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Working-class hero

Never TARON mind EGERTON’S green tights. Robin Hood is a leather-clad ANTI-CAPITALIST crusader. Here, he tells Hermione Eyre what a boy from small-town Wales needs to become the big screen’s HOTTEST male lead: next-level archery skills and ELTON JOHN’S di

- Photograph­s by Lorenzo Agius

As a rebooted Robin Hood, Taron Egerton swaps green tights for tight leather. Hermione Eyre meets the big screen’s hottest new male lead

Douglas Fairbanks, Errol Flynn, Kevin Costner, Russell Crowe, Taron Egerton. All superb Robin Hoods, in very different ways. Egerton, who is about to join their roll call with his gritty new Robin, in a film produced by Leonardo Dicaprio, does not wear Lincoln green, or go riding through the glen. ‘He doesn’t slap thighs,’ grins Egerton. His Robin is more like an anti-capitalist protester, a hoodie-wearing corruption fighter with a multicultu­ral team of Merry Men. And a kick-ass Maid Marian, of course, in Eve Hewson – who just happens to be Bono’s daughter.

‘It’s high octane and it’s fast and edgy,’ says Egerton, whose fingers are still calloused from all the arrow action. He learnt how to perform next-level archery. ‘I’d be holding up to five arrows in one hand,’ he says, adding that he’d be firing them while leaping through the air. Pretty impressive stuff.

Directed by Otto Bathurst, of Peaky Blinders fame, and filmed in Dubrovnik, this all-new Robin Hood transforms Sherwood into what Egerton describes as a ‘hotchpotch world where there are different skin colours and different voices’. Supporting actors Jamie Foxx and Jamie Dornan keep their own accents, southern American and Irish respective­ly. ‘It’s what we did to very consciousl­y establish a non-period universe. There’s scenes at the beginning, set during the Crusades, that feel so frenetic they could almost be from a documentar­y today in Helmand,’ he says.

‘The elements of modernity were what I thought was really cool about it. That, and the fact that Robin isn’t simply an action hero. He’s vulnerable. More than anything, I wanted my Robin to be real. He’s charming but he’s a frightened little boy as well.’

Relatable, likeable, funny, oh, and hot – Egerton, 29, carries the movie with ease. Despite having graduated from Rada on a seeming fast-track to fame, he is still finding his way out of the chrysalis, still blinking at his new-found success, surprised that designers such as Giorgio Armani want to dress him for events. Still reeling, in fact, from meeting Mr Armani for the first time. ‘He grabbed me by the face and looked at me in the eyes for about 12 seconds,’ says Egerton. ‘Which doesn’t sound long but it was a long time. Then he just nodded. If I believed in spiritual experience­s, that would be one.’

During our interview, Egerton is impeccable – polite, charming, astute. Small (5ft 7in) and purposeful, he power-walks into the café on the dot of our agreed time, anonymous in a baseball cap, shorts and jumper. He gives me a hug and thanks me for speaking to him. He then orders a beer (‘I’m going to have a Friday-night drink, do you mind?’), before thoughtful­ly positionin­g himself with his back to the room so we aren’t interrupte­d by anyone asking him if he’s the guy from the Kingsman movies. He shows me the phone screensave­r of him and his girlfriend, Emily Thomas, beside a fish tank in Dubai. ‘That photo was taken by Nicholas Hoult. Hideous namedrop there.’

Thomas has just got back from shooting Wonder Woman 1984 in Spain. ‘She is third assistant director already, at only 25, on a $125 to $130-million movie,’ he says, proudly. Does she want to be a director? ‘Don’t know. She’d like to get into producing. She’s quite enigmatic, my girlfriend, which is probably why I like her.’ They met in 2014 on the set of Kingsman: The Secret Service. ‘I fancied her rotten,’ admits Egerton. ‘Obviously.’

He already has a whole franchise to his name, the daft, massively commercial­ly successful Kingsman films by English indie impresario Matthew Vaughn, in which he stars as heroic everyman trainee spy, Gary ‘Eggsy’ Unwin. ‘I was already into the comics by Mark Miller before the film, I swear!’ says Egerton. He appears in almost every scene of both Kingsman films, which have all the joie de vivre of Roger Moore-era Bond, and none of the pretentiou­s baggage the franchise later acquired. ‘Moore is my favourite Bond,’ says Egerton. ‘I think we borrowed more from him than any other.’

Egerton is almost too obvious a choice for the next Bond. And he ain’t that bothered anyway. ‘Because I made my name in a spy-thriller franchise, it holds less appeal,’ he admits. ‘Of course if Barbara Broccoli or whoever might be replacing her

‘More than anything, I wanted my Robin Hood to be real’

called, I would be honoured, but…’ When I offer him a choice of dream jobs, Hamlet at the National or Bond, he goes for Hamlet without missing a beat. ‘Without a doubt,’ he says. ‘I’d be thrilled and scared and wobbly to do Shakespear­e again, and that’s when you do your best work.’

As we’ve been chatting Egerton has been fidgeting; all excess energy, effortfull­y contained. Then I realise there is a problem with his baseball cap. Under it, he has an itchy secret. For a second, he lifts the cap, revealing the stubbly regrowth and – what, blue hair dye? – around his hairline, and shoots me a wide-eyed look that is pure, unadultera­ted Elton John. ‘I’m not meant to talk about this,’ he says, ‘but I am playing Elton in Rocketman, the film of his life.’

This is the authorised version of Elton’s early years, with producers including David Furnish and John himself. It’s a todie-for part, scripted by Lee Hall, directed by Dexter Fletcher, and co-starring Jamie Bell as Bernie Taupin. Egerton, who won the Stephen Sondheim Society Student Performer prize while at Rada, and voiced a soulful gorilla in the animated film Sing, is doing all the vocals himself. ‘I love to sing and I’ve loved his music since I was a kid,’ he says.

Does Elton come on set? ‘He comes in and out. David [Furnish] is in more. Emily and I spent a few nights at his house.’ The words are tumbling out – Egerton is so excited he can’t stop. ‘I sat by his lake and read his diaries from the 1970s. He gave me his first-ever diamond earrings, which I’m wearing in the film.’ He takes a breath. ‘It’s the happiest, profession­ally, that I’ve ever been.’

Egerton’s long-term collaborat­or Vaughn is also a producer on Rocketman. They are rarely parted: as well as the Kingsman films, they made Eddie the Eagle together too, another huge break for Egerton, who played the underdog 1980s British skijumper to perfection. ‘Matthew, he does my f—ing head in!’ he blurts out. ‘Yes, I will reluctantl­y say I love him with every fibre of me. He and I have spent the best part of the last five years together and I will never escape the feeling that I owe him everything, because I do.’

Beer number two – a Schiehalli­on – is ordered, along with one for me. ‘Try one! You will NOT regret it, these are delicious,’ urges Egerton. ‘It’s Scots and it’s made on the mountain.’ He is Celtic too, in part. His granny was Welsh, his parents from Liverpool. ‘My mum and dad separated when I was three,’ he says. He tries to make light of it, putting on a self-mocking professori­al voice as he adds: ‘That, of course, is for any child unpleasant but I don’t believe acutely detrimenta­l to a child’s upbringing.’ Was it a happy childhood? He snaps back to his usual blokey sincerity, ‘the best’.

Egerton grew up on the isle of Anglesey, where his mother Christine studied for a first-class honours degree in psychology while raising him single-handedly. She worked as a social worker. He was an only child, and they were devoted to one another. ‘She’s a really amazing person,’ he says. ‘When you spend so many years, just a mother and son alone going through funny times and difficulty paying the rent, you become very, very close. I’d be lost without her. I have a good relationsh­ip with my dad, too.’

When he was 19 his mother ‘started again’ with his stepdad and he now has two half-sisters, aged five and eight. ‘We never had any money when I was growing up, but I never wanted for anything,’ he says. ‘It was very normal. I had a Playstatio­n 2 when I was 11, we’re not talking poverty here.’

When he was 12 they moved to Aberystwyt­h to be with his maternal granny, who had motor neurone disease and was dying. He now does his bit as an ambassador of the MND Associatio­n. ‘I had my share of pre-teen anxieties, I didn’t know anyone and I had a few years of feeling quite isolated,’ he says. ‘But then around 15 I made a group of school friends and you could not wish for better friends. They’re my boys, they give me a compass. We meet up about every six weeks, go to gigs. Emily loves it. We travel back a lot in a camper van. When I drive along the M4 my shoulders just relax, I have a sense of peace and home.’

At his comprehens­ive school he sang in choir and musicals and when he decided to audition for drama schools in London, the whole family chipped in. ‘They cost 50 quid each, and my dad paid for one, and my mum paid for one and my auntie paid for one. I stayed with my stepdad at a youth hostel in Piccadilly and my mum got us tickets for Spamalot.’ His years at Rada were supported by the Academy’s network of private benefactor­s. ‘Our joint income in my family was less than £30K, which

‘Mr Armani grabbed my face and looked me in the eye for 12 seconds. Then he nodded’

 ??  ??
 ??  ?? Left As a young Elton John in Rocketman
Left As a young Elton John in Rocketman
 ??  ?? As ‘Eggsy’ in Kingsman: The Golden Circle
As ‘Eggsy’ in Kingsman: The Golden Circle
 ??  ?? Egerton as the eponymous hero in Robin Hood
Egerton as the eponymous hero in Robin Hood
 ??  ?? Egerton wears: trench coat, £2,000, sweater, £860, and chinos, £630, all Giorgio Armani (armani.com)
Egerton wears: trench coat, £2,000, sweater, £860, and chinos, £630, all Giorgio Armani (armani.com)

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