Vancouver Sun

Banderas paints a portrait of Picasso

Latino heartthrob looking for authentici­ty in his life, art

- JULIA LLEWELLYN SMITH

Genius New season debuts Tuesday, National Geographic Canada Something interestin­g is going on with Antonio Banderas. Formerly one half of one of Hollywood’s strongest marriages, the Spanish actor split from Melanie Griffith three years ago and has since left Beverly Hills, relocated to Surrey, U.K., and shed his Hollywood image.

Instead of playing Latino heartthrob­s, voicing characters like Puss in Boots in the Shrek films, or starring in action films such as The Expendable­s 3, he has taken roles in several Spanish-language and Hispanic-themed films — parts that seem to hark back to his preHollywo­od days, when he became a muse to art-house director Pedro Almodovar in Madrid. “I was detaching myself from a character I had created that was not me,” he has said of this recent shift.

And now the 57-year-old is tackling one of the meatiest roles of his career, as Pablo Picasso in the second season of National Geographic’s acclaimed Genius series, the first of which focused on Einstein.

He portrays Picasso from his 40s to his death at age 91 in 1973, during which time he was exiled from Spain and painted his masterpiec­e Guernica. The show debuts Tuesday on National Geographic Canada before moving to its Sunday time slot on April 29.

Playing the towering artist brings, Banderas says, “excitement mixed with responsibi­lity,” not least since both men are natives of Malaga, Andalucia.

“I was born two blocks from where Picasso was born and when my mom was taking me to school we always saw the plaque saying he was born in this house,” Banderas says. “We were living under a fascist dictatorsh­ip and didn’t have too many heroes, so he became a huge figure for me very early in my life.”

Although Banderas travels constantly, since his divorce, his main residence is in Cobham, where he lives in a modernist house with his new girlfriend, Nicole Kimpel, a 37-year-old Dutch investment banker.

“I live in the countrysid­e because I can ride there. I do my own things and I am not bothered by anybody except foxes,” he says.

Three years ago he enrolled in a fashion design course, presumably to hone his menswear line (he already successful­ly flogs his own accessorie­s and scent lines), which he launched a couple of years ago.

Did his newly acquired skills help his portrayal of Picasso?

“I tried to re-create three or four of his paintings to prepare. Not because I wanted to become a painter but to get familiar with the tools I would use filming.”

He also read widely about the artist. “He’s not an easy character. There are a number of mysteries attached to his life. There are as many Picassos as there are people talking about him, it depends how their life with Picasso was, you have one Picasso or another. He was much more reserved than other artists like Dali, who were very out there, so you have to read between the lines.”

In the wake of #MeToo, one challenge has been how to portray Picasso’s Lothario reputation. The artist had affairs with scores of women. Two of his lovers killed themselves, while two went mad. “Women are machines for suffering,” Picasso told one mistress, adding: “For me there are only two kinds of women: goddesses and doormats.”

Yet Banderas refuses to buy into a simplistic reading of Picasso as a misogynist. “I don’t know if he treated women badly or people in general, or if he was misinterpr­eted in central moments of his life. With many of the women that talk badly about Picasso, the relationsh­ip didn’t work in the way they probably thought it would — so that’s kind of normal.

“What I discovered about Picasso was that he was tremendous­ly honest and sincere when he talked and that can be painful. There were some relationsh­ips that were not pleasant, but it is not recorded that he had any physical violence against women.”

Last year, Banderas expressed his support for his friend Salma Hayek, after she claimed to have been harassed by disgraced mogul Harvey Weinstein. Now, however, Banderas won’t discuss either the Weinstein affair or the historic abuse allegation­s that have since surfaced concerning director Woody Allen, with whom he worked on the film You Will Meet a Tall Dark Stranger.

“These cases belong to a pattern of behaviour which has been carried out for millennia,” he says firmly. “But I wouldn’t like to be very specific about specific people. I think that’s unfair because I don’t have all the data.”

His refusal to join the swell of voices denouncing “inappropri­ate” behaviour stems from growing up under a fascist dictatorsh­ip, which many outsiders assumed all Spaniards supported. “People saying ‘This person is guilty of this’ is against my principles,” Banderas says. “I was born in a country in which you were guilty from the moment you were born just for being part of that country.

“When Franco died, I was doing theatre and I remember running in front of the police and fighting for our first democratic government to prove the fact that we were innocent until proven guilty.

“So I don’t want to make that mistake, I don’t want to point a finger. I pay my taxes to have judges and policemen put the facts together and make a decision.”

He’s not an easy character. There are a number of mysteries attached to his life.

 ?? PHOTOS: NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC ?? Actor Antonio Banderas says taking on the challengin­g role of Pablo Picasso is part of his personal and profession­al metamorpho­sis.
PHOTOS: NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC Actor Antonio Banderas says taking on the challengin­g role of Pablo Picasso is part of his personal and profession­al metamorpho­sis.
 ??  ?? “I tried to re-create three or four of his paintings to prepare,” Antonio Banderas said of his upcoming portrayal of Picasso.
“I tried to re-create three or four of his paintings to prepare,” Antonio Banderas said of his upcoming portrayal of Picasso.

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