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Tim Dalton Telegraph interview


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#1 Royal Dalton

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Posted 24 April 2006 - 02:44 PM

Telegraph Arts

Shaking off the bonds of 007
(24/04/2006)

Former Bond star Timothy Dalton can afford never to work again - so why is he returning to TV and growing a moustache to play a supermarket manager? He talks to Maureen Paton.

Timothy Dalton is in basking pussycat mood. He's the kind of saturnine-looking performer who suits amoral characters, most notably in recent years the Miltonesque Satan figure of Lord Asriel in the National Theatre's adaptation of Philip Pullman's His Dark Materials.

Yet, despite the wildcat eyes that made Dalton a ruthlessly unblinking James Bond, there's not a whiff of danger about this well-preserved 62-year-old as he peers over avuncular spectacles in an achingly trendy London restaurant and leans chummily forward to make a point in the rolling Welsh vowels of his Colwyn Bay birthplace.

Until, that is, I make the mistake of asking if his only child, eight-year-old Alexander, wants to follow him into a business that Dalton, the grandson of vaudevillians, describes in his blokey way as "much better than working in the bloody pickle factory". The feral green eyes glower. "I've no idea. Please do not talk about that," he snaps. "I've never liked talking about my personal life, ever. Ever since I was 20, I've lived in a kind of public arena; and there have been stalkers, blackmailers, death threats, physical violence and threats to friends of mine, colleagues of mine, to myself. Real malicious mischief has been threatened on not just family but to people I work with. There are a lot of weirdos out there, so I'm not giving anybody anything to hang on to. Everybody gets this if they're relatively famous."

Yet he insists that he tries not to take his fame too seriously. "Don't ask me about my career - I've forgotten most of it," he jokes. True, much of it has been characterised by a bewildering, revolving-door variety. Dalton's devotion to the theatre and such idols as Olivier meant that his film career lacked focus until 007 came along in his forties with The Living Daylights and Licence to Kill. If Dalton had not immortalised himself as the fourth - and, at 6ft 2in, the tallest - Bond, credited with saving 007 from the self-parody of the Roger Moore years, an alternative career in charming villainy could have been carved out by the 20-year-old who played opposite Katharine Hepburn in his first ever film role as the crafty young King of France in The Lion In Winter.

He has been lucky with his leading ladies ever since: Hepburn was followed by Mae West (who was all of 86 when Dalton played her husband in Sextette), Ava Gardner, Joan Collins, Glenda Jackson and, most notably, Vanessa Redgrave, who became his partner in real life for 14 tempest-tossed years.

His current project, Geraldine McEwan's latest Marple mystery, marks Dalton's return to British television after 14 years and reunites him not only with Patricia Hodge, his co-star in His Dark Materials, but also with McEwan for the first time since they did a television play together 35 years ago.

"No one asks me to come over here and do things," complains Dalton, who is based in west Hollywood with Alexander and his mother, Dalton's Russian-born wife Oksana, but still keeps a house in Chiswick, west London. "My last project here was Lynda La Plante's television thriller Framed in 1992, and she called me up personally instead of the producers because they thought I only did movies and would be bound to say no. But Marple is the kind of show I normally never get a chance to be part of. If you're a boy, you always want to be in a western; and any actor I know would like to be in a horror. This mystery whodunnit sort of fits into those genres."

At one time there was speculation among his circle that Dalton might give up the vagaries of the business for his beloved fishing, but he insists that was never true. "Occasionally the business gives you up, but I don't think you ever give it up; I love it. On one level, I would prefer never to hear the words James Bond again, but on another level, it is part of my blood and my life. And it's the only movie in the world that offers a British actor the chance of international recognition. Without question it coloured my career for the next 12-15 years and hugely enhanced my earnings. Now I could afford never to work again, but I need the excitement of challenge. The idea of doing nothing is total anathema to me."

Which is why Dalton, an avid Little Britain and Man Stroke Woman fan, has grown a moustache to play a shady supermarket manager in the forthcoming horror comedy Hot Fuzz, the follow-up to Simon Pegg's acclaimed zombie comedy Shaun of the Dead. "Comedies don't come along every day and this is completely off the wall," Dalton says. And there's certainly more than a hint of parody, too, about the rictus grin he wears as the two-faced politician Sir Clive Trevelyan in the Marple drama, The Sittaford Mystery. As Dalton observes, "If you are playing a politician, people assume you are playing the villain."

Yet for years his cleft-chinned good looks worked against him. It would have been a real act of imagination to cast him as a baddie in Bond, the dark angel, instead of the hero who has to fulfil so many impossible movie-going expectations after the template had been set by Sean Connery.

"Roger [Moore] was brilliant, but the movies had gone a long way from their roots; they drifted in a way that was chalk and cheese to Sean," says Dalton diplomatically. It was he, as the fourth Bond, who played it straight and re-rooted them. "And I think Daniel Craig will as well," he says. "I think he's going to be terrific, he's got danger and vulnerability."

But it was also Dalton's peculiar misfortune to play Bond at a time when the wildcat was almost neutered by the Aids scare in the late '80s. That meant screen sex was off the menu, for a start, which frankly defeated the point of James Bond. "I think most people thought it was a pity that I wasn't allowed to grapple so much with the ladies," Dalton concedes with a purr. "And he wasn't allowed to smoke; I think I managed to get a few puffs in, which they then cut out."

But now, with the freedom of his advancing years, he's back doing what he does best: a star turn as a mesmerisingly shifty cove. "No one would force me into a leading young man role at my age, and amoral characters are always more interesting and easier to play," he says. "Those characters are much more like real life. Nobody's pure, we're all a mixture. That tension between good and bad is what defines us; it's what we call morality."

'The Sittaford Mystery' will be shown on ITV1 on April 30.


#2 Tarl_Cabot

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Posted 24 April 2006 - 03:25 PM

Thanks for the great interview. Nice to see him give Craig an endorsement, in addition to expressing interest in the Bond series. :tup:

#3 spynovelfan

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Posted 24 April 2006 - 04:08 PM

Am I right in thinking Laz is the only one of the Bonds yet to give Craig the thumbs up?

#4 Loomis

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Posted 24 April 2006 - 05:18 PM

Am I right in thinking Laz is the only one of the Bonds yet to give Craig the thumbs up?


Nope, I think Dalton was until recently the only holdout. I seem to remember Lazenby endorsing Craig in a recent article, although I'm afraid I don't have a source to hand (I think it was the same piece in which he took a perceived jab at Brosnan).

Looks as though Craig now has the approval of all five former Bonds. :tup:

#5 Qwerty

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Posted 24 April 2006 - 07:11 PM

Great interview. Always nice to hear Timothy Dalton talking about Bond, as his interviews/talks are a bit difficult to come by.

#6 Tarl_Cabot

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Posted 24 April 2006 - 07:24 PM

Am I right in thinking Laz is the only one of the Bonds yet to give Craig the thumbs up?


Dalton: ""And I think Daniel Craig will as well," he says. "I think he's going to be terrific, he's got danger and vulnerability."

sounds like an endorsment to me. :tup:

#7 Bryce (003)

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Posted 24 April 2006 - 07:31 PM

Sounds like Tim's doing just fine. Nice nod to Daniel as well.

Cheers Tim - and if you ever want a pint in West Hollywood, give me a ring. :tup:

#8 killkenny kid

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Posted 24 April 2006 - 07:45 PM

Good to hear from Mr. Dalton. Gald to see things are going well for him.

#9 marktmurphy

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Posted 24 April 2006 - 08:23 PM

Yet, despite the wildcat eyes that made Dalton a ruthlessly unblinking James Bond, there's not a whiff of danger about this well-preserved 62-year-old as he peers over avuncular spectacles in an achingly trendy London restaurant and leans chummily forward to make a point in the rolling Welsh vowels of his Colwyn Bay birthplace.


Odd for a man who moved to (at the age of four) and grew up in Derbyshire to have a Welsh accent, I find.

#10 Stuff_My_Orders

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Posted 24 April 2006 - 08:41 PM

I actually think it was good for Bond to avoid the cheesy sexscenes...I think the Pierce Brosnan-movies could have skipped the feministview if they would have stuck with Daltons Bond (wich was the best).

#11 ACE

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Posted 24 April 2006 - 08:47 PM

Tim, you the man! I love the way he phrases things and has this sublime-to-ridiculous career. He's the British John Travolta, pre-Pulp Fiction. Someone's got to rediscover him. Guy Ritchie, make a kick-:tup: gangster flick and put Dalton in it.

#12 Qwerty

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Posted 24 April 2006 - 09:13 PM

Guy Ritchie, make a kick-:tup: gangster flick and put Dalton in it.


:D

#13 The Girl With The Golden Gun

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Posted 24 April 2006 - 09:27 PM

Is it just me, or is it nice to know that Dalton enjoys Little Britain and Man Stoke Woman as much as the rest of us?? I love these programmes, and think that it's great to know that Tim does too! lol. Nice to past Bond actors watch ordinary tv! :tup:

#14 Head of S

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Posted 24 April 2006 - 09:43 PM

Is it just me, or is it nice to know that Dalton enjoys Little Britain and Man Stoke Woman as much as the rest of us?? I love these programmes, and think that it's great to know that Tim does too! lol. Nice to past Bond actors watch ordinary tv! :tup:


I'm looking forward to seeing him in Hot Fuzz, alongside Edward 'The Equalizer' Woodward and scored by David 'Little Britain' Arnold.

#15 Lady Rose

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Posted 24 April 2006 - 10:05 PM

Tim, you the man! I love the way he phrases things and has this sublime-to-ridiculous career. He's the British John Travolta, pre-Pulp Fiction. Someone's got to rediscover him. Guy Ritchie, make a kick-:tup: gangster flick and put Dalton in it.


Splendid take on the situation Ace. He is definitely in line for a huge rediscovery ! What I love about TD is that he can't take himself as seriously as people think. Yes, I think he is professional but some of his movie choices have been so bizarre that he cant possibly be that serious.

I can just see him in a British Ganster movie. He would have been excellent in Sexy Beast or Layer Cake. If you want Guy Ritchie though, lets hope its more Lock Stock than Revolver!!! :D

Lets see were Hot Fuzz takes him ...

Edited by Lady Rose, 24 April 2006 - 10:05 PM.


#16 TheSaint

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Posted 25 April 2006 - 12:48 AM

Topics merged.

#17 marktmurphy

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Posted 25 April 2006 - 08:35 AM

Nice to past Bond actors watch ordinary tv! :tup:


Don't forget Roger likes The Bill and Paul O'Grady (oh; he's on O'Grady's show again soon).

#18 Piz Gloria 1969

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Posted 26 April 2006 - 12:14 AM

It's great that he values his privacy even though he's a public figure *thumbs up*

#19 Dalton's Wendy

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Posted 27 April 2006 - 05:08 PM

Odd for a man who moved to (at the age of four) and grew up in Derbyshire to have a Welsh accent, I find.

I thought that was slightly bizarre, as well, marktmurphy.

Another glaring error, one which relates to the silly argument over whether Mr.Dalton's year of birth was 1944 or 1946:

In the second line of the third paragraph, Dalton is referred to as a "62- year-old."

However, the author contradicts herself in the fifth paragraph, when she refers to the star as "the 20-year-old who played opposite Katharine Hepburn in his first ever film role as the crafty young King of France in The Lion In Winter."

Well . . . The Lion in Winter was released in 1968, so, according to the author of the quoted article, that would have made Dalton 24 at the time . . . Hmmmm . . .