Gary
Oldman slays dragons to play Churchill in 'Darkest Hour'
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[November 21, 2017]
By Jill Serjeant
LOS ANGELES (Reuters) -
Gary Oldman has played Beethoven, Lee Harvey Oswald, Sid
Vicious and Pontius Pilate in his 35-year acting career,
but he says taking on Britain's Winston Churchill was by
far the most daunting.
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Months of research, four hours for makeup and
costumes every day, and capturing the famous voice of Britain's
wartime prime minister were just some of the challenges facing
Oldman in the movie "Darkest Hour." Stamina was another.
"Churchill is arguably the greatest Briton who ever lived to
many people and he has been portrayed many times before. You
just have to slay those dragons and put it aside," Oldman, 59,
said.
"It fills you with fear, but maybe that's what gives you the
best work," he added. "I'm in almost every scene in the movie
and I had long working days and hours in the makeup chair. I
hoped I could get through it. And I had to come in every day
with energy."
The film, directed by Joe Wright and opening in U.S. movie
theaters on Wednesday, focuses on May and June 1940 when Britain
appeared on the brink of defeat in World War Two and Churchill
faced deep divisions in his own government, the military and the
monarchy.
Oldman's risk appears to have paid off. The London-born actor,
director and producer is tipped by awards watchers as a
front-runner for what could be his first Oscar.
Getting there took six months of research, watching and
listening to documentary footage of Churchill, and a total face
prosthetic for Oldman, who bears little resemblance to the
stooping, bow-tied British leader.
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"Two hours, forty-five minutes into the makeup, you start sort of
seeing the spirit, at least, of Winston looking back at you," Oldman
said.
The plethora of recorded Churchill speeches made the task of
capturing his voice harder rather than easier, Oldman said.
"Finding those cadences and those rhythms in his speech - they were
more prominent when he was publicly speaking. It's how we think he
sounds, but he doesn't."
Churchill's gift for rhetoric is not only central to the movie, it
was a crucial element in Britain's response to the threat of defeat
by Germany in 1940, Wright said.
"It's a movie about words and the power of words to change the world
and change the course of history," said Wright. "One of my favorite
lines is where Lord Halifax says Churchill 'mobilized the English
language and sent it into battle'."
(Reporting by Jill Serjeant; Editing by Bill Rigby)
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