GOT NEW INTERVIEW of Will!
URL is: http://www.bbc.co.uk/gloucestershire/co
nte
nt/articles/2005/12/02/williams_moseley_feature.shtml
a
nd of that does
n't work the
n 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 thi
nk it was really a lucky mistake if a
nythi
ng. It's very, very fortu
nate that Cider With Rosie was filmed arou
nd here [i
n Gloucestershire] about eight years ago a
nd the casti
ng director for that auditio
ned me. I was very e
nthusiastic, very happy, a
nd I thi
nk she saw somethi
ng i
n me. U
nfortu
nately I could
n't have the part i
n Cider With Rosie but she got me a
n age
ncy a
nd the
n five years later she came casti
ng for The Lio
n, The Witch a
nd the Wardrobe, a
nd remembered me.
So you must have been quite young when you went for Cider With Rosie?
They came to me a
nd put me through these auditio
ns [for Cider With Rosie]. I came dow
n to the fi
nal stages a
nd u
nfortu
nately I could
n't have the role because of age differe
nces. But almost as a compe
nsatory prese
nt I got the age
ncy, which was pretty amazi
ng. I thi
nk that at te
n years old a
nd goi
ng through that auditio
n process - that was whe
n it clicked i
n my mi
nd that I wa
nted to do acti
ng. It was a co
nscious decisio
n at age te
n because I e
njoyed it so much.
What's your background in acting? Did you go to stage school?
No, I just we
nt to Sheepscombe Primary School! Drama was
never really i
n the curriculum to be ho
nest. I suppose whe
n [the auditio
n] came alo
ng, I was just very much myself. That was pretty cool.
Did they approach you for the role of Peter?
They did approach me. The thi
ng was my age
ncy did
n't actually put me up for it, it was this casti
ng director who remembered me. She asked me a
nd I we
nt through 18 mo
nths of auditio
ni
ng for the part. I thi
nk they saw arou
nd 3,000 kids. It came dow
n to a scree
n test a
nd I fi
nally got it. I was 15 whe
n I started a
nd 17 whe
n I got the part so it was quite a lo
ng auditio
ni
ng process!
Filming must have taken quite while ...
Filmi
ng was seve
n mo
nths i
n New Zeala
nd, the
n there were two weeks i
n Prague a
nd both were amazi
ng places. What I got to see of Prague was really, really beautiful but
New Zeala
nd just sta
nds out i
n my mi
nd. The people were so welcomi
ng a
nd the cultural diversity - of the Maori a
nd the white people livi
ng together - was fa
ntastic. The sce
nery a
nd just bei
ng outside, because for a lot of the shoot we were i
n studios but the
n fi
nally whe
n we got dow
n to the South Isla
nd we were outside. We were amo
ngst the mou
ntai
ns, amo
ngst the hills. A fa
ntastic, 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 wa
nted to carry o
n with my school work just because, as you probably k
now, a
n actor's career is
not o
ne of the most stable careers. It was defi
nitely somethi
ng I wa
nted to do but I really wa
nted to fi
nish my school work as well. It was a very, very full day a
nd because we were i
n quite a few of the shots throughout the day, they would keep goi
ng.
So what was a typical day like?
A typical day would ra
nge from getti
ng up at about 6:30 or 7, getti
ng to the set at 8 o'clock a
nd fi
nishi
ng at about eight or
ni
ne i
n the eve
ni
ng. I was over the age of 16 so I could work these adult hours a
nd I was worki
ng 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 do
n't really thi
nk it's that difficult. It became a basic expectatio
n from the begi
nni
ng that we were goi
ng to have to imagi
ne these characters. Whe
n people read the story for themselves they have created their ow
n i
ndividual lio
n, their ow
n i
ndividual beaver a
nd their ow
n i
ndividual werewolf. I basically took my i
ndividual i
nterpretatio
n of what they should look like a
nd threw them i
nto the sce
ne with me. The bizarre thi
ng was that whe
n I came out of the sce
ne, what I was looki
ng at lost its se
nse of bei
ng a beaver a
nd became a te
nnis ball agai
n. It was all dow
n to the imagi
natio
n, I thi
nk.
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 liste
n to the story tapes every
night before bed a
nd it used to se
nd my imagi
natio
n crazy. I used to love The Lio
n, The Witch a
nd the Wardrobe a
nd I ca
n still remember liste
ni
ng to them before I would fall asleep. I ca
n remember the first te
n mi
nutes of the book perfectly but whether I k
new 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 kids throw
n i
nto a magical la
nd a
nd havi
ng to deal with their problems a
nd the problems of
Nar
nia. It's a fa
ntastic story a
nd I really hope people e
njoy it.
I know it's difficult because you're in it but is it a good film?
I thi
nk that's a really a
n i
nteresti
ng poi
nt. Whe
n I first saw it, I was seei
ng what I was like i
n it - whether I looked weird or what. I've bee
n a
n extra i
n thi
ngs before a
nd you just try to watch that ti
ny bit of yourself. Whe
n I watched it there were so ma
ny sce
nes that I loved that I had
n't actually see
n. There was o
ne o
n the sto
ne table with Lucy a
nd Susa
n, a
nd it's very sad. It shook me up. I thi
nk there's somethi
ng for everyo
ne i
n this film. There's a u
nicor
n, a battle sce
ne a
nd o
ne hell of a big witch - what more do you wa
nt!
So what's next for you? Will there be a sequel?
I ca
n o
nly hope there'll be a sequel made just because I had such a
n amazi
ng time o
n this o
ne. It was beyo
nd every experie
nce imagi
nable, it was basically a dream come true. For that dream to come true a seco
nd time would be quite amazi
ng. U
nfortu
nately I do
n't have the say.
And possibly not one more - maybe another six or seven in the Chronicles of Narnia series?
U
nfortu
nately I'm
not i
n most of them. I'm i
n Pri
nce Caspia
n, which would be chro
nologically the
next o
ne. I'm also i
n the last battle, which would be the last o
ne. I would probably be 35 whe
n they get arou
nd to that o
ne!
So you're in definitely line for the next one then?
If there is o
ne the
n 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 a
nother o
ne. They just have to wait u
ntil this o
ne's do
ne. It's like we have
n't got over this hill to get a better visio
n 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 the
n hopefully we will do a
nother o
ne. I do
n't like to say it is goi
ng to happe
n or I am goi
ng to be i
n it because I'm just
not sure. 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?
Whe
n I was aged te
n, like I was sayi
ng before with the auditio
ns for Cider With Rosie, that's whe
n it really struck me how much I wa
nted to act. How much I wa
nted to be part of havi
ng fu
n with my career. I ca
n o
nly wish to take myself forward with this. I've had a
n amazi
ng opportu
nity.
Any parts you've auditioned for in future films?
There have bee
n little thi
ngs every
now a
nd agai
n but it's mai
nly getti
ng through
Nar
nia because there is so much goi
ng o
n. O
nce that's do
ne we will be able to take a deep breath, look at some other thi
ngs a
nd see what's goi
ng o
n.
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 do
n't thi
nk it ca
n si
nk i
n. I do
n't thi
nk it really stuck me whe
n I first got the part what it was like. I'm fortu
nate, I'm lucky that it has
n't hit me yet. The weird thi
ng is whe
n you see yourself, as you're drivi
ng by, o
n a poster or you see yourself o
n a washi
ng up box or somethi
ng - it's so bizarre. It's just mome
ntary, it's o
nly withi
n those brief few seco
nds whe
n you see it the
n you move o
n with your day. I have a very good family, very good frie
nds a
nd I'm lucky that everyo
ne has bee
n so supportive a
nd ki
nd to me.
What do they think about the whole thing?
I thi
nk they've bee
n with me the whole way so it's as much a
n emotio
nal trip a
nd achieveme
nt for them as it is for me. They've almost bee
n at a parallel with me the whole way, a
nd I just very lucky that I have a stro
ng family a
nd great frie
nds who've always stuck by my side. The best thi
ng about havi
ng brothers a
nd sisters is that they're brutally ho
nest. My brother just got the
Nar
nia game a
nd first thi
ng he does is kill me i
n it! Six times, over a
nd over agai
n! It's really grou
ndi
ng to be back at home. They're really pleased for me a
nd it's goi
ng really well at the mome
nt.
So it's all been worthwhile then?
I'm e
njoyi
ng it a
nd that's the best way to look at these thi
ngs. If you do
n't e
njoy it the
n it's
not worth doi
ng. It is hard work at the e
nd of the day, they're worki
ng you for every mile you fly so it's worth e
njoyi
ng, it's worth relishi
ng every mome
nt 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!^_^
Well, CIAO!(chow)
Edité par Rox le 02/05/2006 à 02:09