| South
Fla Sun Sentinel
15 Nov 2004 Thanks Anne |
Firth gets uptight - againActor's nothing like his character in Bridget JonesBy Jane Wollman Rusoff Tribune Media Services Posted November 15 2004 Ensconced in a Beverly Hills hotel suite, Colin Firth thrusts his high-top-sneaker-clad foot on the arm of a posh sofa. It's hardly a move his neat-freak character in 2001's Bridget Jones's Diary and, now, the sequel, Bridget Jones: The Edge of Reason, would make. In the flesh, the actor, 44, is just as British-accented, tall, curly-haired and great looking as on film. But Firth is hardly his ultra-reserved character, Mark Darcy. Indeed, today, Firth is wearing a pair of dark-blue jeans, a blue sweater with sleeves pushed up above the elbows and the aforesaid sneakers. "When I first played Darcy, everyone was saying, `You couldn't possibly be that guy in a million years,'" Firth says. "It was the biggest stretch I'd ever made. But ironically, Darcy is whom I've become identified with." In the sequel, the scatterbrained thirtysomething Bridget (Renée Zellweger) is still ga-ga over the hunky Darcy. When the film opens, Mark has been plump Bridget's perfect boyfriend now for six weeks. But can she hold onto him? And what about that cad of an ex-boss, Daniel Cleaver (Hugh Grant), who's still hot for her? Right -- our starry-eyed Bridget has to cope with a slew of mushrooming challenges. And Darcy is right there for her -- for example, looking after the jolly heroine after she gets tossed in prison. An unlikely pair, but protocol-driven Darcy is ever-captivated by Bridget's candor. Still, notes Firth, "he's just a romantic device. We're not engaged with his main life -- being a human rights lawyer. That all takes place in the wings." The movie's climatic water-fight scene has rivals Darcy and Cleaver having at it over Bridget in the middle of the fountains in Hyde Park's Italian Gardens. "London in November: It was freezing!" Firth says. "I came down with something afterwards and lost my voice." For camera and lighting requirements, a number of takes were done over a few days. Between each take, Firth and Grant, in cold, soaking-wet suits, were warmed by sitting in "a kind of hot tub and having a cup of tea. It was very bizarre. We didn't stay in it for very long, though, because it smelled of sulfur or something. Very strange." It was in winter decades ago that the Hampshire, England-born Firth caught the, er, acting bug. Part of a Christmas pantomime, the schoolboy played Jack Frost. He's gone on to appear in lots of British theater and more than 40 films, including The English Patient and Shakespeare in Love. Last year, Firth starred opposite Scarlett Johansson as enigmatic painter Vermeer in Girl With a Pearl Earring and as an infatuated writer in Love Actually. And as different as Firth and Darcy might be in real life, it's a part the actor played even before the Bridget Jones films. Well, sort of. Darcy is modeled after the dashing Mr. Darcy in Jane Austen's Pride and Prejudice, a role that Firth portrayed in a 1995 BBC-TV adaptation. To do publicity for Bridget, Firth is taking a few days off from filming Where the Truth Lies in Toronto. "It's Rat-Pack-type stuff -- repartee and music," Firth says. He and Kevin Bacon play a '50s Las Vegas comedy duo, and the drama involves a woman found dead in their hotel room. But rather than talk just about his movies, Firth shares a tale about the quirky work habits of the painter Rene Magritte. "I don't know if it's true," Firth says, "but the story goes that he'd wake up punctually at the same time every morning, pack his portfolio as if he were going off to work at an office, kiss his wife goodbye and leave the house. Then he'd walk around the block, come back to the house, go upstairs to his studio and paint. At 5 o'clock, he'd reverse the process and come back home. I think everybody, to some extent, leads two lives, maybe even five, six or seven." The anecdote calls to
mind the pride the actor takes in compartmentalizing his own life. Firth,
who has two boys with his wife
"A lot of us change
channels when we work and when we're home. It's probably more pronounced
if one of your lives is quite public. That certainly isn't something you
want to bring home and affect your family. A person who's ambitious to
do things creatively [can] feel different from the person who wants to
be a good dad."
|
Colin Firth not quite himself in `Bridget Jones' sequelBy Hanh Nguyen
LOS ANGELES - For Colin Firth, playing Mr. Darcy is old hat. He first portrayed
the
He's not as familiar, however, with playing himself.
In Helen Fielding's novel Bridget Jones: Edge of Reason the basis for the
film of the
"It starts to get confusing. There was never any talk of Colin Firth appearing
as a
Nevertheless, director Beeban Kidron still wrestled with the dilemma when
she began
"We decided (that) was perhaps a little postmodern for the middle of the
movie," says
The filmmakers even discussed casting a different celebrity as the object
of Bridget's
"We talked about it and we talked about it and we could not find a solution
that didn't
Fans still hoping to see Bridget in a starstruck stupor over the actor
won't be denied
"One day after filming, I asked Renee and Colin to stay behind. Renee stayed
in
The scene isn't meant to be part of the film, rather it was conceived as
a stand-alone
Adds Kidron, "It was written, if not exactly as the book. There are a few
treats for you
Copyright © 2004 KRT News Service |
the 1980s - the 1990s - the 2000s - film reviews - theater reviews - misc