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Firth and ForemostShakespeare in Love’s Colin Firth relishes a good role, his son and a little road rageColin Firth was in trouble—and
not just because the 1995 BBC drama he was starring in revolved
around a pig accused of murder. No, the problem was not the plot. The problem
was the leading lady: a half-pig, half-boar named Gwinny who was, to put
it delicately, no Babe. "Gwinny had tusks," says her owner, Joe Henson
of England’s Cotswold Farm Park. "She had already bitten another actor
twice." As Firth, playing a medieval attorney defending the swine, entered
an old London dungeon to shoot the first scene with his temperamental costar,
Henson stood close by in case the beast needed soothing. She did not—not
by him at least. Firth sat down next to Gwinny and began talking to her.
"Then he started scratching behind her ear, and she literally rubbed up
against him and laid down with her head in his lap. The pig," says Henson,
"fell in love with him."
No need to make up praise for his portrayal of the pernicious English aristocrat who comes between William Shakespeare (played by Joseph Fiennes, brother of Ralph) and the Bard’s true love (played by Gwyneth Paltrow). As The New York Times put it, "[He is] a perfect Mr. Wrong." Still, Firth knows that his supporting role is unlikely to catapult him to Hollywood-style superstardom anytime soon. And that’s just fine with him. "I’ve got nothing against being adored," he says. "Actors do need to be praised. But do I want everyone in a restaurant to know me? Absolutely not." Which is just one reason
he calls home a villa overlooking olive groves and ancient vineyards in
the Italian region of Umbria, where he plays guitar, prowls the countryside
for antiques and studies Italian. But even in Italy, Firth cannot totally
avoid stares—at least not when his wife of 19 months is with him. She is
"far too beautiful," jokes Firth’s English Patient costar Kristin
Scott Thomas of Livia Giuggioli, 29, whom Firth met on the set of the BBC
drama Nostromo in 1996. (She was taking time off from her Ph.D.
studies at the University of Rome to work as a producer’s assistant.) Says
Firth’s friend, author Nick Homby (whose book Fever Pitch is a soonto-be-released
movie starring Firth): "She’s also like him in that she’s incredibly worldly,
smart and self-deprecating."
The same can hardly be said for Firth’s own childhood. Born in Hampshire, England, he was the first of three children of two teachers, David, now 64, who taught social studies, and Shirley, now 62, with a Ph.D. in comparative religion. His parents met as schoolchildren in India, where their own parents worked as missionaries. While Firth was still a toddler, the family—which now includes brother Jonathon, 31, an actor, and sister Kate, 36, a voice coach—moved to Nigeria, where his parents were teachers. (In Firth’s intellectual, Christian home, the word "sin" did not come up, he once told Britain’s The Guardian, but there was always a sense of "right and wrong.") When he was 3, the family returned to Hampshire, and Firth enrolled in the local elementary school—much to his dismay. "There were moments I enjoyed and [a few teachers I found inspiring," he allows. "The rest of it I despised." Of the moments he enjoyed,
English and music classes ranked high. But even as a young boy, his passion
was drama. "I did a pantomime when I was 5, and everyone loved it,"
says Firth. He joined a drama workshop at 10 and by 14 had decided on acting
as a profession. "I dare say it was an excuse to be bad at math," he says,
laughing. After graduating in 1979, he spent a "bleak" six months answering
phones at London’s Shaw Theatre and six more months working in wardrobe
at the National Theatre there. In 1980 he was accepted at London’s prestigious
Drama Centre and for the first time felt excited by his studies—most of
them.
When a casting agent saw his performance, he recommended Firth to replace a departing Rupert Everett (My Best Friend’s Wedding) in the acclaimed Queen’s Theatre production of Another Country—based on a real-life group of elite British schoolboys who eventually became Soviet spies in the ‘30s. Firth left school early to take the part, was later cast in the 1984 movie version and has kept busy ever since. "It’s not been blockbuster territory but projects that have engrossed me, says Firth of his career. "People think earning $20 million is better, but how many castles can you live in? How many cars can you drive? Excessive ambition can destroy the good stuff." These days, Firth’s
ambitions involve staying off cigarettes—"an old enemy" he conquered a
year ago— and spending more time with his son, whom Firth would, it seems,
prefer to be growing up in Italy. "I don’t find L.A. the most child-friendly,"
he says. "In L.A. or London, kids are perceived as an annoyance if you
take them to the wrong restaurant. In Italy no one snarls about it. They
consider kids part of the human race. They’re expected to be there."
· Karen S. Schneider · Lorenzo Benet in Santa Monica, Ken Baker in LA. and Joanna Blonska in London © Copyright of PEOPLE 2/8/99 p.73 |
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