THEWLIS HITS A NEW HIGH
By Natasha Stoynoff | Toronto Sun (06 October, 1997)
David Thewlis isn't hip to the commercial, Tinseltown way of working.
Matter of fact, the BBC-weaned actor only recently learned one of his
roles once spawned a doll in his likeness for toy stores. "Oh?" he is
corrected, slightly amused, "it's called an 'action figure', is it?"
And he surely wasn't aware of the hype caused by current Seven Years In Tibet co-star Brad Pitt before filming began. "I didn't know
much about him and hadn't read the gossip mags,"says Thewlis, "but
I did ask mutual friends if he was a good guy."
Based on the true story of Austrian mountaineers Heinrich Harrer and
Peter Aufschnaiter, who set out to climb the Himalayas in 1939 and
found spiritual enlightenment, Seven Years was an illuminating
experience for Thewlis, too -- of the Hollywood kind. Discovering Pitt
to be "a very mellow, easy-going, good-natured, intelligent fellow
who is unaffected by all that has happened to him," the actor still
wouldn't trade places with the mega-star. "(During filming) in
Argentina, I'd go hang out in coffee bars and get to know people. He
couldn't. It would cause a public disturbance."
But the lanky Brit, who made an indelible, introductory mark on
moviegoers and critics with his desperate, award-winning
performance in Mike Leigh's Naked (1993), is embarking on his
second, big-budget Hollywood film with Seven Years (his first, The
Island Of Dr. Moreau, was "an awful experience, an awful film," he
admits). And with it, perhaps, Fame.
Scaling mountaintops in the film, Thewlis shows he'd have the
stamina to survive it. "I was sent to the gym for three months, five days
a week, to get strong," he says of the regimen that included uphill
drills with expert climbers. "It was a greulling, intense period of
training which was absolutely essential." While shooting authentic
climbing scenes with Pitt, "We had each other's lives in each other's
hands more than (producers) will ever know about."
Even more daunting was meeting the real Heinrich, on whose book
the film was based, and who was recently revealed to have had a
Nazi past. "He is a very verbose man, very egocentric," Thewlis
reports, "but also a very charming fellow."
Staying in the spotlight, Thewlis has an upcoming role in a Coen
brothers' film, and might do Mike Leigh's next venture, whatever that
may be. "He asks me, 'David, do you want to do my next film? I don't
know what it's gonna be yet.' " Thewlis mimics, laughing, "which
always makes it very hard for him to get the money for it." Not a
concern of this thespian, since before his current big-budget lineup,
"I was living in a one-room flat, had no money, and was very happy."