Montreal Gazette

ACTOR NOT TAKEN FOR GRANTED

Vikings star Standen takes action role after reconsider­ing

- BILL BRIOUX The Canadian Press

It’s a long way from Holywood to Hollywood North. Just ask Clive Standen.

The 35-year-old actor was born in Holywood, Northern Ireland, and for the past four seasons has starred as Rollo in History Channel’s Canada-Ireland co-production, Vikings.

“After doing the 50 hours we’ve filmed so far, I feel like I’ve become a useless almanac of Viking knowledge,” said the London Academy of Music and Dramatic Art grad. “I’d be the best person to have on your team if you’re doing a Vikings pub quiz.”

Vikings shoots in Ireland. Looking for new worlds to conquer, Standen traded in his swords for a suit and tie in Toronto (or Hollywood North, as it’s called) as the lead on the new action drama Taken, which premieres Monday on NBC and Global.

Standen stars as former Green Beret Bryan Mills, a younger version of the character Liam Neeson played in the Taken movies. A personal tragedy drives Mills into a career as a deadly CIA operative. Jennifer Beals plays Mills’s intelligen­ce agency boss. French writerdire­ctor Luc Besson, who created the film trilogy, stays involved as an executive producer.

The role calls for Standen to adopt an American accent, a skill he’s a little rusty at, he said. Helping was growing up “on a steady diet of American films.”

Speaking in Pasadena, Calif., at the Taken media launch last month, Standen said he nearly missed out on the series.

“It’s full of car chases and explosions,” he recalled saying as he ignored the script he was sent. “It’s not really my cup of tea.”

That’s a shame, said his agent, who mentioned the pilot was written by Alexander Cary, a Gulf War veteran and later a writer and producer on Homeland. Standen immediatel­y excused himself, went home, and read the script.

“It was phenomenal,” he said. “What I find interestin­g about Bryan Mills is he’s not like any other action hero.”

What Standen likes about Mills is that he is more Clark Kent than Superman. “You want him to succeed, and when he trips and fails and falls down, you want him to get back up.”

He becomes more of a Superman later in life, in the Taken film trilogy.

“I’ve got no interest in playing Liam Neeson’s character in the film,” Standen said. “He’s the finished product. He’s this man with a particular set of skills. This is about how he acquires them, and I think it’s going to be a roller-coaster of a ride with lots of ebbs and flows and twists and turns.”

Shooting in and around Toronto this winter was challengin­g at times, said Standen, especially one night shoot in Orangevill­e, Ont., north of Toronto, during an ice storm.

“We had a big helicopter stunt the first day,” he said, “and they couldn’t even get the helicopter up because the propellers were freezing.”

Standen said the ice felt like “sharp rain in the face.” He envied the crew “all warm in their parkas.” It wasn’t all bad, however. “When we finished at 8 o’clock in the morning, everything looked like it was made of glass. It was the most beautiful thing I’d ever seen.”

Standen said he’s taken his lumps so far this season: “Every day, it’s me getting my ass kicked.”

He smiles when he says it, though.

 ??  ?? Clive Standen
Clive Standen

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