Los Angeles Times

Newcomer Fionn Whitehead storms ashore

- By Josh Rottenberg josh.rottenberg@latimes.com

A year and a half ago, Fionn Whitehead was an unknown aspiring actor working in a coffee shop in the Waterloo district of London. On his off hours, he’d go in for every audition he could, hoping to catch a break that would free him, he says, from “washing dishes and taking orders from angry businessme­n.”

Then one day Whitehead went in to read for a part in director Christophe­r Nolan’s World War II thriller, “Dunkirk,” and — if you’ll forgive the Hollywood cliché, which happens to be true here — everything changed.

Arriving in theaters on July 21, “Dunkirk” recounts the harrowing story of the evacuation of nearly 400,000 British and Allied soldiers from the beaches of Dunkirk, France, where they were surrounded and under heavy fire from German forces in spring 1940. Chroniclin­g a pivotal moment in the war — albeit one unfamiliar to many Americans — the film plays out on an epic scale on land, sea and air and features such boldfaced British names as Tom Hardy, Kenneth Branagh, Mark Rylance and, in his first film role, pop star Harry Styles.

But it is Whitehead, as a teenage soldier named Tommy, who serves as the audience’s eyes and ears and gives the sweeping story its emotional center of gravity.

“You kind of experience this world through him,” the 20-year-old Whitehead — whose only previous credit is a 2016 British miniseries called “Him” — explained by phone from his home in London. “These young and inexperien­ced soldiers are thrown into this dire, brutal situation, and you follow Tommy on this journey as he tries to get home.”

Throughout the months of auditionin­g, Whitehead didn’t know much at all about “Dunkirk” beyond the title and general subject matter. As with Nolan’s previous films, which include the “Dark Knight” trilogy, “Inception” and “Interstell­ar,” details about the project were kept tightly under wraps.

“Everyone was going in blind,” said Whitehead. “No one knew how many characters there were, who the characters were, how old they were, the plot, anything. It was very, very secretive.”

It was only when Whitehead was finally offered the role that he learned that he wouldn’t merely have a handful of lines but would, in fact, be the film’s main protagonis­t. “That was when my jaw hit the ground and I got the nervous sweats,” said the actor, who immediatel­y threw himself into reading firsthand accounts of soldiers who’d survived the ordeal.

Nolan says he’d been impressed with Whitehead from the first time he saw him. “There’s a naturalnes­s and a genuinenes­s to the way Fionn performs that’s extraordin­ary,” said the director, who also wrote the screenplay for “Dunkirk.” “He’s got a very charismati­c presence. He reminds me of a young Tom Courtenay.”

In the wake of “Dunkirk,” Whitehead will next be seen opposite Emma Thompson and Stanley Tucci in the drama “The Children Act,” an adaptation of an Ian McEwan novel that will hit theaters this year. Beyond that, he says, he has no real career plan and is just taking things as they come. Having caught a glimpse of the extremes of fame working alongside Styles, with screaming One Direction fans waiting outside his hotel, he’d like to hold on as long as he can to some of the anonymity he had back when he was serving those angry businessme­n their coffee.

“I like to think I’m fairly grounded, and I have friends who will very happily tell me if I’m ever being big-headed,” Whitehead said. “I know things will change. But I’m hoping it’s nothing too drastic.”

 ?? Lorenzo Agius ?? FIONN WHITEHEAD unexpected­ly found himself in a lead role in the World War II film “Dunkirk.”
Lorenzo Agius FIONN WHITEHEAD unexpected­ly found himself in a lead role in the World War II film “Dunkirk.”

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