| One
of the best moments in Bridget Jones: The Edge of Reason is when your character
Daniel Cleaver talks to Bridget’s oversized pants. Were you trying not
to laugh?
It was Renée
who was quite giggly—but mainly out of embarrassment because I was addressing
the crotch of her pants. That was very sporting of her—not many actresses
would let me speak that close to her you-know-what. I don’t see myself
as a funny many but I do think I’ve got better at it. It’s taken me 20
years and I think what I’ve done recently has been OK.
So can we expect
more of the same roguish Daniel Cleaver?
Yes and no. My character
was a huge womanising sleazebag in the first film, but in this one he has
the possibility of becoming a better person. He gives the
impression he could
be saved. I like that element because I was worried about repeating myself.
But you and Colin
do have another big fight in this film...
Absolutely. Well, we
fought like girls in the first one and wanted to keep it up in this one.
We were aiming for two pathetic Englishmen, scared of each other and throwinghandbags,
basically. Which is what I might be like in real life If I were in a fight—but
I never am because I’d just run for it.
You’ve said you’re
not like William Thacker in Notting Hill—so are you more like Daniel Cleaver?
There are people who’ll
say that I am, but I don’t think I’m that bad. I could have become that
bad, but that’s a fun aspect of doing this type of role, exploring something
you could have become. It’s true I don’t feel at all under pressure to
settle down, even though the newspapers seem to think I should. I suppose,
like every man, you want the wife and you want the mistress, hopefully
rolled into one
person.
How’s your relationship
with Jemima Khan going?
I won’t comment on that...
In the movie you
ask Bridget for a second chance. Do you believe in second chances?
I haven’t thought about
it much—but, yes, I think people can change. And I have given people a
second chance.
Has being a Godfather
changed you? It’s been said
that you only like
babies for a couple of minutes at a
time!
Well, less than that
actually. I’m Godfather to a lot of children and I have a very good assistant
who has them all on Microsoft Outlook, so an alarm comes on when it’s someone’s
birthday. She chooses a present and I pay for it—that’s where my Godfatherly
duties end.
How do you deal with
fame?
It’s very difficult.
It’s been worse for my ex, Elizabeth, who has people crowding around while
she’s in a car with a screaming baby. I have rows outside my house with
paparazzi. They tell me I need the publicity. Well, I don’t.
Do you travel to
get away from it all?
Yes, I love anywhere
in Continental Europe. But having said that, I like the exotic too. I’m
ashamed to say, I was in Marrakesh earlier this year with my father and
we had a guide taking us around the usual tourist spots. I kept saying,
‘I want to see poverty!’ I wanted to see people in rags, you know.
You’ve also taken
up playing golf
Well, it’s destroyed
my life actually. There are very few golden rules, but one of them is never,
ever play golf. It’s more dangerous than drugs. Just say no! It’s so addictive
and then that’s all you do.
Do you keep a diary?
I used to, but every
time I write one I stop because I don’t know who I’m writing it for. You
imagine your mother might read it after you’re killed in a road accident,
which is unthinkable. So I’m not doing it any more. |
What
was it like stepping into Mark Darcy's shoes again?
It was difficult because
we re-enter Darcy's life almost where it left off, whereas I've since had
two children and my life's almost unrecognisable. There was nothing
easy about it, but it helped having Hugh and Renee thereyou resume friendships
again.
How do you
deal with fame?
I have problems with
it. I think Hugh's lived with it very intensely for yearsmuch longer than
I have.He has a different life to me and it attracts people.There's a lot
about it that's not fun, It can be incredibly restrictive if you have a
family and if you value a life outside this business.
Mark Darcy
is quiet and serious.Are you like him?
Not very much (laughs).
He's incapable of expressing himself, he doesn't like to speak much and
likes to operate quietly whereas I'm demonstrative and not afraid to speak
up. I disagree with people who think he's desperately boring though. At
a dinner party he'd be a fascinating man to talk to on a certain level.
Have the Bridget
Jones films taught you anything new about women?
Nothing new as such,
but it gives you an angle from which to laugh at the whole weight-obsession
and 30s-angst thing which perhaps you didn't have before. But Bridget Jones
hasn't invented anything about 30s angstit's been with us for a long time
before we started drawing attention to the concept.
Do men in their
30s have the same anxieties as women?
Absolutely. Bridget
thinks she's fat and no one else is; she thinks she's incapable of doing
things that everyone else can. Men have the same problems. Men worry about
their weight too, and worry if they're going to find someone who loves
them, and about making social faux pas. Everyone has a bit of Bridget in
them. I don't know if men are as eager to marry but then again I think
it depends more on the person than their sex. I know some women who run
screaming from commitment and some men who really want it. My best friend
from childhood dreamt of having children throughout his teenage years,
and got married very young.Then his wife left him.
Do you think
you'll be typecast as the quintessential good guy?
No. I've been playing
so many bad-guy characters that I couldn't possibly be a prisoner of that.
In the film Trauma I put a tarantula in someone's mouth and strangle her
to death, and recently I played a genocidal Nazi. But in this film I wouldn't
swap my role for Hugh's bad guy at all, it makes a change to get the girl;
it's been a while.
Hugh was saying
that you and he were fighting like girls' in the film.
Yes, he's been saying
this a lot. He's quite right, but actually Hugh knows exactly what he's
doing and handled me very gently. He has SAS training and is trained to
kill, so I felt like I was in very firm hands! But I think it looks as
if we're fighting like a couple of seven-year-old boys.
Have you ever
read anyone else's diary?
No.That might sound
a little sanctimonious but it isn't because of moral scruples. It's just
that I feel a bit queasy about it. I prefer to let people present what
they want to present in a window display, so to speak. I don't like seeing
the contents of people's purses, bedroom drawers or even their bedrooms,
So I'd never read a diary or keep one of my own I don't want to leave
any evidence. |