GOT NEW INTERVIEW of Will!
U
RL is: http://www.bbc.co.uk/glouceste
rshi
re/content/a
rticles/2005/12/02/williams_moseley_featu
re.shtml
and of that doesn't wo
rk then I'll jst give u the scope!
Tales of Narnia
The Chronicles of Narnia is tipped to be one of the big blockbuster films this Christmas. But did you know that one of its stars lives right here in Gloucestershire?
18 year old William Moseley plays Peter in the big screen adaptation of the CS Lewis classic. BBC Gloucestershire's David Bailey was granted an exclusive interview with him - at his home in Sheepscombe near Stroud in Gloucestershire.
How did you get the role in a major feature film like the Chronicles of Narnia?
I think it was
really a lucky mistake if anything. It's ve
ry, ve
ry fo
rtunate that Cide
r With
Rosie was filmed a
round he
re [in Glouceste
rshi
re] about eight yea
rs ago and the casting di
recto
r fo
r that auditioned me. I was ve
ry enthusiastic, ve
ry happy, and I think she saw something in me. Unfo
rtunately I couldn't have the pa
rt in Cide
r With
Rosie but she got me an agency and then five yea
rs late
r she came casting fo
r The Lion, The Witch and the Wa
rd
robe, and
remembe
red me.
So you must have been quite young when you went for Cider With Rosie?
They came to me and put me th
rough these auditions [fo
r Cide
r With
Rosie]. I came down to the final stages and unfo
rtunately I couldn't have the
role because of age diffe
rences. But almost as a compensato
ry p
resent I got the agency, which was p
retty amazing. I think that at ten yea
rs old and going th
rough that audition p
rocess - that was when it clicked in my mind that I wanted to do acting. It was a conscious decision at age ten because I enjoyed it so much.
What's your background in acting? Did you go to stage school?
No, I just went to Sheepscombe P
rima
ry School! D
rama was neve
r really in the cu
rriculum to be honest. I suppose when [the audition] came along, I was just ve
ry much myself. That was p
retty cool.
Did they approach you for the role of Peter?
They did app
roach me. The thing was my agency didn't actually put me up fo
r it, it was this casting di
recto
r who
remembe
red me. She asked me and I went th
rough 18 months of auditioning fo
r the pa
rt. I think they saw a
round 3,000 kids. It came down to a sc
reen test and I finally got it. I was 15 when I sta
rted and 17 when I got the pa
rt so it was quite a long auditioning p
rocess!
Filming must have taken quite while ...
Filming was seven months in New Zealand, then the
re we
re two weeks in P
rague and both we
re amazing places. What I got to see of P
rague was
really,
really beautiful but New Zealand just stands out in my mind. The people we
re so welcoming and the cultu
ral dive
rsity - of the Mao
ri and the white people living togethe
r - was fantastic. The scene
ry and just being outside, because fo
r a lot of the shoot we we
re in studios but then finally when we got down to the South Island we we
re outside. We we
re amongst the mountains, amongst the hills. A fantastic, beautiful place.
What was the filming process like because you hear stories about actors waiting around for several hours just to shoot a few minutes of film ...
I wanted to ca
rry on with my school wo
rk just because, as you p
robably know, an acto
r's ca
ree
r is not one of the most stable ca
ree
rs. It was definitely something I wanted to do but I
really wanted to finish my school wo
rk as well. It was a ve
ry, ve
ry full day and because we we
re in quite a few of the shots th
roughout the day, they would keep going.
So what was a typical day like?
A typical day would
range f
rom getting up at about 6:30 o
r 7, getting to the set at 8 o'clock and finishing at about eight o
r nine in the evening. I was ove
r the age of 16 so I could wo
rk these adult hou
rs and I was wo
rking 12-1
4 hou
rs eve
ry day.
There's a lot of computer graphics in the film, did you find yourself having to act in front of a blue screen? If so, was it difficult?
I don't
really think it's that difficult. It became a basic expectation f
rom the beginning that we we
re going to have to imagine these cha
racte
rs. When people
read the sto
ry fo
r themselves they have c
reated thei
r own individual lion, thei
r own individual beave
r and thei
r own individual we
rewolf. I basically took my individual inte
rp
retation of what they should look like and th
rew them into the scene with me. The biza
rre thing was that when I came out of the scene, what I was looking at lost its sense of being a beave
r and became a tennis ball again. It was all down to the imagination, I think.
Had it been a favourite book of yours as a child or did you have to read it when you knew you had the part?
I used to listen to the sto
ry tapes eve
ry night befo
re bed and it used to send my imagination c
razy. I used to love The Lion, The Witch and the Wa
rd
robe and I can still
remembe
r listening to them befo
re I would fall asleep. I can
remembe
r the fi
rst ten minutes of the book pe
rfectly but whethe
r I knew the
rest of it was slightly mo
re dicey.
In a nutshell, for those who haven't read it, what is the Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe about?
It's about fou
r no
rmal kids th
rown into a magical land and having to deal with thei
r p
roblems and the p
roblems of
Narnia. It's a fantastic sto
ry and I
really hope people enjoy it.
I know it's difficult because you're in it but is it a good film?
I think that's a
really an inte
resting point. When I fi
rst saw it, I was seeing what I was like in it - whethe
r I looked wei
rd o
r what. I've been an ext
ra in things befo
re and you just t
ry to watch that tiny bit of you
rself. When I watched it the
re we
re so many scenes that I loved that I hadn't actually seen. The
re was one on the stone table with Lucy and Susan, and it's ve
ry sad. It shook me up. I think the
re's something fo
r eve
ryone in this film. The
re's a unico
rn, a battle scene and one hell of a big witch - what mo
re do you want!
So what's next for you? Will there be a sequel?
I can only hope the
re'll be a sequel made just because I had such an amazing time on this one. It was beyond eve
ry expe
rience imaginable, it was basically a d
ream come t
rue. Fo
r that d
ream to come t
rue a second time would be quite amazing. Unfo
rtunately I don't have the say.
And possibly not one more - maybe another six or seven in the Chronicles of Narnia series?
Unfo
rtunately I'm not in most of them. I'm in P
rince Caspian, which would be ch
ronologically the next one. I'm also in the last battle, which would be the last one. I would p
robably be 35 when they get a
round to that one!
So you're in definitely line for the next one then?
If the
re is one then I hope I am, yeah.
You're holding something back aren't you? You know there's going to be another one, don't you ...
I hope the
re's anothe
r one. They just have to wait until this one's done. It's like we haven't got ove
r this hill to get a bette
r vision of what's ahead of us.
I suppose a lot will depend on what the audience thinks of it ...
Exactly. If this is a success then hopefully we will do anothe
r one. I don't like to say it is going to happen o
r I am going to be in it because I'm just not su
re. I would like to be!
Beyond the Chronicles of Narnia, is this it for you now - are you going to be an actor for the rest of your life?
When I was aged ten, like I was saying befo
re with the auditions fo
r Cide
r With
Rosie, that's when it
really st
ruck me how much I wanted to act. How much I wanted to be pa
rt of having fun with my ca
ree
r. I can only wish to take myself fo
rwa
rd with this. I've had an amazing oppo
rtunity.
Any parts you've auditioned for in future films?
The
re have been little things eve
ry now and again but it's mainly getting th
rough
Narnia because the
re is so much going on. Once that's done we will be able to take a deep b
reath, look at some othe
r things and see what's going on.
It is one of the big films of the year, especially as it's coming out before Christmas. Has it sunk in yet that you're in this film?
I don't think it can sink in. I don't think it
really stuck me when I fi
rst got the pa
rt what it was like. I'm fo
rtunate, I'm lucky that it hasn't hit me yet. The wei
rd thing is when you see you
rself, as you'
re d
riving by, on a poste
r o
r you see you
rself on a washing up box o
r something - it's so biza
rre. It's just momenta
ry, it's only within those b
rief few seconds when you see it then you move on with you
r day. I have a ve
ry good family, ve
ry good f
riends and I'm lucky that eve
ryone has been so suppo
rtive and kind to me.
What do they think about the whole thing?
I think they've been with me the whole way so it's as much an emotional t
rip and achievement fo
r them as it is fo
r me. They've almost been at a pa
rallel with me the whole way, and I just ve
ry lucky that I have a st
rong family and g
reat f
riends who've always stuck by my side. The best thing about having b
rothe
rs and siste
rs is that they'
re b
rutally honest. My b
rothe
r just got the
Narnia game and fi
rst thing he does is kill me in it! Six times, ove
r and ove
r again! It's
really g
rounding to be back at home. They'
re
really pleased fo
r me and it's going
really well at the moment.
So it's all been worthwhile then?
I'm enjoying it and that's the best way to look at these things. If you don't enjoy it then it's not wo
rth doing. It is ha
rd wo
rk at the end of the day, they'
re wo
rking you fo
r eve
ry mile you fly so it's wo
rth enjoying, it's wo
rth
relishing eve
ry moment you get.
[there is also an audio recorded while Will was being interviewed!]
You can find it [if u found the site] on the right side of Will's pic....under SEE ALSO >> or on the very bottom of the page!...
THE
RE YA HAVE IT!
He has such sexy VOICE!^_^
Well, CIAO!(chow)
Edité par Rox le 02/05/2006 à 02:09