DAVID THEWLIS SINKS HIS TEETH INTO 'HARRY POTTER'
Ian Spelling | Feature Contributor (2004)
On one of the hottest summer days in last year's European heat wave, David Thewlis left a darkened soundstage at England's Shepperton
Studios and ventured into the sun. And everyone who saw what
happened next figured that Thewlis, the acclaimed British actor who
plays professor Remus Lupin in Harry Potter and the Prisoner of
Azkaban, had taken Method acting to a new extreme. "I remember
coming out of the studio and hitting the light and screaming,"
Thewlis says, laughing. "I'd stepped out of Shepperton and into the
light, and the light hit the pinholes of my lenses. Everyone was like,
'He's really in character.' I was screaming like a wolf.
Watch Out Boy, He's a Maneater!: David Thewlis, as professor
Lupin - with Daniel Radcliffe as Harry Potter - comes out as a
creature of the night in the Prisoner of Azkaban. "It was pretty
uncomfortable," he says, "But at the same time it was kind of
exciting, because in your career you don't expect to do the classic
thing of the werewolf transformation."
Thewlis joins a 'Who's Who' of
British actors in the Harry Potter franchise effective as of Prisoner
of Azkaban" The film, which will open nationwide June 4, also
features fellow newcomers Gary Oldman as Sirius Black, Timothy
Spall as Peter Pettigrew, Emma Thompson as professor Trelawney
and Michael Gambon, who actually hails from Ireland, replacing the
late Richard Harris as Headmaster Albus Dumbledore. Julie Christie,
Robbie Coltrane, Alan Rickman, Maggie Smith and Julie Walters are
among the returnees. As "Harry Potter" fans know, Lupin is a former
best friend of Black, Pettigrew and James Potter, long-dead father of
Harry (Daniel Radcliffe). Dumbledore allows Lupin to teach Defense
Against the Dark Arts class at Hogwarts, and Lupin and Harry form a
fast bond. Every full moon, however, Lupin must be whisked to the
Shrieking Shack, where he can howl, snarl and attack without
harming anyone.
Speaking by telephone from Morocco during a day off from shooting
Ridley Scott's upcoming Kingdom of Heaven, the garrulous Thewlis
- whose previous credits include such fantasy and sci-fi films as
James and the Giant Peach, Dragonheart, The Island of Dr.
Moreau, Total Eclipse (where he played a young Leo Dicaprio's
gay lover) and Timeline - explains that he played Lupin more as a
human than as a werewolf. "For most of the film I'm human and very
avuncular, a very gentle character and very sympathetic to Harry,"
says the actor, who was almost cast as professor Quirrel (Ian Hart) in
Harry Potter and the Sorcerer's Stone. "And I didn't want to give
hints to his lupine nature before we actually see it, particularly
because I didn't want to give away the surprise for anyone who's not
read the book. "I didn't want there to be wolfish tics or something in
the way he walks," Thewlis continues, "So I'm generally human. I do
have two big scars across my face all throughout the film that are
never explained, but the idea is that they've happened when I've
transformed before."
Thewlis confirms that Prisoner of Azkaban is to date the scariest by
far of the Harry Potter films, much more so than either Sorcerer's
Stone or Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets. One Lupin
scene in particular, the actor says in a spoiler-filled spurt of
conversation, might make the uninitiated toss their butterbeer and
chocolate frogs in panic. "The scene will be a total shock, hopefully,
for anyone who's not familiar with the books," Thewlis says. "It comes
from nowhere, two-thirds of the way through the film. Hermione
(Emma Watson) sees the moon rising, and we've just been in the
Shrieking Shack. We come out, and we're holding Wormtail/Peter
Pettigrew hostage. At that moment the moon rises and I go through
the transformation. "Once I am a werewolf, he's played by a 9-foot
Thai kickboxer or a ballet dancer," he says. "They're very tall guys in
this animatronic body suit, at which point I went home. "I was so glad
I wasn't in that body suit," Thewlis adds. "I was working with Gary
Oldman, who's an old experienced veteran of prosthetics with
'Dracula,' and he was very sympathetic because I'm changing as
Sirius holds onto me. Gary was sympathizing with me about how
difficult it was going to be and how we were going to be there for a
long time. "In fact, because he's holding onto me as I'm changing,
we got to a point where I'd changed as much as I could on camera,
and then the CGI and the animatronic creature took over," the actor
says with a laugh. "But Gary was actually left there the whole time. I
said, 'Bye, Gary. I'm going home, man. You've got another two days
hanging onto this piece of plastic!' "But it was great fun."
Thewlis attended a recent rough-cut screening of Prisoner of
Azkaban at the behest of director Alfonso Cuaron, and he gives the
film high marks. "I really liked it," he says. "I thought it was great. I
was just proud to be in it, really. I do think it's the best of the three.
The series is progressing and the kids are certainly progressing.
They've come on considerably, all three of them."
Thewlis will not appear in Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire,
which is in production now. However, he anticipates the chance to
reprise Lupin in Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix, when
the Harry Potter team sets about realizing the fifth book of J.K.
Rowling's magical saga. "In the prepping for 'Azkaban,' " he says, "I
read 'Azkaban' and 'Goblet of Fire.' Then, right in the middle of
filming 'Azkaban,' 'Order of the Phoenix' was published. I have to tell
you that I've not completely finished it - I'm saving that for when we
do it. "I'm hoping that they cast me," Thewlis says. "It's not a foregone
conclusion, but I'm assuming that, because Lupin returns in Book 5,
that I'll be back again too."