Sneak-peak from the article by Tom Chamberlin:
Have you met Eddie?” I was asked several times before I met Eddie Redmayne.
It would be easier to relay the meaning behind that question in person
rather than
on paper, but the gist of it was this: when going through the
standard operating
procedure of setting up a cover shoot, questions like
“Does he need a car?”,
“Does he have any catering needs?”, or “Can we shoot behind-the-scenes content?”
all elicited the response, “Have you met Eddie?”
He took the tube, by the way.
This being my 36th issue of The Rake, with no fewer than 30 of those covers
being
handled by publicists who represent the great and good of the big
screen, it is difficult
to elucidate just how unusual it is to get a
response like that. That is not to say that any
of the actors we have
featured on our cover have been swallowed up by their own image
or seek to
make life difficult for us Earth-dwelling normies, but to witness an actor
voluntarily eschewing the trappings to save others the hassle is
mind-blowingly refreshing.
So it was safe to say I was interested in meeting
Eddie, and I was not disappointed.
Eddie Redmayne has the kind of social skills I am particularly fond of: he
appears to be
interested, if not actually interested, in what the person he is
talking to is saying; he is
affable and kind and self-deprecating; and he
doesn’t seem to take himself too seriously,
which, given he is an Oscar
winner, you might forgive him for doing. He undermines
the theory that fame
changes and ultimately blemishes character.
Our interview, a week or so later, got off to a good start. “Oh my God, you bastard,”
he said, though in every way I deserved it. I had dialled in over
Zoom from my holiday
in France, and I wasn’t going to keep the view to myself.
Once the smugness faded,
and I had to remember to try to be professional, I
got on with the questions.
Redmayne was not brought up in an artistic household. He had several brothers and
sisters, whom he credits with helping him stay grounded, along with his wife,
Hannah Bagshawe. His adventure in the creative arts began with music rather than
acting. He says: “When I was very little, when I was staying at a
friend’s house, there
was a piano there, and though I never learned, I could play a bit and make some tunes.
My mum was a bit shocked by that, and rented a
piano, and before I started learning
I had the facility to be able to
improvise.” In school concerts and weekend classes, he
nurtured his enthusiasm for singing and acting — sometimes, in concert, he’d be given
no music and would simply riff off his own aptitude. He goes on to say that, “I got a
great
thrill in those moments, of being the freest, and then began to find that in
acting.”
School was where things began to gather steam. He was a beneficiary of
terrific teaching.
His tutor in drama at Eton, Simon Dormandy, was someone
who, as Eddie put it, arrived
as a teacher practically straight from the
rehearsal rooms of the West End. “He treated us
like professionals, and I
remember feeling like he rated you, but he also wanted to push you.
It was a
mixture of my own passions as a kid, but he was one teacher who really gave me the
tools and emboldened me by rating me. Sometimes it takes someone having
faith in you.”
Read the full Eddie Redmayne interview in Issue 72 of The Rake
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