyes
still wide with wonder at the world. Even that laugh, with its throat-tickling
rumble, belongs to a boy.
I tune back in, and find that Firth has moved
on to the known facts he has unearthed about Vermeer: "He had 15 children,
four of whom died. There were wars going on - the French invaded, and the
dykes were broken in a kind of scorched earth policy. He grew up in a pub
that his mother ran..." He leans back in his chair to deliver what is clearly
his favourite piece of Dutch miscellany: "The annual beer consumption in
Delft was absolutely jaw-dropping!"
We pause in respect for the constitution of
the apparently permanently pickled locals before returning to art. Specifically,
Firth's lack of aptitude for it: "The physical side of painting is beyond
me," he proffers. "You can't teach me to draw a face with two eyes in the
right place. All I'm hoping for is to look as if I've picked up a palette
before and to hold a paintbrush without dropping it."
He won't be drawn on how he thinks the film
is going. "I'm hopeless at predicting that kind of thing - I was the one
who thought Shakespeare In Love couldn't work, which shows how strong my
instincts are. I just thought: 'there have been so many star-studded flops,'
and my worry was that it would be panto for clever clogs."
As for his own part in it, he starts to giggle:
"I was the absolute antithesis of everything that was charming about that
film - the guy with no humour, no poetry and no romance. The beauty of
the film," he declaims in cod-Shakespearean, "was thrown into relief by
my lack of it."
He's less happy-go-lucky when, inevitably,
we find ourselves having a Mr Darcy moment. "You know, this whole star
persona nonsense that came from Pride and Prejudice is not something I
actually occupy, and I only ever have to answer for it in a press situation."
He lets out a sigh. "When the question is
asked, I often have to wake myself up to remember what to say about Mr
Darcy. I can't recall it very well, not least because it was a very ordinary
working experience. I've had to talk about it so much, I can no longer
distinguish my own memories from other people's mythology about it."
He does remember thinking it wouldn't be up
to much: "I went to South America [to film Nostromo]. I thought it would
be nice to be away when everyone was having a go at it."
He didn't pay much more attention when he
got a call from home saying he was the subject of some intense press interest:
"I just thought it was the sort of thing that mums say."
Meanwhile, on the set of Nostromo, Firth fell
in love with an Italian, Livia Guiggioli (they are now married). Intrigued
by reports of Firth from England, her family went to check him out at the
cinema. "The only thing that was on at the time was Circle of Friends,"
he grimaces. "And appealing in that I am not. They were in despair at this
ghastly, bloated, moustachioed English fool. Then, when they were sent
tapes of Pride and Prejudice, there was a general kind of disbelief that
anyone could find this man sexy." Firth himself remained unconvinced until
his mum sent him a recording of a radio discussion about the series: "I
thought, 'Christ! This has never happened before, this is extraordinary.'"
He leans forward to add sincerely: "It can
make you a bit jittery." He continues, sounding as though he still can't
quite fathom it: "The interesting thing was that I thought I'd been doing
great up until that point. I'd been doing stuff that I found really interesting.
I'd been working away - had never been out of work, actually. I was doing
central roles in things that interested me a lot and were sometimes well
received. If people liked me, they liked me and if they didn't they didn't.
And then, with Pride and Prejudice, it was as if I'd never done a thing
before."
Or since? I prompt: "Well," he shrugs, resigned,
"if people want to bang on about it eight years on, if they're still interested,
I can't really complain."
He has, of course, had a hand in inspiring
such longevity himself, by starring as Mark Darcy in Bridget Jones's Diary
and its forthcoming sequel.
"I know," he shrugsapologetically. "The first
one just seemed such fun, but I was worried about a sequel. The very idea
conjures up all sorts of dreadful thoughts. But I read the script and found
a new affinity with it, so..." he trails off. "Nevertheless," he picks
up, with a shake of the head, "I have to say I find it weird that there
is this hologram of me as Mr Darcy still wandering about."
The notion reminds me of something Firth told
me about the moment he saw his first original Vermeer: "I don't know if
I've ever seen such a difference between reproduction and the real thing.
Even in print, you can see they're marvellous, but nothing compares to
coming face to face with one."
Firth may not be a great work of art, but
he's certainly nothing like his image. Neither scrumptious nor cheesy,
he's more like a reliably decent pint of beer. Something, it seems, of
which Vermeer himself would have approved.
-
'Girl With a Pearl Earring' is released 16
January
Copyright
© 2003 Independent Digital (UK) Ltd
Reproduced
with permission of the copyright owner. Further reproduction or distribution
is prohibited without permission.
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