





Interview September 2008
Scans
and typed up by to sam00600
Ben Barnes
He conquered the land of children's fantasy. Now Narnia actor Ben Barnes grows
up ---at least a little-- to play Dorian Gray. Barnes has the youth part down.
It's the eternity he's still working on. Articles by Kaleem Aftab.
It's hard to believe when
looking at him, but Ben Barnes's first stab at fame came in front of a microphone,
and not a movie camera. Barnes was 17 and living with his folks in Wimbledon,
England, when Pop Idol talent-spotter Simon Fuller signed the young man up
to his label, 19 Management. Barnes was dubbed the next teen heartthrob, but
all too soon his singing career sank into a sorry sequence of dead notes that
ended in 2003, when the band he teamed up with failed to qualify for the Eurovision
Song Contest. He retreated to Kingston University, in London, where he studied
English and drama. He didn't know it at the time, but the loss of his crooner
ambition would set him on course for a spot amoung cinematic royalty.
Barnes's turn as the hero in Prince Caspian in the second Chronicles Of Narnia
film, released this past sping, has turned the 27-year-old actor into a global
poster boy. Hollywood usually casts young male Brits as villains or rebels,
but Barnes comes equipped with way too much of that other cliched English
trait---charm--- to be convincing in those dark roles. Nope, the kid was cursed
to be a valiant hero in a million-dollar fantasy-adventure movie. Just look
at his first break, in Matthew Vaughn's fairy-tale epic Stardust, where he
was given the small but pivotal role of Young Dunstan, which in retrospect
seems like an elaborate audition for Caspian. Not to say Barnes is a walking,
talking typecast: He played a broke Russian immigrant in Suzie Halewood's
independent movie Bigga Than Ben and the cocky straght-A student Dakin onstage
in Alan Bennett's The HIstory Boys.
Today, living in central London, Barnes has signed on for the third chapter
of Narnia and recentrly took on the role as the son of Colin Firth's and Kristin
Scott Thomas's characters in the film version of Noel Coward's tragicomedy
Easy Virtue. He's also currently filling the shoes of a very different male
fantasy character, Dorian Gray, Oscar Wilde's handsome protagonist who sells
his soul to the devil to stay looking very much like Ben Barnes does today.
In real life, Barnes sees himself as more of an accidental sex symbol.
Kaleem Aftab: The last time that we saw each other was a year ago. You were
still acting onstage in The History Boys and were excited that Bigga Than
Ben was nearly completed. What a difference a year makes.
Ben Barnes:It's so funny, last time I saw you this change in fortune was just
happening.
KA: Yeah. You'd just been
to--or were about to go to--the audition for Prince Caspian.
BB: And then it all went a bit mental.
KA: You stopped making
$200,000 movies.
BB: Exactly. But Bigga Than Ben played at the Edinburgh International Film
Festival. It never came out! Now it's getting released in a few cinemas in
the U.K. They've cut it together with really cool music and got the likes
of Pete Doherty on the soundtrack.
KA: Has all the attention
you've been receiving come as a shock?
BB: Yeah, but I've been working steadily at it since I left school, moving
up the ranks, as it were. When I first came out of university, I had my obligatory
six months out of work and was pulling my hair out, wondering what the next
step was. It was such a miserable state of affairs for me in London. There
just didn't seem to be any work. I saved up some money and headed over to
the Staes and bashed on a few doors and got a few meetings and took some auditions
to play L.A. lifeguards and all sorts of things I was entirely inappropriate
for. I managed to get a pilot, but it wasn't picked up. Then the work in London
started slowing coming.
KA:Did you have any trepidation
about playing a fantasty hero?
BB: Luckily for me, Caspian is supposed to be scared and running for his life
most of the time. When I got to the set, I was fairly intimidated by the size
and scope of the film. I wasn't really prepared for it. I found myself having
to learn all these new skills---horseback-riding, sword-fighting, and accents.
There was sort of this Narnia boot camp that I had to throw myself into for
a few weeks before we even started shooting.
KA: Ther ewas a period
earlier this year when you couldn't walk a block wihtout seeing your face
on a poster.
BB: When they first showed me the publicity campaign, I said, "Is that
sensible?" They said, "It's called Prince Caspian, so we've got
to have the prince on the poster." It was a little disconcerting, you
know, when I went over to the States to publicize the film, seeing myself
15 stories high. When you've driving down Sunset Boulevard and you see Harrison
Ford and then Will Smith and then Robert Downey Jr. and then yourself, you
think, What am I doning up there?
KA: At least your new
higher profile ensures that you won't be scrambling for parts in tiny independent
films.
BB: I still do independent work. In two weeks I start shooting a version of
The Picture Of Dorian Gray that is obviously much darker, much grittier--it's
more of a gothic horror story.
KA: Looking at 15 story
high posters of yourself seems like the perfect grunding for playing a character
like Dorian Gray.
BB: There have been some very interesting parallels. I don't really see the
point in making a film unless you can think of a good reason to do it. We
live in this celebrity-obsessed, youth-obsessed culture, and it just seems
to make a lot of sense to make this Dorian Gray film right now. Especially
for me, as somebody who's...I don't know if "on the brink" is the
right term, but sort of at the beginning of getting attention from the media
and from other people. Dorian Gray is also somebody who, at the beginning,
doesn't want to be looked at, doesn't really want to be noticed, but then
begins to realize the power of youth and the power of people wanting to be
around him. Obviously it goes very dark, which I'm hoping in real life my
part won't. I supposed you have to be aware , on some level, of the attention
being focused on yourself even to accept a part like Dorian Gray.
KA: But being cast as
Dorian Gray is like being told you are the ultimate in beauty, that people
should sell thier grandmothers to look like you. That must give you so much
confidence.
BB: I don't know. You still get these waves of doubt that come over you, for
example, when you get a bad review or you accept and part and think, "Oh
God, what have I just accepted? I can't do that." I don't think that's
something that will ever go away in me.
KA: I've never taken you
for a fragile soul.
BB: I hide it well. It's in private. You should doubt in private.
KA: You're really going
for the iconic gay writers, aren't you? Alan Bennett, Noel Coward, Oscar Wilde...
BB: Sexuality is a topic that has huge shifts in society. Attitudes toward
different sexualities change, but the actualy sexuality of a human being is
something that consistent, and it's consistently interesting, and so people
write about it. But having said that, I think for all the characters I've
played--obviously Caspian--sexuality hasn't been the most interesting thing
about them.
KA: Then what was it like
playing the husband of Jessica Biel in Easy Virtue?
BB: Actually, we were in the recording studio together just this morning.
We were signing some songs together in this sort of '20s jazz vibe, and it
was so much fun. My character has to be in love with Jessica's character like
a puppy, which is not a very difficult thing to act.
KA : How are you finding
being called a sex symbol?
BB: I honestly find it slightly cringey and embarassing [laughs]. I don't
really believe it, to be honest.
KA: Do you find yourself
playing it up? I've seen you quoted as saying something really cheesy like
"I'm single and looking for a normal gal."
BB: Oh, no! There always just make it sound ridiculous. I was asked, "Have
you got a girlfriend?" I said no. Then I said, "But I think having
a big film coming out will probably help that"--as a joke!~ The dryness
of the delivery was entirely sucked out. It was obviously suppsed to be a
joke, but when I read it, it was like I was looking for the babes. I've never
said "babes" in my entire life! I find it really just embarrassing.
Even the words film star make me feel awkward. I don't know how you're supposed
to respond when people say things like that. Certainly I don't get any more
attention on the street or in bars than I ever did.
KA: You think you've been
waylaid with a lot of pressure lately as a rising star?
BB: When you're doing a film, people are always telling you exactly what to
do. Literally, your own decisions are taken away from you. After three months
of publicity, you'll get a menu and think, I don't know what I want. You have
to ask other people what they are having to cover up this inablity to make
a decision.
KA: Would you ever return
to singing?
BB: Never say never, but I highly doubt it. I love music and I love singing.
I just feel that musicians have a harder time than actors do.
KA:But a lot of actors
are in bands.
BB: I like the ones who just kind of do it for fun. The Johnny Depps and Russell
Crowes. It's great if you're not trying to pimp it out and exploit it for
all it's worth.
KA: What do you sing in
the bath.
BB: Well, I was in Japan a few times recently, doing karaoke, and there were
a lot of Beatles songs flying around.
KA: Favority tune?
BB: "Twist and Shout" What I love is that they'd done two solid
days of recording, and it was late in the evening on the second day, and John
Lennon's voice waws completely shot, and he just completely went for it, ruining
his voice for a week.

