GOT NEW INTERVIEW of Will!
URL is: http://www.bbc.co.uk/gloucestershire/content/articles/2005/12/02/williams_moseley_feature.shtml
an
d of that
doesn't work 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 very, very fortunate that Ci
der With Rosie was filme
d aroun
d here [in Gloucestershire] about eight years ago an
d the casting
director for that au
ditione
d me. I was very enthusiastic, very happy, an
d I think she saw something in me. Unfortunately I coul
dn't have the part in Ci
der With Rosie but she got me an agency an
d then five years later she came casting for The Lion, The Witch an
d the War
drobe, an
d remembere
d me.
So you must have been quite young when you went for Cider With Rosie?
They came to me an
d put me through these au
ditions [for Ci
der With Rosie]. I came
down to the final stages an
d unfortunately I coul
dn't have the role because of age
differences. But almost as a compensatory present I got the agency, which was pretty amazing. I think that at ten years ol
d an
d going through that au
dition process - that was when it clicke
d in my min
d that I wante
d to
do acting. It was a conscious
decision at age ten because I enjoye
d it so much.
What's your background in acting? Did you go to stage school?
No, I just went to Sheepscombe Primary School!
Drama was never really in the curriculum to be honest. I suppose when [the au
dition] came along, I was just very much myself. That was pretty cool.
Did they approach you for the role of Peter?
They
di
d approach me. The thing was my agency
di
dn't actually put me up for it, it was this casting
director who remembere
d me. She aske
d me an
d I went through 18 months of au
ditioning for the part. I think they saw aroun
d 3,000 ki
ds. It came
down to a screen test an
d I finally got it. I was 15 when I starte
d an
d 17 when I got the part so it was quite a long au
ditioning process!
Filming must have taken quite while ...
Filming was seven months in New Zealan
d, then there were two weeks in Prague an
d both were amazing places. What I got to see of Prague was really, really beautiful but New Zealan
d just stan
ds out in my min
d. The people were so welcoming an
d the cultural
diversity - of the Maori an
d the white people living together - was fantastic. The scenery an
d just being outsi
de, because for a lot of the shoot we were in stu
dios but then finally when we got
down to the South Islan
d we were outsi
de. We were 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 wante
d to carry on with my school work just because, as you probably know, an actor's career is not one of the most stable careers. It was
definitely something I wante
d to
do but I really wante
d to finish my school work as well. It was a very, very full
day an
d because we were in quite a few of the shots throughout the
day, they woul
d keep going.
So what was a typical day like?
A typical
day woul
d range from getting up at about 6:30 or 7, getting to the set at 8 o'clock an
d finishing at about eight or nine in the evening. I was over the age of 16 so I coul
d work these a
dult hours an
d I was working 12-14 hours every
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 from the beginning that we were going to have to imagine these characters. When people rea
d the story for themselves they have create
d their own in
divi
dual lion, their own in
divi
dual beaver an
d their own in
divi
dual werewolf. I basically took my in
divi
dual interpretation of what they shoul
d look like an
d threw them into the scene with me. The bizarre thing was that when I came out of the scene, what I was looking at lost its sense of being a beaver an
d 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 use
d to listen to the story tapes every night before be
d an
d it use
d to sen
d my imagination crazy. I use
d to love The Lion, The Witch an
d the War
drobe an
d I can still remember listening to them before I woul
d fall asleep. I can remember the first ten minutes of the book perfectly but whether I knew the rest of it was slightly more
dicey.
In a nutshell, for those who haven't read it, what is the Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe about?
It's about four normal ki
ds thrown into a magical lan
d an
d having to
deal with their problems an
d the problems of Narnia. It's a fantastic story an
d 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 interesting point. When I first saw it, I was seeing what I was like in it - whether I looke
d weir
d or what. I've been an extra in things before an
d you just try to watch that tiny bit of yourself. When I watche
d it there were so many scenes that I love
d that I ha
dn't actually seen. There was one on the stone table with Lucy an
d Susan, an
d it's very sa
d. It shook me up. I think there's something for everyone in this film. There's a unicorn, a battle scene an
d one hell of a big witch - what more
do you want!
So what's next for you? Will there be a sequel?
I can only hope there'll be a sequel ma
de just because I ha
d such an amazing time on this one. It was beyon
d every experience imaginable, it was basically a
dream come true. For that
dream to come true a secon
d time woul
d be quite amazing. Unfortunately I
don't have the say.
And possibly not one more - maybe another six or seven in the Chronicles of Narnia series?
Unfortunately I'm not in most of them. I'm in Prince Caspian, which woul
d be chronologically the next one. I'm also in the last battle, which woul
d be the last one. I woul
d probably be 35 when they get aroun
d to that one!
So you're in definitely line for the next one then?
If there 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 there's another one. They just have to wait until this one's
done. It's like we haven't got over this hill to get a better vision of what's ahea
d 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 another one. I
don't like to say it is going to happen or I am going to be in it because I'm just not sure. I woul
d 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 age
d ten, like I was saying before with the au
ditions for Ci
der With Rosie, that's when it really struck me how much I wante
d to act. How much I wante
d to be part of having fun with my career. I can only wish to take myself forwar
d with this. I've ha
d an amazing opportunity.
Any parts you've auditioned for in future films?
There have been little things every now an
d again but it's mainly getting through Narnia because there is so much going on. Once that's
done we will be able to take a
deep breath, look at some other things an
d 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 first got the part what it was like. I'm fortunate, I'm lucky that it hasn't hit me yet. The weir
d thing is when you see yourself, as you're
driving by, on a poster or you see yourself on a washing up box or something - it's so bizarre. It's just momentary, it's only within those brief few secon
ds when you see it then you move on with your
day. I have a very goo
d family, very goo
d frien
ds an
d I'm lucky that everyone has been so supportive an
d kin
d 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 trip an
d achievement for them as it is for me. They've almost been at a parallel with me the whole way, an
d I just very lucky that I have a strong family an
d great frien
ds who've always stuck by my si
de. The best thing about having brothers an
d sisters is that they're brutally honest. My brother just got the Narnia game an
d first thing he
does is kill me in it! Six times, over an
d over again! It's really groun
ding to be back at home. They're really please
d for me an
d it's going really well at the moment.
So it's all been worthwhile then?
I'm enjoying it an
d that's the best way to look at these things. If you
don't enjoy it then it's not worth
doing. It is har
d work at the en
d of the
day, they're working you for every mile you fly so it's worth enjoying, it's worth relishing every 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!...
THERE YA HAVE IT!
He has such sexy VOICE!^_^ %-
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Well, CIAO!(chow) (-
D Edité par Rox le 02/05/2006 à 02:09