Hayley Atwell, The Sunday Telegraph
Transcription
Hayley Atwell, The Sunday Telegraph
interview Hayley Atwell – star of the Brideshead Revisited remake and now, it seems, just about everything else – has known from the earliest age where she was heading, and at what pace. With le tout Hollywood clamouring for a piece of her, she tells Tim Auld why they might jolly well have to wait DAYDREAM BELIEVER Photograph by Laura Hynd ‘Precocious. I was never precocious,’ says Hayley Atwell. ‘Someone else wrote that I’d said I was precocious as a child and my mum read it and went, “You were never precocious, you just knew what you wanted to call your future kids when you were seven.”’ The 26-year-old actress’s eyes sparkle and her features – summed up by one critic, breathlessly, if entirely accurately, as ‘stupendously beautiful’ – break into a grin of self-mockery. We have been talking about Atwell’s habit, as a child, of writing letters to her future self to remind her of dreams she needed to fulfil. Call it precocious, call it what you will, it points to a degree of ambition scarily beyond that found in the common herd. And Atwell is the first to admit that she was an extravagant dreamer. Nevertheless, I doubt that even she could have 24 stella stella 25 Dress by Yves Saint Laurent. Stylist: Camilla Pole. Hair and make-up: Becca Harrison, using the Organic Pharmacy interview imagined quite how rapid an ascent she’d make in the dramatic firmament. One story that interviewers delight in repeating is of her first job, making an advert for Pringles crisps. I can understand why. It allows one to puncture her bubble for a brief moment before adopting more reverential tones, because, since she first appeared in 2006 as Cat Fedden, the self-harming, straight-talking daughter of a Tory MP in Andrew Davies’s television adaptation of Alan Hollinghurst’s novel The Line of Beauty, she has hardly put a foot wrong. Consider her CV: before The Line of Beauty had been broadcast, just eight months out of drama school she landed a role alongside Ewan McGregor and Colin Farrell in Woody Allen’s Cassandra’s Dream. Since then she’s appeared with Billie Piper in a television adaptation of Mansfield Park, for the RSC in Middleton’s Women Beware Women, at the National Theatre in Etherege’s The Man of Mode and as the lead in Bernard Shaw’s Major Barbara. She starred in two of last year’s biggest openings, as Julia Flyte in the film remake of Brideshead Revisited and alongside Keira Knightley in The Duchess. Both Woody Allen and the National Theatre’s director Nicholas Hytner had no hesitation in employing her within minutes of meeting her, and she now has a powerful agent making waves for her in Hollywood. It’s become de rigueur to hail her as the next big thing in British acting. But, what, in fact, is ‘next’ about Atwell? She could already claim to have earned ‘big thing’ status, though she’d never indulge in such crude categorisations. When I suggest to her that, by the mere fact of working for Allen, she’ll already have set alarm bells ringing in Hollywood, she deadpans, ‘Have I? I don’t know.’ We meet at a smart East End restaurant on a bitterly cold January evening. It is the end of her first day back at work after Christmas, rehearsing Lindsay Posner’s new production of Arthur Miller’s A View from the Bridge, and, as she walks into would have spoken. It’s an added stress, she concedes, before launching convincingly into some With ewan mcgregor, woody the bar, the slightness Mafioso-style banter about allen and colin farrell, and of her 5ft 6½in frame buying a cup of ‘cwaafee’. (right) in ‘the line of beauty’ is highlighted by the What’s intriguing is that burly presence of her she’s on the British stage co-star Ken Stott by at all. Young actors like her side. her (the Emily Mortimers, the Damian Lewises), weighed down with the n screen and on yoke of being the next big stage Atwell has thing, have tended to make played women who a beeline for Hollywood. are mercurial, sexy, But Atwell seems in no steely, scheming, hurry, happy to keep all smug, streetwise, three balls of television, film and theatre unhinged and vulnerable. There’s in the air, emulating the great British usually something deceptively actors of an older generation, Judi complicated going on behind her Dench, Eileen Atkins, Helen Mirren et al. characteristic cat-that-got-the-cream These battle-hardened British exports smile, which is exaggerated by two seem to have a cachet in Hollywood knowing little dimples on either side of because of their versatility, their her lips. In person, dressed in a simple accomplishment in all forms of drama. pink V-neck sweater and jeans, her dark Was this something Atwell was aware of hair scraped back into a ponytail, she when she finished drama school? exudes none of this danger. She is just ‘I think that there is a generation of us incredibly youthful and startlingly selfwho came out of drama school that has possessed. Sipping a glass of red wine tried to do everything,’ she says. ‘I think she enthuses about Arthur Miller. ‘He’s the shift has been that when you used a genius and he writes family drama so to come out of drama school you’d start brilliantly and it’s colloquial and it feels as spear carrier number four and you’d natural but it follows an extraordinary apprentice and if you were lucky enough structure and it’s like Greek tragedy.’ you’d get to the RSC and then you’d She speaks in crystal-clear received eventually build yourself up to bigger pronunciation, with only the hint of roles, and then maybe after that you’d the odd dropped ‘t’, a kind of concession break into television, and maybe after to being ‘yoof’, but you feel her heart’s that you’d break into film. Because not really in it. She also uses the there’s just a lot more opportunity now American ‘gotten’ for ‘got’ (her father within film and television I never felt is American) and will often finish that I’d just have to start from theatre. a statement with the word ‘yeah’, used I wanted to be able to do all of those as a kind of self-affirmatory tick. things. There are American actors I’ve For this production, though, she’s had met who have this amazing ambition to master a Brooklyn accent of the 1950s, to launch and star in big films, and I’m and, along with other members of the going, “But you’ve got to do Shakespeare cast, has been assiduously studying first, you’ve got to be earnest and tapes of the way Miller’s characters O ‘There are actors who have this amazing ambition to star in big films, and I go, “But you’ve got to do Shakespeare first”’ stella 27 interview serious,” and they’re like, “No, I don’t want to do that.”’ How long Atwell will be able to juggle her career is another question. She is now represented in Hollywood by the powerful Hilda Crealey, whose clients include Cate Blanchett. On a recent trip to Los Angeles to publicise Brideshead Revisited Atwell found herself at the blunt end of Crealey’s ambition, being told, in no uncertain terms, ‘The only limits are those in your own head.’ Atwell herself admits she is not immune to the charms of Hollywood. ‘When I was over there I met quite a lot of people and within a few days I was like, “I’m gonna do this and I’m gonna… Ah, fabulous, I’m going to be fabulous,” and it was contagious.’ So what does Crealey make of Atwell working on the British stage? Is there a conflict there? For the first time Atwell’s easy-going mask slips, revealing the tough cookie who’s got what she wants, when she wants, and will continue, one suspects, to do so. ‘I don’t listen to anyone else,’ she says. ‘I don’t listen at all, because at the end of the day if I realise I’ve taken a job because of some pressure from some external source then I realise that I’m not in it, myself. And I think my own sanity, my own kind of living experience, is going to be much better than trying to please Hollywood.’ T he key to Atwell’s extraordinary self-possession and iron will lies in her childhood. Her hippyish parents divorced when she was two. Her American father, Grant – or Star Touches Earth, to give him his other name (he’s part Native American) – returned to live in California, where he works as a photographer-cum-massage therapist (‘He’s very hug a tree, get naked and chant,’ Atwell has said). Atwell grew up with her mother, Alison, a motivational speaker, near Ladbroke Grove in west London. There were few rules, and Atwell was encouraged to think freely and question authority. In short, she was treated like an adult and from an early age learnt that she ‘had to trust herself’. She was a very active child. ‘I think I was born with a lot of energy and enthusiasm and excitement and I’d get bored really quickly and I always wanted something new and fast and adventurous and a challenge and that seemed to be in my nature.’ But there was also the influence her mother’s job as a motivational speaker had on the way they spoke at home. ‘It was the language,’ she says. ‘It was absolutely my mother’s language of how she spoke to me, of how she related to the world, and it was also part of her enjoyment of knowing that she could free herself from her own so-called limitations and that her work gives herself such enjoyment that she would pass it on and that With her co-stars at the only moment when it would naturally rub off premiere of ‘brideshead’ she really allows her on me a little bit.’ frivolous, girly side At the age of eight, after off the leash is when seeing Loyd Grossman talking about what put a live lobster into it was like to move to a pot of boiling water, an all boys’ school for she became a vegetarian sixth form. ‘It was (though she now eats brilliant,’ she says. meat and fish). She has ‘There was like this described herself as hormonal upheaval the an intense girl, and first term of going, throughout her teenage “Aaaaaaaah.” And walking into class and years she espoused contentious causes going, “Oh, my God, he looked at me. I (‘going on antivivisection and Boycott think he fancies me, I think he fancies Beef marches, Free the Dolphins, you.” Brilliant. And it was really… [pauses anything’). She became head girl of for deep breath] Yeah, I enjoyed it very her secondary school, set up debating much. I had a boyfriend from within my societies, and acted as much as she first two weeks and I stayed with him could, landing the lead roles in her throughout the whole time. I was very, school plays. A bit of a square, then? Not very happy and dedicated.’ in Atwell’s topsy-turvy home. For her, As to current boyfriends, Atwell is being organised, hard-working and single, though she does, she says, have disciplined was a form of rebellion, a dachshund, to whom she is devoted, a form of self-assertion (‘I rebelled taking it with her to work whenever against rebellion,’ as she has put it). possible. When she’s not rehearsing or She won a place at Oxford, which, performing or filming, she says, she in fittingly contrary fashion, she turned ‘sniffs out’ old friends to go to a pub or down. ‘I just felt, “Well, I’ve gotten there karaoke bar ‘or something’. She also now. So what?” It felt like I’d kind of likes hiking and cooking and cleaning. done it really just to prove something to Cleaning? ‘It’s therapeutic. A bit of myself.’ Instead she took two gap years, control,’ she says without hesitation. before entering the Guildhall School of One thing’s for certain, you won’t Music and Drama. I’m hoping that she find Atwell lazing about. ‘My friends put went thoroughly off the rails during her time out, but no. ‘I travelled and I worked me up to the challenge of swing-dance classes,’ she tells me as we finish. ‘So we in a casting director’s agency. I did the might take that up once the play gets up Rada summer school and saved up and running. Let off some steam, and some money and went to the States to learn something new. Yeah.’ } see my dad. But I knew that I would act; I just didn’t know or not whether drama school would be the thing for me.’ ‘A View from the Bridge’ is at the Atwell is a friendly conversationalist, Duke of York’s, London WC2 but watchful and reserved. Indeed, the (0870 060 6644), until 16 May ‘When I was in Hollywood within a few days I was like, “Ah, fabulous, I’m going to be fabulous.” It was contagious’ stella 29