She,
(U.K.) 11-07 December 2004 Thanks Jennie
Firth Among SequelsInterviewed by Elisa Leonelli“Colin
is the kind of name you give your goldfish as a joke.”
Playing Darcy in P&P propelled you into the fantasies of millions of women –how did you cope with that?
In the book Bridget Jones: The Edge of Reason, Bridget meets you in her real life. How did they cover that in the film, since you were already playing another character? I don’t think they were ever going to go that way in the movie, but if they had, I expect they would have had to get somebody like Russell Crowe to play me. What did you think of all the fuss made in the press when Renee Zellweger – an American – was chosen to play the very British Bridget? I never thought much
about where Renee came from, any more than I ask any other actor where
they come from. I think the English make a fuss about these things and
I’m never quite sure why. It’s very common for English people to play Americans
and I’ve never seen the American press get up in
The papers also went to town on the fact that Renee had to gain weight for the role, didn’t they? It’s a kind of malaise that has spread right across the Western world and is particularly bad in LA – women are expected to be unhealthily thin. Do you think a successful man like Mark Darcy could really fall for an insecure, clumsy woman like Bridget? Actually, I find Bridget
an extremely attractive character, partly becauseof all her disasters.
I don’t see whey men shouldn’t fall for women like that, I think they can
often be charming. People who are radiant,
What do you find most attractive in women? I don’t have a particular template – it’s 100% case by case. A certain level of intelligence helps, and I think almost everyone finds humour appealing and the lack thereof not very appealing. What do you find baffling about female behaviour? The list is fairly endless. I think men and women are probably very similar and that far too much is made of the differences, but having said that, there will always be an Enigma to the relationship between the sexes, which I think is insoluble. We’ll never reach a perfect understanding and I can’t really imagine it being desirable to do so, because it’s kept alive by mystery. Are you romantic? Yes, I suppose I am,
as much as anybody is. I think in any real relationship there are elements
other than romance that drive it. I do think it’s very important to keep
the lyrical element in your life though,
What do you consider romantic? I think it’s very romantic to learn someone’s language and travel a long way to propose to them, try to win their parents over and all that. I think that qualifies absolutely; it certainly does in cinematic terms. I did it in Love Actually with the Portuguese girl, but I did something similar in real life. I married someone whose first language wasn’t English and got on a plane to propose. Having an Italian wife, you must have noticed certain differences between Brits and Italians? The more I travel, the more I see cultural stereotypes broken down. We’re led to believe tht there’s no such thing as a repressed Italian and it’s quite untrue. I know so many repressed Italians – they’re some of the most repressed people I know. And I’m not sure wo the stereotypical English man is; are we talking about Mick Jagger or John Lennon or Johnny Rotten? We produce rock stars all the time, yet we still have this fixed image of an Englishman as somebody like John Major. Have the cultural differences affected your marriage? Of course. There are
language differences, and although we speak each other ’s well enough to
communicate, they still lead to misunderstandings. There are certain views
that we’re destined to differ on, but they’re stimulating rather than restrictive.
The English love the Italians, and the Italians
How did it feel to become a father again at 40? I’m just better equipped
for it now. I won’t go into a lot of detail about my children or family
life, but it takes a long time for some of us boys to grow up. At 30, I
still felt far too young for anything like that – I hadn’ t quite got over
not being 18 anymore and it changed my life dramatically. Obviously I fell
passionately in love with my child and my priorities changed – I think
that’s true of everybody. The second time , I did feel old enough finally,
and a little more equipped for it, but in some ways it’s
Is your wife’s Italian approach to motherhood different? Yes, but I think the more you get to know someone from a different culture, the more you realise those differences are fairly inconsequential. It’s much more to do with who she is than the fact that she’s Italian, because often I ’ll assume that something she’s doing or thinking is because she’s Italian, but her best friend or sister will think something completely different. Certainly her Italian family operates very much as a clan around a newborn child – for the first
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