FRIENDS REUNITED
| The Guardian (30 May 2003)
So David [Thewlis] and his girlfriend Anna [Friel] were staying with
Trudie [Styler] and Sting [who has no surname] when David decided
to show Trudie his movie script. She loved it! Together, and with a
little help from Luc [Besson], they decided to get it made. By Stuart
Jeffries.
So... is your film any good, or is it a monstrous vanity project that is
going to come hopelessly unstuck? "Don't ask me," says David
Thewlis, his mouth filled with nasty ravioli from the Shepperton film
studios canteen. "I have no idea yet. I've been cutting the thing for
four weeks and I've got no perspective. That's the reason I hate doing
interviews when I'm in the middle of a project. I keep having to do
these TV interviews for the film, and you have to be upbeat."
Thewlis mimics his interview technique: "'Yeah, this project is really
exciting, we're having a great time. And it's a brilliant film because of
this, this and this.' And you end up eating your words. It turns out not
to be such a brilliant film for whatever reasons, but then they show
these interviews when the film's released, and you're saying it's a
wonderful film and then they cut back to the studio and the critics say
it's a pile of shit. 'But I didn't know! I was in the middle of making the
fucking thing!'"
Whether the film in question - which stars Thewlis, as well as being
written and directed by him - turns out to be any good will become
clear when it finally gets an airing - at Venice, he hopes - later this
year. It's called Cheeky and tells the story of toyshop owner Harry
Sankey (played by Thewlis) who leads a simple life in the quiet
northern town of Gigglethwaite until the sudden death of his wife,
Nancy. Her last wish is that he become a contestant on a quiz show
called Cheeky, hosted by a northern stand-up called Alf Price (played by Johnny Vegas), in which participants win prizes according to the
skill with which they insult each other. On the show, he meets a
contestant called, coincidentally, Nancy (played by Trudie Styler).
She attempts to draw him out of his misery, and in so doing
unwittingly helps Harry to rebuild his relationship with his estranged,
mother-idolising son, Sam.
How did the idea for the film come about? Are you exploring some
sort of Oedipal conflict with your dad in the film's central father-son
relationship? Thewlis nearly gags on his pasta. "I don't think so. My
dad ran a toyshop in Blackpool, but I think that's about as far as the
parallels go."
The germ of Cheeky's plot apparently came to Thewlis when he was
working on a sitcom in Nottingham in the 1980s. "I used to sit next to
Leslie Crowther in make-up while he was doing The Price is Right.
And there was this other quiz show that was being filmed there. One
day I saw one of the contestants after he'd won a lot of money, but he
was crying. It didn't look like he was crying for joy, so I wondered why
he was. I had this idea that he'd probably just heard that his wife had
died, just then after the show. And then that got changed in my head
to what if his wife had died a few weeks before - but then, why would
he be on the show? And that got mixed up with an idea about a man
who was on a quiz show who became famous in his town for a few
weeks, but didn't want to be. That was originally a short film idea."
Thewlis wrote the bulk of the script in Bratislava in 1996 when he was
playing an evil monarch in the fantasy film Dragonheart. He was King
Einon, Pete Postlethwaite played Gilbert of Glockenspur and Dennis
Quaid was a dragon-slaying knight. "It was so boring and Dragonheart
was so unchallenging - there was no research involved or any
rehearsal. So I was in my hotel room every night with no
English-language TV except 'Beavis and Butt-head' at 10 o'clock
every night. And I didn't want to go out because everybody was
drinking and I wasn't drinking much then. So I started work on an
idea, and by the end of three months I'd written most of it."
Were you getting tired of acting? "I was getting tired of being in
unchallenging stuff," says Thewlis. And indeed, after his extraordinary
performance as Johnny in Mike Leigh's 1993 film Naked, for which he
won best actor at Cannes, many of his roles have demanded little
and have been in films that delivered even less. His personal nadir
was playing an earthworm in James and the Giant Peach, but he has
also managed to pick a fair number of turkeys - he played the French
poet Paul Verlaine opposite Leonardo DiCaprio's preposterous Arthur
Rimbaud in the dire Total Eclipse, and was in such flops as
Bertolucci's Besieged, Seven Years in Tibet, The Island of Dr Moreau and Restoration. Perhaps he wanted to try something new. "I was
keen to do something other than acting. I've always written - I have a
novel waiting to be edited - so writing a filmscript seemed a good
idea. I've already directed a short film."
Cheeky was put into development by FilmFour. "But, because I'm a
procrastinator, nothing happened. It was only when I was staying at
Trudie and Sting's villa in Italy that the thing got going." Come
again? "Anna [his partner, the actor Anna Friel] and I were invited to
stay with Trudie and Sting. Anna had been in Me Without You [Sandra Goldbacher's teen-girlfriends film] with Trudie [as Friel's
mother] and they became friends. We were asked for a weekend and
we ended up staying for four weeks. One day Trudie said she'd love to
read my script. I had my computer with me, so I printed it out and she
spent the afternoon reading it. And then she came out and said, 'This
is wonderful. I really want to produce it.' We decided we were going
to play the leading roles quite early on."
Back in London, Styler introduced him to the wonderfully named US
actor/producer Travis Swords. "Next thing you know we're in Cannes
meeting Luc Besson and he's pumping money into the project." Did
the veteran French producer-director give you any creative tips, as
well as money? "He did. One day he arrived at Trudie's place in
Wiltshire and went through the script. 'This you will not film. This is
good but it needs to go here, not there.' He was very helpful. Then he
went out on to the lawn and flew off in his helicopter back to
Normandy. Like you do."
Shooting started at Shepperton on October 22 last year. While
Thewlis finessed his script, and filled the film with Brit talent (Vegas,
Ian Hart, delightful Mike Leigh regular Ruth Sheen), the
Oscar-winning designer Lindy Hemming set to work at Shepperton
building a game show set surmounted by vast lips. "Lindy had been
set designer on Naked and with every film Mike made since. She won
an Oscar for Topsy-Turvy, so I knew she could give me what I wanted."
When I visit the set just before Christmas, Thewlis is poised to film the
denouement, in which he and Trudie Styler bawl at each other on
the set of Cheeky. Johnny Vegas is asleep in his trailer when I arrive
for our appointment. "Sorry, I just nodded off watching Genghis Khan
on telly," says Vegas. "I was thinking of modelling my interpretation of
Alf Price on Yul Brynner's performance of the great Mongol warrior.
But in the end I decided to model him on Jim Davidson instead. I
really despise everything Jim Davidson stands for, so it seemed
appropriate to play Alf as a kind of northern Jim Davidson." A few
minutes later, Vegas sits on a throne on top of the vaginal set,
wearing a frilly shirt. He has the northern aura of a TV host who is no
stranger to jars of pickled eggs. At the emotional climax, Thewlis and
Styler run down two curving ramps to the front of the shot and shout
at each other. Thewlis snarls verbosely like he did in Naked all those
years ago, someone shouts "Cut!" then he rushes over to the monitor
to see what the take looked like.
Two months later, Thewlis is editing the film. What have you learned
about film-making? "It'll make me far more understanding of directors
in the future. I now realise the last thing they need is some actor
saying, 'Excuse me. I don't know what's going on, but I've been here
four hours now. And I'm dead bored in me trailer.' I always thought I
wouldn't let that happen to any of my actors when I directed the film.
I'd always make sure that they would be called in, do their work and
go home. But when it came to it, people would come up to me and
say, 'They've been waiting here six hours!' And I'd say, 'Well fucking
keep 'em here!' Totally on the other foot."
Did you seek professional help? "All the time." I mean from people
skilled in making films - after all, you're only an actor, albeit an
award-winning one. "Oh God, yeah. I surrounded myself with people
who would stop me making a fool of myself. Or at least I hope that's
what I've done. My director of photography was Oliver Stapleton - I'd
worked with him before on Restoration. I remembered him as a
cameraman who did have an input and an opinion on performance.
That can be very annoying - my usual tactic when someone gives
you notes about your performance on set is to tell them, 'Mind your
own fucking business.' But with Oliver it was always pertinent, helpful
and welcome. If I needed some confidence in my performance, he
was the person I'd go to. But I'm not completely naive. I've spent the
past 10 years working almost exclusively in films, so I know how it works."
Since filming Cheeky, Thewlis, 40, has taken on a new project. "Two
weeks ago I was in a pink leotard being smeared with Nivea by three
old men." Just for fun, or did this have anything to do with the film? "I
was having a bodycast made. I'm playing Professor Lucas in the next
Harry Potter film. It's a great thing to do after this, because I know it'll get seen and I've got loads of kiddie friends. If you say, 'You'll never
guess what I'm doing,' and tell them, they start screaming. And then
you tell them, 'You can come to the set and meet Harry Potter,' and
they get short of breath. It's worth it just for that."
After the experience of Cheeky, will you direct again? "It really
depends on how it's received. If it comes out to indifference, I don't
think I'll ever do it again. I don't think I'd go through the palaver
again. I like a good lie-in, and I haven't been able to have one for six
months. And I haven't seen Anna properly for ages. So if it comes out
and people say, 'It's all right, a bit slow - it's nice,' I won't bother."