GOT NEW INTERVIEW of Will!
UR
L is: http://www.bbc.co.uk/g
loucestershire/content/artic
les/2005/12/02/wi
lliams_mose
ley_feature.shtm
l
and 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 rea
lly a
lucky mistake if anything. It's very, very fortunate that Cider With Rosie was fi
lmed around here [in G
loucestershire] about eight years ago and the casting director for that auditioned me. I was very enthusiastic, very happy, and I think she saw something in me. Unfortunate
ly I cou
ldn't have the part in Cider With Rosie but she got me an agency and then five years
later she came casting for The
Lion, The Witch and the Wardrobe, and remembered me.
So you must have been quite young when you went for Cider With Rosie?
They came to me and put me through these auditions [for Cider With Rosie]. I came down to the fina
l stages and unfortunate
ly I cou
ldn't have the ro
le because of age differences. But a
lmost as a compensatory present I got the agency, which was pretty amazing. I think that at ten years o
ld and going through that audition process - that was when it c
licked 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 Primary Schoo
l! Drama was never rea
lly in the curricu
lum to be honest. I suppose when [the audition] came a
long, I was just very much myse
lf. That was pretty coo
l.
Did they approach you for the role of Peter?
They did approach me. The thing was my agency didn't actua
lly put me up for it, it was this casting director who remembered me. She asked me and I went through 18 months of auditioning for the part. I think they saw around 3,000 kids. It came down to a screen test and I fina
lly got it. I was 15 when I started and 17 when I got the part so it was quite a
long auditioning process!
Filming must have taken quite while ...
Fi
lming was seven months in New Zea
land, then there were two weeks in Prague and both were amazing p
laces. What I got to see of Prague was rea
lly, rea
lly beautifu
l but New Zea
land just stands out in my mind. The peop
le were so we
lcoming and the cu
ltura
l diversity - of the Maori and the white peop
le
living together - was fantastic. The scenery and just being outside, because for a
lot of the shoot we were in studios but then fina
lly when we got down to the South Is
land we were outside. We were amongst the mountains, amongst the hi
lls. A fantastic, beautifu
l p
lace.
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 carry on with my schoo
l work just because, as you probab
ly know, an actor's career is not one of the most stab
le careers. It was definite
ly something I wanted to do but I rea
lly wanted to finish my schoo
l work as we
ll. It was a very, very fu
ll day and because we were in quite a few of the shots throughout the day, they wou
ld keep going.
So what was a typical day like?
A typica
l day wou
ld range from getting up at about 6:30 or 7, getting to the set at 8 o'c
lock and finishing at about eight or nine in the evening. I was over the age of 16 so I cou
ld work these adu
lt hours and 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 rea
lly think it's that difficu
lt. It became a basic expectation from the beginning that we were going to have to imagine these characters. When peop
le read the story for themse
lves they have created their own individua
l lion, their own individua
l beaver and their own individua
l werewo
lf. I basica
lly took my individua
l interpretation of what they shou
ld
look
like and 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 and became a tennis ba
ll again. It was a
ll 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 story tapes every night before bed and it used to send my imagination crazy. I used to
love The
Lion, The Witch and the Wardrobe and I can sti
ll remember
listening to them before I wou
ld fa
ll as
leep. I can remember the first ten minutes of the book perfect
ly but whether I knew the rest of it was s
light
ly 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 norma
l kids thrown into a magica
l land and having to dea
l with their prob
lems and the prob
lems of Narnia. It's a fantastic story and I rea
lly hope peop
le enjoy it.
I know it's difficult because you're in it but is it a good film?
I think that's a rea
lly an interesting point. When I first saw it, I was seeing what I was
like in it - whether I
looked weird or what. I've been an extra in things before and you just try to watch that tiny bit of yourse
lf. When I watched it there were so many scenes that I
loved that I hadn't actua
lly seen. There was one on the stone tab
le with
Lucy and Susan, and it's very sad. It shook me up. I think there's something for everyone in this fi
lm. There's a unicorn, a batt
le scene and one he
ll of a big witch - what more do you want!
So what's next for you? Will there be a sequel?
I can on
ly hope there'
ll be a seque
l made just because I had such an amazing time on this one. It was beyond every experience imaginab
le, it was basica
lly a dream come true. For that dream to come true a second time wou
ld be quite amazing. Unfortunate
ly I don't have the say.
And possibly not one more - maybe another six or seven in the Chronicles of Narnia series?
Unfortunate
ly I'm not in most of them. I'm in Prince Caspian, which wou
ld be chrono
logica
lly the next one. I'm a
lso in the
last batt
le, which wou
ld be the
last one. I wou
ld probab
ly be 35 when they get around 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 unti
l this one's done. It's
like we haven't got over this hi
ll to get a better vision of what's ahead of us.
I suppose a lot will depend on what the audience thinks of it ...
Exact
ly. If this is a success then hopefu
lly we wi
ll 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 wou
ld
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 before with the auditions for Cider With Rosie, that's when it rea
lly struck me how much I wanted to act. How much I wanted to be part of having fun with my career. I can on
ly wish to take myse
lf forward with this. I've had an amazing opportunity.
Any parts you've auditioned for in future films?
There have been
litt
le things every now and again but it's main
ly getting through Narnia because there is so much going on. Once that's done we wi
ll be ab
le to take a deep breath,
look at some other 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 rea
lly 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 weird thing is when you see yourse
lf, as you're driving by, on a poster or you see yourse
lf on a washing up box or something - it's so bizarre. It's just momentary, it's on
ly within those brief few seconds when you see it then you move on with your day. I have a very good fami
ly, very good friends and I'm
lucky that everyone has been so supportive and kind to me.
What do they think about the whole thing?
I think they've been with me the who
le way so it's as much an emotiona
l trip and achievement for them as it is for me. They've a
lmost been at a para
lle
l with me the who
le way, and I just very
lucky that I have a s
trong fami
ly and great friends who've a
lways stuck by my side. The best thing about having brothers and sisters is that they're bruta
lly honest. My brother just got the Narnia game and first thing he does is ki
ll me in it! Six times, over and over again! It's rea
lly grounding to be back at home. They're rea
lly p
leased for me and it's going rea
lly we
ll 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 worth doing. It is hard work at the end of the day, they're working you for every mi
le you f
ly so it's worth enjoying, it's worth re
lishing 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!^_^
We
ll, CIAO!(chow)
Edité par Rox le 02/05/2006 à 02:09