It will never go away.Īpart from having a family, I release pressure through mountaineering. It was an extraordinary time so many things came out of that experience and whether I like it or not that role lives with me on a daily basis. I don’t think I could have handled the sort of fame Lord of the Rings sparked if I’d been younger. I did occasionally come into contact with other people, so I just had to pretend I was looking for something. I spent a lot of time in preparation for that I would go off for walks on all fours for hours. I used to walk on all fours off set when we were filming Lord of the Rings. Not feeling like you belong to an enormous group of which you are certain. I’ve always felt like an outsider, which has been central to a lot of the work I’ve done. You’re totally plugged into that sense of play. They were sitting at the very front – couldn’t have been closer.Īcting is a liberating experience. My dad had brought two doctor friends from Baghdad. My parents came to see a production I was in at the Royal Exchange Theatre in Manchester, Manchester, where I had to perform fellatio on a naked boy. I phoned up my mum to tell her I was going to become an actor – silence and fear ensued. It was horrific enough that I’d gone to study visual arts, but when I did a drama module in the first year, that turned everything on its head. My choice of occupation was a big disappointment to my parents.
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