Colin Firth thinks he’s “lucky” to have his heartthrob status

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When is The King’s Speech coming out, for the love of God? I can’t wait to see this movie. Ooh, it comes out this Friday! Next weekend then. It’s a date. I’ll see you bitches there. So… given that the film comes out within days, it’s no surprise that Colin Firth is stepping up her promotional duties. Have you ever sat down and read a longer Firth interview? He’s quite lovely, actually. But you can just tell that he’s an enormous dork in real life – like, he’s not trying to front like he’s suave or Mr. Popularity or anything. He just likes talking about the work and he’s kind of nerdy and silly and sweet. It’s refreshing – he is, after all, 50 years old. He would come across as desperate and dumb if he was trying to convince us of how cool and hip he is. He’s a 50 year old husband and father and he loves being an actor and he doesn’t mind talking. It’s so nice. Anyway, here’s an interview he did with Movieline:

Do not call The King’s Speech a period piece — at least not around its star Colin Firth. And this is a guy who knows a thing or two about labels — an actor who has long since shed the baggage of being the fantasy of every adolescent girl who ever saw Pride and Prejudice. As Firth mentions, he’s quite happy he’s at an age (he just turned 50) where it’s his work as an actor who’s being judged — judgment that paid off with his first Oscar nomination last year for A Single Man and what will surely be his second nomination this year for The King’s Speech.

The actor is back in the awards-season spotlight as George VI, the English king tasked with overcoming a severe speech impediment before addressing his subjects in the early days of World War II. Movieline spoke to Firth about resisting period trappings, the chemistry he shared with the king’s on-screen speech therapist (played by Geoffrey Rush), living a year of his childhood in the United States and why, just maybe, it isn’t the most terrible thing in the world to be labeled a heartthrob.

The opening scene of The King’s Speech, the address to Wembley Stadium, is hard to watch.
It’s like an anxiety dream. I don’t know if people who aren’t actors have that dream — that thing where you go out there and no words come. I remember having dreams as a kid, which I think are common, where the monster is after you but you can’t scream or you can’t run. And I guess if you were that guy, George VI, it wasn’t a dream. Public speaking is bizarre. I don’t know whether to call it irrational or not — and I’m talking about people who don’t stammer. It’s a mortal terror. I’ve heard this second-hand, but I think Jerry Seinfeld had said that research showed that fear of public speaking was second only to fear of dying.

I think it is actually above dying.
Above it, yes. Right. Do you remember what he said? At the funeral most people would rather be in the coffin than giving the eulogy.

One thing that struck me about The King’s Speech is how it doesn’t feel at all like a traditional English period piece.
It’s interesting, this idea of a period piece. I mean, you can’t get away from it being English, but it’s funny how — just because I’ve done so many different things in different periods — I don’t really ever think of that very much. And [director] Tom Hooper doesn’t have anything that we normally think of as a period film feel about him. I even read something that had been written about the film as if it was to do with elegance — it couldn’t be further from that. This isn’t a shrill protest against anything; believe me, we’re getting so much love for this film. But it is interesting that it’s easy to define it in those terms, when, actually, if you look at the film, it really isn’t.

So do you think that people who love “English period pieces” are still finding what the want with this film?
Maybe they do. And maybe the people who don’t like it still see it that way. I don’t know. All I know is that I think most people have had your reaction. It’s very, very gratifying.

It helps that there’s someone in the movie who is still very much alive.
And how far back does it need to go for it to be a period piece? I mean, my mother didn’t like it when I referred to a Terrence Rattigan play that I was doing as a period piece. It was set and written in 1952; that’s part of my mother’s life — which is not the beginning. She was getting into her teens by then. You know, I’m doing a spy thriller at the moment which is set in 1973. It’s Tinker, Tailor, Soldier, Spy, about the Cold War. I remember it being out as a book; I was about 14 at the time. I remember it being on TV as a series and it was contemporary, up-to-date and cutting edge. Now, I remember sitting with the guys on the set the other day saying, “Are we doing a period piece?”

As someone who was born in the ’70s, I don’t like hearing anything from that decade called “a period piece.”
That’s my thing. So that, for me, is what would be your ’80s. Are the ’80s a period piece? So, 1937, my mom I think was born that year, actually, and that’s when this is largely set. It’s not that long ago. I was born about 15 years after the end of World War II and it still feels like ancient history, in black and white. And I think 15 years back now is nothing. This is Prince Charles’s granddad that I’m playing. It’s the Queen’s dad. So it’s not ancient history. It’s not a parallel universe. I think people are extremely surprised to laugh as heartily as they do for something that they think is a period movie.

I’ve never laughed more at someone saying the word “f*ck” over and over again as you did in the film.
Well, it highlights the forbiddenness of those words — the fact that this isn’t a guy who would usually go around saying those words. And the fact that they’re not vicious, and the fact that they’re not sexual in the context, and the fact they’re not casual means that actually they have a wonderful liberating and comic power because they’re exceptional here.

And I wasn’t expecting to hear that word in this movie.
It’s forbidden! It’s completely forbidden. And, actually, the laugh at the end, because it finishes on the lamest word of all. The laugh at the end obscures the next couple of lines at the screenings that I’ve seen.

Which word are you referring to?
“Tits.” After all that, it kind of ends on an afterthought. it almost has a sweetness about it; if the word weren’t forbidden, there would be nothing happening.

King George VI seemed jealous of Hitler’s ability to speak.
Intimidated. I mean it’s like, “How do I compete with that? I’ve got live radio here and I’m terrified of the microphone, this guy is actually exploiting it to hypnotize the masses. And I can’t even speak. Why am I even in this job?”

Since at least Pride and Prejudice, if not before, you’ve been labeled a “heartthrob.” Do you think the label has ever impeded your career?
I don’t think it was helpful. I haven’t tried to get rid of anything, though. This is an interesting thing: Somebody constructed a speculative thing about me the other day which I was told about, I haven’t actually read it, but it was to do with trying to shake it off. And I realized over the years that this perception that I’m grumpy about it at all, or wish it wasn’t around, or tried to shake it off — I don’t find it onerous in any way. I think it’s actually rather wonderful to have done something that has actually lingered for so long. In some ways I’m quite glad it casts a long shadow. One’s lucky to ever play a role in one’s life that, in any time, will do that.

I’m not sure it casts a shadow. People who aren’t talented get stuck with that and they can’t shake it because there’s nothing else there.
I don’t mean a shadow in a negative way. I just mean that, you know, that it resonates still. George Falconer in A Single Man started to shake it off for me. For me. I shook off that one the day I walked off the set. I mean, age helps get that shaken off. I’m getting to a certain point where people aren’t casting me on that basis. I remember when I was about 25, looking at older actors I was working with — brilliant older actors — thinking, I cant wait to get a few wrinkles. Look at the instrument that they are using. I had such an utterly boring face at that age. I think it needs to show some weathering just to get some texture there. So I think that’s helping. I think it can invite some condescension. You know, if you take yourself a little bit too seriously, or you want to take yourself a little too seriously, it gets in the way. But in some ways it probably did me some favors and encouraged me to subvert things and make a fool of myself.

And the Fiennes brothers stopped showing up to steal away your love interest.
Yes, indeed. But actually I think it’s probably one of the reasons why I was tempted to get into and do some sort of silly stuff.

Like the fight in Bridget Jones’s Diary?
Like the fight in Bridget Jones! And good silly stuff. Things like Mamma Mia. You just get out, make a fool of yourself. You know, people sort of see you as this po-faced 18th- or 19th-century remote figure.

I was a little shocked to find out that you lived a year in my hometown of St. Louis.
Yeah, it was 1972 to 1973. I was in the eighth grade, my dad taught at a community college in Florissant. I went to Hazelwood West Junior High for one year. I was in the eighth grade and I did my Constitution test — passed with flying colors. And, yeah, I had some very good friends there and people I actually still see now.

As an English actor, it’s interesting that you lived in Missouri. It’s a lot different from living in New York or L.A. Did the experience of living in the “heartland” help you as an actor to understand the U.S.?
Well, it certainly did because my first knowledge, my first acquaintances, with this country is the Midwest. My mother grew up in Iowa, so I grew up with quite an awareness of America. But she was very strongly connected with her parents raising her there. Basically, my mother was born in India but her father decided late-ish in life to get medical training. So he went to the states to train somewhere in Iowa, so she spent seven years growing up in that part of the world. And we visited and they visited us, so I always felt that America has always been a very big part of my life. I almost feel like I’m partly of this country, really. It’s a combination of things, but the family compass points that way so much.

[From Movieline]

Ooh, he lived in America for a short time! I didn’t know that. So Colin Firth loves the heartland – that should win him some Academy votes when he’s up for Best Actor this year. Seriously, if Colin doesn’t win an Oscar at long last, then I have little faith in the system.

Here are some clips from The King’s Speech:

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Photos courtesy of WENN.

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12 Responses to “Colin Firth thinks he’s “lucky” to have his heartthrob status”

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  1. ziggy says:

    yeah he is, cause it’s a mystery to me why he’s considered a ‘heartthrob’.

  2. sickofit says:

    cant wait to see the movie too

  3. Zelda says:

    Did he start spray tanning? Ew.

  4. The_Porscha says:

    I’ve been waiting, waiting, waiting for this movie. I can’t wait for next weekend. I think this film – and Firth’s role – has a significant fighting chance during awards season.

  5. bellaluna says:

    Speaking of dorky hotness, could we have a little Jack Black on HGF? *ducks flying objects* Colin Firth and Jack Black would be GREAT for, I don’t know, an Ordinary HGF.

  6. Raven says:

    Oh, Ziggy, you need to watch the TV miniseries “Pride and Prejudice”. Then you’ll get it.

  7. Lindy says:

    I could not–could NOT–be more in love with this man. Seriously, he’s awesome. Also, I’m a college professor and will be teaching Pride & Prejudice this afternoon. Go me! 🙂 (Wish I could just settle back with a glass of wine and Colin Firth as Mr. Darcy, but that might be considered unprofessional or something).

  8. NancyMan says:

    I was in London back in the early 90s waiting for a friend in a hotel lobby. I heard this beautiful voice coming from nearby in an interview with a reporter. After a few minutes, I figured out that it was Colin Firth. I was a huge fan after seeing his work in ‘Apartment Zero’ and ‘Valmont’.

    Of course, I went over to check him out. At that time, he had shaggy long hair, a full beard, a back pack and he was wearing tennis shoes, blue jeans and an old denim jacket. He does not look like the same man now. But, he was hot then and he’s hot now…

  9. Abbs says:

    Swoon. That’s all.

  10. irishserra says:

    He’s not conventionally good looking, but there is something very appealing about him (to me, at least). 🙂

  11. Bina says:

    Kaiser, you need to move to Vietnam, where the local currency is… the Vietnamese dong!

  12. sjs says:

    Tinker, Tailer, Soldier, Spy? That has me even more excited than The King’s Speech!