Cynon Valley

Maybe I need to wear jeans and shave my head for the next role...

Poldark’s Aidan Turner had to think twice before starring in another period drama, but he tells GEORGIA HUMPHREYS why he couldn’t turn down the chance to play legendary artist Leonardo da Vinci

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NEARLY two years after the much-adored historical series Poldark came to an end, Aidan Turner is finally back on our screens. And the Irishman, 37, admits he did question whether he should take on Leonardo – another period drama – as his next project.

“I do hear what you’re saying: maybe I need to wear a pair of jeans and shave my head for the next role. Note taken,” quips the charismati­c actor, chuckling.

But a mysterious and passionate retelling of the life of one of history’s greatest artists – set against the backdrop of Renaissanc­e Italy – was a project he just couldn’t turn down.

“In a way, if it wasn’t Leonardo da Vinci, I probably wouldn’t [have taken the role],” continues The Hobbit star.

“As actors, sometimes we feel – certainly I do – ‘If I pass on this, will I watch this in a year’s time with some other actor playing it, and wish I had done it?’ And I kept feeling that.”

An eight-part series launching on Amazon Prime Video, Leonardo explores what made the Renaissanc­e painter, architect, and inventor famous.

Showing the secrets and drama behind his unparallel­ed genius, each episode focuses on a different Da Vinci painting, and reveals the story behind it (some of these works are rooted in collective memory, others are less known to the general public).

Aidan confides he found the idea of playing the artist “initially quite terrifying”.

“What eased me into the idea of playing him was the script. It focused, almost immediatel­y, on ‘Let’s try to uncover who this person was’.

“We already know who the artist is, we know his great works, we know his works as a philosophe­r and as an engineer, anatomist, botanist – it goes on. But who was he behind all that? Who was he at the core? What motivated him as an artist, as a person? What were his vulnerabil­ities?”

The story focuses a lot on Da Vinci’s very unorthodox upbringing with his grandparen­ts, and how that may have influenced him.

Interestin­gly, the drama also explores the pioneer’s sexual orientatio­n, portraying his relationsh­ips with men.

Starring alongside Aidan as Leonardo’s “muse” Caterina da Cremona is Matilda De Angelis, who many will recognise from one of the biggest TV events of last year, HBO series The Undoing.

The Italian actress, 25, says it was the passion that director Daniel Percival had about the character and the story – which weaves in a murder mystery – that initially drew her to the role. “I really like the thriller part of it,” she explains. “It was important to add something a bit spicy to the story, and the thriller part is so clever and so interestin­g. “And the relationsh­ip between them was also very beautiful and pure, and I’m a romantic person so I like this kind of impossible relationsh­ip.” When it came to research for the role, Aidan had an experience “that

just felt really special. It felt like, ‘This shouldn’t have happened’.”

It was the chance to visit the Louvre Museum in Paris, and have a private viewing of Da Vinci’s work, which includes the iconic Mona Lisa.

“I got to spend a couple of hours with his paintings on my own and it was extraordin­ary.

“I mean, there are so many things that strike you. One is just the physicalit­y of it; we’re so used to seeing his paintings on the screen, on an iPad, in an encyclopae­dia, in a magazine, newspaper, television. You see them up close, its scale... Some of them are huge!

“Then you get close and you think, ‘How kind has 400, 500 years been to these paintings?’ And it seems incredibly so.

“The detail... They’re like high-definition photograph­s. You get as close as you can safely get to the painting, which is close enough, and it’s just perfect.

“They’re perfectly preserved, they’re perfectly executed.”

Aidan read biographie­s as part of his preparatio­n, too (he recommends one by Charles Nicholl, which focuses on the artist’s early life, in particular).

Plus, there were workshops on set, which saw the star witness real-life painters replicatin­g Da Vinci’s work – and then he would have to try to do it himself.

So, just how good is Aidan with a paintbrush?

“I don’t know if ‘good’ is the right thing; I’m brave,” he says, laughing.

“Leonardo worked very slowly, because his work was very precise work, obviously. So, as an actor on set, you can’t make any huge mistakes, when you’re working a very fine brush – you can almost count the bristles on it – and you’re applying a small amount of paint.”

It is, of course, not the first time Aidan has played a painter. He was Dante Gabriel Rossetti inin the 2009 BBC series Desperate Romantics. On that production, he would use a varnish over the paint, to allow for mistakes, but it was different for Leonardo.

“We didn’t have that luxury. We were quite authentic; we would use pigments and apply the paint. So, yeah – no room for error!”

One of the interestin­g ideas about Da Vinci is how obsessed he was with attaining perfection.

Nowadays, with social media a part of our everyday lives, there’s an argument to be had that there is even more pressure on us as humans to be perfect.

“It’s not something that I’m interested in,” suggests Matilda. “I think perfection, it’s rather boring and it doesn’t exist.

“I think Leonardo da Vinci’s portraits are perfect. But perfection, for me, is not something that I look for.”

Aidan, however, seems to have trouble with the suggestion that Leonardo was a perfection­ist.

“I think he was an incredible observer, and it was important for him to observe nature and the way he saw it and try to replicate that on a canvas, or a sculpture, or whatever it might be,” he notes. “And he always talked about in his writing how difficult that was – the fingerprin­t of God and how impossible it is to emulate something like this.

“So, he always knew he wouldn’t even get close, but his idea was to get as close as he possibly could.”

As for the topic of social media, the actor says: “There are only so many people who can get into a gallery to see a piece of work, or to have it with them.

“And these days, there’s Instagram for an artist, and your work is judged on a global level immediatel­y. It’s difficult.”

“I personally don’t do social media,” he adds matter-of-factly.

“Being judged by people I don’t know isn’t something I’m very interested in.”

I don’t know if I’d say I’m good with a paintbrush... I’m brave

Leonardo star Aidan Turner

■ Leonardo launches on Amazon Prime Video on Friday

 ??  ?? Down to a fine art: Aidan Turner as Leonardo da Vinci
Down to a fine art: Aidan Turner as Leonardo da Vinci
 ??  ?? Matilda appeared in Sky Atlantic hit The Undoing
Matilda appeared in Sky Atlantic hit The Undoing
 ??  ?? Aidan and Matilda in Leonardo
Aidan and Matilda in Leonardo
 ??  ??
 ??  ?? Last Supper club: Aidan as Leonardo da Vinci (centre), with Matilda De Angelis as Caterina de Cremona (left) and Freddie Highmore as Stefano Giraldi (right)
Last Supper club: Aidan as Leonardo da Vinci (centre), with Matilda De Angelis as Caterina de Cremona (left) and Freddie Highmore as Stefano Giraldi (right)
 ??  ?? Aidan in Poldark
Aidan in Poldark

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