When Marvel was casting the part of the hammer-happy Avenger Thor, Tom Hiddleston had just arrived in LA and fancied his chances. In an exclusive interview with SciFiNow, he revealed how he almost got the part: “I had a connection to [Thor director] Kenneth Branagh as I had worked with him in the theatre, I’m 6’2” with naturally have blond hair, and Marvel were very keen on having an unknown actor to play Thor, so I knew I had a shot,” he says.
But Thor is a not-so-puny god and Hiddleston was asked to bulk up for the audition. “I’ve never committed so much to an audition in my life,” he tells SciFiNow. “The guys at Marvel said, ‘Can you put on as much muscle as you can in six weeks?’ I went from 180lbs to 198lbs, and had only 7% body fat. I still have the pictures to prove it.”
At the time he had no idea about the part of Loki, but Marvel President Kevin Feige and director Kenneth Brannagh knew he’d be perfect for the God of Mischief and telephoned him personally to offer him the role. “They said, ‘You’re not going to play Thor but we’d like to play Loki,’” he says. “Ken assured me at the time, ‘This is the role that I would want to play.’ And it was a gift. I have no regrets about it at all. I have never once thought, ‘I wish I was playing Thor.’”
It’s hard to imagine it any other way, now that he’s become a huge fan favourite, tumblr icon and the ultimate meme magnet. Thor: The Dark World will see Loki form an uneasy alliance with his brother after a new enemy, Malekith The Accursed (Christopher Eccleston) strikes, attacking Thor (Chris Hemsworth)’s mortal girlfriend Jane Foster (Natalie Portman).
Hiddleston has confirmed that he won’t be appearing in Avengers: Age Of Ultron, so this could be the last we see of Loki for some time. However, the actor confirmed to SciFiNow that he has signed on for 6 movies: “The Dark World is number 3,” he tells SciFiNow, “I don’t know whether we’ll make more. It depends on Kevin [Feige]‘s plans.”
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“The only thing disconcerting about him was his inability to answer the door wearing anything more than a towel”
Tom Hiddleston for The Love Book | Download with Love – YOU Mag
Lynne Carter-Yates: One of the many terrific actors interviewed by the IFC@TIFF13 crew. Thanks Tom Hiddleston for charming the whole crew. (x)
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Tom Hiddleston being naughty – I warn you, you may not recover from this – you have been warned ❤
Tom Hiddleston Brings Loki Fans To Shakespeare
ETonline: While you were on stage, I was struck by the passion with which you speak about this project. Would you struggle to promote a project you couldn’t speak about that passionately?
Tom Hiddleston: Yes. I would. And that’s why I make all my decisions based entirely on passion. On gut instinct. I tell my team that I have to be running off the diving board and jumping head first into the water because I want to swim so badly. I can never make a strategic career decision. I’ve found what I love to do and it’s my great privilege to do this job, which I love more than anything else in the world. I knew quite early on, but it took me a while to get there. I think everyone should do what they love because it will never feel like work that way. Also, with this kind of project, you have to be passionate about it because it’s too challenging otherwise. Bringing Shakespeare to life is an enormous task, you have to do so much digesting in understanding the plot and the verse and the character and the language so an audience can sit back and cleanly listen to it. And shooting was tough — long, long days of six pages a day, which is fast for Shakespeare. The degree of precision and stamina required is massive. It 14 weeks to do all three plays. I saw the sun rise and set every day because I was getting up that early and staying up that late. It wasn’t easy but it was the best kind of challenge because you know if you do it right, you’ve contributed something of immense value.VIDEO – Tom Hiddleston Talks Thor 2
ETonline: Thanks to Loki you’ve amassed a very passionate fanbase that might not necessarily watch a four-part Shakespeare miniseries airing Friday nights on PBS. But because of you, they will. What does that mean to you?
Hiddleston: If they see it for that reason, I’m flattered and honored. If fans come because they know who Loki is but stay because they’ve fallen in love with Shakespeare, my job is done. I was that guy. I was interested in Superman and Terminator and Rambo as a kid, but was taken to the theater to see great Shakespearean actors performing these plays with such rigor and muscle and sheer vivid energy. They seem so alive and, as a result, the action felt more spectacular than any movie I’d ever seen. Kenneth Branagh and Vanessa Redgrave and Ian McKellan and Zoe Wanamaker and Juliet Stevenson and Emily Watson gave me Shakespeare and if I can pass it on, then it’s my great gift.ETonline: Through the four plays you go on a massive, life-spanning journey with this character. How do you describe the man?
Hiddleston: You meet him and he behaves like an irresponsible teenager: drunk and rebellious and wild and mischievous and almost deliberately antagonistic with his dad. It seems like a truthful shape of the contemporary adolescent. And then he goes all the way to being the Head of State and extraordinary and exemplary and one of the most inspirational Heads of State England has ever seen. And I think there’s something in Henry the Fifth that appeals to contemporary leaders. I think they would love to be him; they would love to be held in that high esteem, to have their courage and mettle tested in the way his was and to pass with flying colors. The arc of the character is massive, the journey of the character is massive, but the journey is about so many things: his own nature as a man, as a son, as a leader, as a warrior and because the writing is so good, the levels of subtlety are sorich.ETonline: Do you have a favorite scene or line?
Hiddleston: There’s one night when, before The Battle of Agincourt, he’s disguised as a beggar and he’s moving among his army in the middle of the night under the cover of a hood. He’s listening and taking the temperature of his men, who are all disillusioned — many of them are dying of terrible, medieval dysentery, and he gets into a debate with a soldier who doesn’t recognize him as the king. They have a bit of chinwag about the nature of leadership. And this hot-headed solder basically says — and this is a direct quote — “When all those arms, and all those legs and heads chopped off in battle say they died at such a place, it’ll be a black matter for the King who led them to it.” And Henry’s response is, “Every subject’s duty is the King’s, but every subject’s soul is his own.” I want that on my mantelpiece. It’s his way of saying, “Fair enough, you’re right to pin the duty and the reason we’re all here on me, but your soul is your own and make sure it’s clean before you fight tomorrow.”
ETonline: How much time do you like to spend with text this rich before filming begins?
Hiddleston: There’s a lot more text and it’s so formal. You can’t riff around. With contemporary screen dialogue, sometimes you can make the words your own. For example, if the lines are, “Could you give me a cup of coffee?” On the day you could say, “Can I get a cup of coffee?” You can’t do that with Shakespeare. You can’t say, “Here we go again lads” if “Once more unto the breach dear friends” is what’s written [laughs]. There’s a degree of rigor and preparation required, and I usually give myself a clear month to start learning it and thinking it and digesting it. The learning is the heavy lifting. You need to get the words into your brain. Like a very complicated piece of music. One you know it, you can really play it — and that’s just application. Jeremy Irons used to say he’d just pace around his living room with his wife, and I have to learn on the move. I have to be physically in motion, so I tend to take myself to the parks of London. I’m the mad guy walking around in a loop as if I’m on the phone, but actually I’m going over the lines.ETonline: Do you remain in character between takes, or can you segue in and out?
Hiddleston: I can go in and out of it. To be honest, the way we live now, it would stress me out more to not. That would involve such a length disengagement from my own life that my own life would end up in ruins. When I was shooting The Hollow Crown, I did two rounds of press for War Horse. So there was a whole load of other things going on at the same time, which was a strange disconnect. There’s always a little shadow, a residue or a hangover from a dream you get from playing a character, and sometimes you take on the elements of that character in your own life. But only for the best; particularly when it’s Shakespeare.
ONLY LOVERS LEFT ALIVE Q&A with Jim Jarmusch, Tom Hiddleston, Mia Wasikowska and Anton Yelchin from Bird Braid [HD 720P] – 20 Minutes
New Stills from ‘Only Lovers Left Alive’ [HQ] (x)
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Shall I compare thee to a summer’s day?
Thou art more lovely and more temperate:
Rough winds do shake the darling buds of May,
And summer’s lease hath all too short a date:
Sometime too hot the eye of heaven shines,
And often is his gold complexion dimm’d;
And every fair from fair sometime declines,
By chance or nature’s changing course untrimm’d;
But thy eternal summer shall not fade
Nor lose possession of that fair thou owest;
Nor shall Death brag thou wander’st in his shade,
When in eternal lines to time thou growest:
So long as men can breathe or eyes can see,
So long lives this and this gives life to thee.