Taranaki Daily News

A kind of magic playing Freddie

Rami Malek had a fight or flight moment when he was asked to play the iconic Queen frontman. Stephanie Bunbury reports.

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There will never be anyone quite like Freddie Mercury, the unbottled genie who strutted, bounced and roared at the front of rock group Queen from 1970 until he died of Aids-related bronchopne­umonia in 1991.

Playing him in a biopic, especially one as illstarred as Bohemian Rhapsody, was always going to be close to impossible.

‘‘It’s an extraordin­ary, iconic human being who is a one-off, which would be seen by any reasonable human being as a daunting task,’’ agrees Rami Malek. ‘‘I guess essentiall­y it begins with: ‘Do I or don’t I?’ There is that fight or flight moment. I chose to fight.’’

Malek was filming a remake of Papillon with Charlie Hunnam in 2016 when he heard the producers of Bohemian Rhapsody were once again looking for their Freddie.

Already, the film had been years in the coming. Back in 2010, Sacha Baron Cohen was locked in to play the role. But after he left in a storm of ‘‘artistic difference­s’’ with surviving band members Brian May and Roger Taylor, Ben Whishaw became top choice for the band and the director, Dexter Fletcher.

In 2014, Fletcher left; Whishaw said there were issues with Peter Morgan’s script and it was ‘‘on the back burner’’ before he also faded from view. At that time, it’s probably safe to say an EgyptianAm­erican actor called Rami Malek hadn’t sprung to anyone’s mind.

Two years later, however, Malek was nominated for numerous awards, winning several, for his work in the TV series Mr Robot. Like Farrokh Bulsara, whose Parsee family went to Britain from Zanzibar, Malek came from a faraway minority culture. Also like Farrokh he was ferociousl­y determined.

He made a tape of himself as Freddie in his full performing pomp and sent it to the producers in London. At that stage, Bohemian Rhapsody had been on the table for more than six years.

He made pre-recordings at Abbey Road that could be mingled with the originals; meanwhile, knowing Mercury had four extra back teeth that pushed his front teeth forward, he persuaded the makeup artist on Papillon to make him a false set that would sit over his own.

‘‘I just had to get the ball rolling by getting myself to London, flying myself out, to let them know how passionate I was.’’

The light finally turned green for Bohemian Rhapsody in November 2016 when Bryan Singer, director of The Usual Suspects and originator and director of four of the X-Men films, came on board. Malek was confirmed in the role.

There was also a completely revised script by The Theory of Everything writer, New Zealander Anthony McCarten and, crucially for a musical biopic, they had the songs. Killer Queen, Another One Bites the Dust, I Want to Break Free: Queen songs played all day on the set.

‘‘The music is timeless. One thing I thought before we started was that we needed to make a film that would live up to it.’’

It is hard to overstate Queen’s rock’n’roll hugeness. Guitarist Brian May and drummer Roger Taylor were students in a band called Smile; Taylor ran a second-hand clothes stall in Kensington Market with Freddie Bulsara.

They joined forces in 1970 and settled on the name Queen; bass player John Deacon joined in early 1971. Two years later, they started recording; by 1974 they hit the top 10.

Then came 1975 and the smash hit that changed radio programmin­g, pop videos and all convention­al wisdom about what rock fans wanted: Bohemian Rhapsody, a six-minute song spanning several musical genres that was No 1 in England for nine weeks.

In 1976, a Queen concert in Hyde Park broke attendance records; in 1985, they stole the show at Live Aid and broke the world attendance record again at a festival in Brazil, playing to 300,000

‘‘I just had to get to London to let them know how passionate I was.’’

Rami Malek

people. Gold and platinum records plastered their walls; in 2006, an exhaustive assessment of the industry establishe­d that Queen’s Greatest Hits was Britain’s best-selling album of all time.

May has been actively involved in every aspect of production. Lucy Boynton, who plays Mary, Mercury’s wife in his uncertain youth and lifelong best friend, says May was on set every day.

‘‘Which was reassuring,’’ she says, ‘‘because I always get slightly nervous about biopics, not wanting to become intrusive in any way.

‘‘People are asking: did we explore the darker sides of Freddie’s life in this film? The film doesn’t shy away from anything, but it’s done in a really beautiful, respectful way.’’

With director, cast and an almost familyfrie­ndly script in place, Bohemian Rhapsody’s troubles were not over. Since 1997, director Singer had been dogged by accusation­s of serious sexual abuse; he also had a reputation for unannounce­d disappeara­nces and friction with actors.

Once shooting began, he soon clashed with the perfection­ist Malek, throwing a plate at him during one argument. When he repeatedly failed to show up on set, Malek formally complained about his lack of profession­alism.

In December last year, Singer was sacked. His

replacemen­t was Fletcher, who had left three years before. ‘‘It was difficult,’’ says Boynton. ‘‘But I think you become closer and work harder when things get difficult.’’

Malek concentrat­ed on channellin­g Mercury. ‘‘I think Freddie was very aware of being unlike the people around him,’’ he says. ‘‘There is the sense that Queen was catapulted to fame but, learning about him, you see the drive he had to get to where he was.

‘‘He taught himself to play the piano. He didn’t have any vocal instructio­n, yet he could sing those four octaves. He is constantly pushing himself to defy any expectatio­n of who he was. It became easier when he found that that bravado was not just a facade, but something he had in him.’’

That defiant sense of mission is certainly there in Malek’s exact re-creation of Mercury’s showstoppi­ng turn at Live Aid in 1985, which is the climax and grand finale of the film.

‘‘We wanted to get as close to the on-the-day performanc­e as possible,’’ says Malek. Freddie knew then that he was HIV-positive; every song is a triumphant blow-back against death. Bohemian Rhapsody is in cinemas now

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 ??  ?? Rami Malek as Freddie Mercury and Gwilym Lee as Brian May. Malek believes coming from a minority culture was his ‘‘way in’’ to gaining the role.
Rami Malek as Freddie Mercury and Gwilym Lee as Brian May. Malek believes coming from a minority culture was his ‘‘way in’’ to gaining the role.

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