Article Portal
Factory, Autumn 2005
Let's DanceDamian Lewis at the Dorchester by Natalie Theo, Factory, Autumn 2005 Damian Lewis really wants to be Widow Twanky. Thankfully Factory has asked him to camp it up as an all-dancing James Bond hero for its shoot at the Dorchester Hotel's London ballroom. "I went through a lot of pantomime when I was young -- I mostly wanted to be Widow Twanky." Well, as I say, thank God we are more 007 today. You see I am blushingly helping Damian Lewis into a pair of elegant black Ralph Lauren trousers, shirt and diamond studded De Beers cufflinks. We are tucked away in the dark refines of the Dorchester ballroom's coat check cubicle. The men's loos are unavailable for trouser tucking. Better to be tucking him into a Ralph Lauren number rather than a figure moulding pair of panto tights.
"I am an ex-infantry soldier," says Mannie. "I don't really like films and film actors and actresses, but he imparted great dignity to the role. He ennobled the role of the allied infantry commanders in the second world war. I am very glad I met him because I can tell my friends I actually met Captain Winters! He is going to have a distinguished career in film but he will always be remembered for Captain Winters. I don't think anybody else could have done that role as well as he did." Hmmm, I wonder if De Beers handpicked its man for the shoot today or what. It's one thing for the women on the shoot to get in a fluster over their main man, but a middle-aged man... Later on, when Mannie gets to pose with him, Lewis also whips out a publicity shot and signs it for him with a "I don't really do this...." For the troops, Damian, for the troops.
Apart from the fact that there are six gorgeous young actresses, namely Andrea Corr, Lucy Punch, Siobhan Hewlett, Michelle Ryan, Kate Groombridge and Natasha Wightman, Factory has kindly arranged for rising star, actor Tom Chambers to chauffeur Lewis and said actresses to the shoot in a purple Lotus as a little extra something.
But a lot of his roles are dark obsessive men, Factory points out. "Yeah repressed." Repressed? A bit of an understatement -- more like intense tortured souls? "I think it's interesting to play people who are conflicted because I think most of us are all the time, or for a good part of our lives, or at least I've felt conflicted. It's true that if an actor seems to be able to play a baddie well, for example, or a tortured soul, those portrayals seem to register very strongly with an audience and the public. You might play five sweet comedic roles that don't grab people in quite the same way than if you played a tortured soul successfully. So Soames Forsyte, the character I played recently on TV, was definitely tortured, conflicted, unhappy, jealous, repressed."
Now it's no secret that women seem to love a man who is conflicted. It's a chick thing. Give us a sweet old soul and we'll chew him up and spit him out like a piece of gum that has lost his flavour. Give us a conflicted baddie and we'll stick to his shoe, like a piece of gum. I am sitting opposite the man who played Soames. I haven't quite stuck to his flip flop like a piece of gum, but I am still sitting opposite dear, misunderstood Soames, who, when he appeared on my television screen in The Forsyte Saga, certainly made me want to pop out of my gum wrapper and get stuck in to all sorts of interesting places. Anyway, steady girl. But I'm not really going to say that to Lewis now am I, so I go in with the more demure, "Funnily enough the character of Soames Forsyte is iconic especially in the minds of women. There was great conflict amongst women with regards to Soames. Some loathed him. Some felt he was wounded. Some just obsessed over him."
His character in An Unfinished Life, sounds nasty too. "I filmed that two years ago. Robert Redford, Morgan Freeman, Jennifer Lopez are the main parts. I play a jealous boyfriend and he is a violent and unattractive man. He is just outright, bad white trash and nasty. Spent his time in trailer parks and pool halls and beats his women up. He's just nasty. Really attractive. But I really wanted to work with Lasse. I've got Keane coming out, which is a very tortured character and a very dark film, but in my view a brilliant film, made by Lodge Kerrigan. The Situation with Connie Nielson is a really interesting political thrilller set in contemporary Iraq. At the centre of this is a love triangle, all based on true facts, between Connie who is a journalist, my character who is an Arab affairs specialist seconded to the CIA, and an Iraqi war photographer. The script is written by a first-time script writer -- I can't think of anything more interesting than telling a story about Iraq. But it's no way a macho film story."
To use Michael Caine's phrase, 'not a lot of people know that,' the Irish singing star, Andrea Corr, is now starring and acting in movies. When she got to The Dorchester, she may have purred over the smooth leather interior of the purple Lotus 'Factory taxi', but when offered this service to take her home, she sweetly declined, opting instead to walk. Now that's star quality. She had an 'in' on our leading man: they know each other and have danced together before. "Oh Damian's wonderful to dance with," she smiled coyly. And she was immediately drawn to the dress we had selected for the Factory shoot.
Punch and Lewis literally smouldered into the walls of The Dorchester ballroom as they played cat and mouse for the Factory shoot. We'll let you work out who was the predator and whom was the prey. Kate Groombridge: The Undercover Agent First on the shoot, first to step out of the chauffeur-driven purple Lotus courtesy of Factory, in the teeniest of tiniest denim skirt, first to elicit a "Wow! You look amazing!" from our leading man Lewis. First to get the dancefloor rolling, Lewis twirling and the hair and make-up artist all in a fluster. A true star. Groombridge has recently finished filming David Leland's Decameron with Hayden Christensen and Tim Roth.
This hot new star was in big demand on the day of our Factory shoot. Fresh off The Dorchester ballroom dancefloor she was ushered upstairs to a much more modest setting for a British Vogue shoot, with instructions from Ralph Lauren to take any clothes from the Factory shoot she liked -- provided they hadn't been used. Well they had, so Vogue just had to make do without. Never let it be said Factory doesn't do things in style. Her Ralph Lauren Collection outfit got our leading man all in a fluster, "Leather just makes me want to be naughty." Down boy. Down. After playing the lead Betsey Balcombe at 19 in the acclaimed Monsieur N, and then Karen in the BBC's award-winning Wife of Bath, Hewlett's star, like Lewis' temperature around these ladies, is rising. She has just made her West End theatre debut at the Donmar playing the lead role in The Philanthropist. She can be seen in January 2006 in the film written by Julian Fellowes, Piccadilly Jim, and is currently filming The Virgirn Queen for a BBC adaptation, where she plays a lady-in-waiting.
For months and months she cried her heart out on British television as the emotionally tortured Zoe Slater in soap opera EastEnders. Who can blame her when her leading men were really just a bunch of dodgy geezers. Thankfully, on the Factory shoot she was all smiles and gleaming blue eyes, not to mention that fabulous body. But maybe that had something to do with her leading man for the day. "Damian is a great dance partner! He's very good at making people feel comfortable."
Natasha Wightman: The Assassin Natasha does not like anything too flowery, which posed a problem for all of about ten seconds when I realised the jewellery set aside for her was, ermmm, a huge floral constellation of a necklace. Never mind. We had nearly all the De Beers stock in The Dorchester, so we were covered. Shooting Natasha was a dream because like a pro (she used to be a ballerina) wrapped around another pro, Lewis, she delivered the perfect picture in all of ten seconds. "It was great to work with Damian. When he was picking me up and throwing me around, I wanted to pick him up and throw him around. Not that he looked weak! But it was that muscular man with damsel in distress thing. I wanted it to be hero woman and man in distress." Just finished filming V for Vendetta where she shaved her head again after having it shaved for her prior role in Mouth to Mouth, which won the Brooklyn Film Festival. All a far cry from her role of Lavinia in Robert Altman's Gosford Park. "I've been lucky with the characters I've played; they've been strong, interesting people." |
RETURN TO DAMIAN'S DOMINION: ARTICLE PORTAL
This site copyright Ann (damiandreamer) 2004 - present. All rights reserved.