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Hollywood Goes Ape For Brit Star Andy Serkis As Oscar Campaign Gathe

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  • Hollywood Goes Ape For Brit Star Andy Serkis As Oscar Campaign Gathe

    HOLLYWOOD GOES APE FOR BRIT STAR ANDY SERKIS AS OSCAR CAMPAIGN GATHERS STEAM

    Mirror, UK
    December 25, 2014 Thursday 5:40 PM GMT

    The Lord of the Rings star has won accolades across tinsel town for
    his portrayal of Caeser in Dawn Of The Planet Of The Apes

    By James Desborough

    When you're rolling around on the carpet with your kids and suddenly
    pull yourself to your feet with your knuckles, it gives a whole new
    meaning to aping around.

    That's exactly what British actor Andy Serkis found himself doing
    during filming for blockbuster Dawn Of The Planet Of The Apes earlier
    this year.

    He admits it was a tad unnerving - but it was also the lightbulb
    moment when he realised he had truly captured his character, Caesar,
    the super-intelligent ape leader and star of the Hollywood franchise.

    It may also have been the moment his wife Lorraine locked up the
    household's bananas.

    "Sometimes I wasn't even aware I was still in 'ape zone' and I'd be
    playing with my kids and rolling around and find myself using my
    knuckles to climb to my feet and I'd think, 'Why am I still doing
    that?'," he laughs.

    "That's when I'd realise I was still very much in the character of
    an ape."

    The star is recalling his highly-acclaimed part in the film as a
    campaign for 50-year-old Andy to win an Oscar nomination for the role
    gathers momentum.

    Dawn of The Planet of The Apes

    20th Century Fox is pushing for his inclusion on the Best Supporting
    Actor list. It's easy to see why.

    Best-known for portrayals of Caesar and, before that, Gollum in Lord
    of the Rings and the The Hobbit: An Unexpected Journey, there's no
    denying his success.

    His work has generated billions of pounds in just over a decade.

    In that sense he's up there with fellow Brits Daniel Radcliffe,
    Michael Caine and Sean Connery.

    Yet the great irony is many would struggle to recognise his face -
    because he so often works his acting magic behind a CGI mask.

    Andy is Hollywood's go to man when it comes to using 'motion-capture'
    technology - which sees him don a lycra suit with reflective marks
    that allow up to 40 cameras to track his movements and feed the
    data to visual effects specialists who then slide them onto animated
    characters.

    However it's because of that technology not everyone's convinced of
    his Oscar worthiness.

    There's a debate in Tinseltown. Is his work and that of other
    motion-capture actors deserving?

    But Andy is adamant it's just as hard for him to capture and portray
    his characters as any actor.

    "What we're doing is creating a performance in the same way as if
    you were playing a live action role," he says.

    "It is acting, there is no difference and it's ludicrous to think of
    it in any other way.

    "We are still living out our roles, we're on set with the director
    and other actors and it is then manifested through visual effects.

    "In five years we won't be having this discussion as it's obvious
    what we do is acting and needs to be seen as that."

    Dawn of the Planet of the Apes

    Before the first film in the Planet Of The Apes series, 2011's Rise
    of the Planet of the Apes, Andy threw himself into observing the
    creatures.

    He said: "I spent time at London zoo with the gorillas and keepers.

    Then I went to Rwanda to work with Dian Fossey Gorilla Fund
    International.

    "It's fascinating to watch a troop of 23 gorillas. It was a bit like
    watching a group of hippies at Glastonbury."

    But for the sequel, he says his inspiration for Caesar changed as
    the ape's character became more human.

    In fact, he cites a slightly surprising role model - Nelson Mandela.

    "There's this sense that he's this statesman-like figure and, as
    a leader, he's created this 2,000-strong community and he wanted to
    lead, but not necessarily from the front.

    "More like an egalitarian leader so that all the apes would feel
    valued. There's real social responsibility by all of them for the
    community to survive," he explains.

    "I thought very long and hard about the pressure of being a world
    leader and I read a lot about Nelson Mandela because leadership,
    as we all know, is incredibly complex.

    "To look at someone when they first become a leader and then to look
    at them again four years later and see the way they've been ravaged
    by the day-to-day decision making, was a very interesting idea.

    "I wanted Caesar to have some of that in his countenance and in his
    physicality."

    Andy and the other ape actors went through a kind of 'ape therapy'
    before filming.

    "We had a number of weeks prior to filming called 'ape camp'," he said.

    "It involved us improvising and setting up the hierarchy of the apes
    and a way of us communicating."

    He added: "I do most of my jumping around and hollering just before a
    take. The other ape actors will gather around and we'll go into call
    and response mode.

    "You'll normally find me standing on a chair, leading them on,
    raising hell. The noise we make is terrifying."

    There's no arguing Andy doesn't give his all. And he says he learns
    from his characters too.

    "Caesar was an immense and humbling figure to learn from.

    "His ability to be empathetic and a great leader and have a strong
    presence while still being firm fair - it is quite a reach for
    me!" he says.

    The actor's originality may stem from an unconventional childhood.

    He grew up in Ruislip, Middlesex with his Armenian doctor father,
    and his mother, who taught disabled children. Although his parents
    were married, they lived separately.

    He describes how he would regularly visit his dad when he was working
    in Baghdad until it became too dangerous.

    "I'd visit him during the school holidays," he's said.

    "Things weren't easy for him in Iraq. Back in the 70s he spent months
    in an Iraqi jail. He saw relatives vanish. I was an angry kid.

    "I'd throw tantrums and my three older sisters would have to hold
    me down. I always felt an outsider and that probably had a lot to do
    with my home situation."

    Ultimately, it was acting which let him channel his emotions - he's
    called it his 'saviour'.

    Although at school he loved art and went to Lancaster University to
    study it, there he became interested in theatre.

    He honed his skills at the Dukes Playhouse, Lancaster, and began
    touring.

    Success on London stages in the early 90s coincided with his
    breakthrough in TV and film.

    His work has ranged from Oliver Twist to 24 Hour Party People;
    Brighton Rock to the Adventures Of Tin Tin.

    In 2010 he was Bafta-nominated for his role as polio-afflicted Ian
    Dury in Sex & Drugs & Rock & Roll - for which he spent months walking
    with a heavy 70s-style calliper on his leg.

    But it was as Gollum in Peter Jackson's Lord of the Rings trilogy
    that he found global success, before working with the director again,
    taking his first simian role in 2005's King Kong.

    Now, set to appear in Star Wars Episode VII, and currently directing
    and acting Jungle Book: Origins, in which he will star as Baloo the
    bear, his star is rising.

    The Jungle Book stars Oscar winners Christian Bale and Cate Blanchett
    and Andy, married to actress Lorraine Ashbourne, hopes the big names
    will help Hollywood realise the talent that goes into motion-capture
    technology.

    "If you asked any one of them whether it is any different to acting
    in a costume they'd all say, 'Of course not, it's acting!'," he says.

    "I honestly think soon people will look back and say, 'How did we
    think it was anything else?'"

    Perhaps that day will come when Andy wins an Oscar...

    Is acting in CGI the same as acting in costume? Dawn of the Planet
    of the Apes is available on Blu-ray 3D + Blu-ray. The Collection is
    part of the Fox Home Entertainment Holiday Collection.

    http://www.mirror.co.uk/tv/tv-news/hollywood-goes-ape-brit-star-4871558

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