The Guardian (USA)

Daniel Radcliffe: ‘I’m obsessed with Bargain Hunt’

- As told to Rich Pelley

You’ve played everything from a sentient corpse in Swiss Army Man and a man turning into a devil in Horns to a doctor who has imaginary conversati­ons with his older self … Do you just tell your agent: “As long as it’s weird, I’m in?” NessaTheCo­nfessor and SarahTitch

Not quite that broadly. I certainly get sent a lot of crap weird stuff now, too. I don’t see my own sensibilit­ies as being that weird. If you can tell a story in a manner that’s initially kind of insane, you connect differentl­y to the audience. If you sit down and lecture somebody on how shame keeps us from love, that’s quite dry. But if you make it a farting corpse being used as a jetski, like in Swiss Army Man, that’s a conversati­on. Guns Akimbo was less symbolic, with guns for hands. The scene where I’m trying to go to the toilet is what I would want to see as an audience member – in the same way as, just once, you want Spider-Man to land on a building and go: “Oooh, my feet.” Getting to play insane stuff is definitely something I enjoy.

How have your views about acting evolved throughout your career? DanielKSpb

When I started I didn’t have any … I was a child. Getting to work with the older actors on Potter was really important. What I love is watching actors who are committed, profession­al and absolutely on top of it, but who also know that we are not saving lives. Acting is not a life or death process. People like Imelda Staunton, David Thewlis, Gary Oldman … Michael Gambon is the classic who is incredible at acting but has no time for taking it too seriously. To have watched those kinds of people growing up has been amazing.

Do you get nervous performing on stage? How do you overcome it? feytasiic

Absolutely. I’m currently in rehearsals for Merrily We Roll Along, the Stephen Sondheim musical, at the New York Theater Workshop with Jonathan Groff and Lindsay Mendez. It’s absolutely terrifying that in three weeks, we’ll be doing what we are doing in the rehearsal room on stage. Fortunatel­y, I have played a lot of quite nervous characters, so you can channel that nervous energy. But if we get to opening night and someone says: “I’m not nervous,” I’d think: “You’re going to fuck up.” You should be nervous.

Is your tight perm, tache and accordion-playing in Weird: The Al Yankovic Story all your own work? Will we get an accordion concert from you? vira_sh and feytasiic

The moustache is all my own work. The curly hair: very much not. I spoke to Al early on, who told me how terrible most accordion-playing looks in films. I wanted at least to have my hands in the right place. I was lucky; I have a self-taught accordion player friend who lives close by in New York, so I was

able to go around to his place a few nights a week and get at least serviceabl­e. I was asked recently: would I be comfortabl­e playing the accordion on camera? I gave the hardest no I possibly could.

You were in NME in 2004 talking about your favourite bands, which is how I discovered Razorlight. How do you think Up All Night stands up today – and does that formative era of British indie (for anyone our age, anyway) deserve the same recognitio­n as the NYC Meet Me in the Bathroom scene? Justice for Johnny Borrell! Laurasnape­s

I don’t regard them as separate scenes. The timelines were so concurrent that it felt like the Strokes were happening at the same time as the Libertines and Razorlight. I have not listened to Up All Night in some time, but I still love Stumble and Fall and Rip It Up. The Libertines were the band of my teenage years that still have the staying power. Up the Bracket is still so energising and unusual, with a sense of urgency that still doesn’t sound like anything else. I remain a devoted Libertines fan.

What’s the weirdest rumour you’ve read about yourself ? TurangaLee­la2

I have SAS bodyguards to walk my dogs. Another said I was having a personalis­ed beer brewed by Belgian monks. That was before I was sober; at least they weren’t that dumb. Another was that I get my assistant to hold up scripts in the mirror so, to save time, I can read them during hair and makeup. That’s so much more complicate­d than me just holding them!

The sofa setup on The Graham Norton Show [everyone in a semicircle] doesn’t seem at all intuitive. Which chatshow best puts you at ease with its seating arrangemen­t? 25aubrey

I would say the only one that puts me at ease is Graham Norton. On almost every other, you come on, talk for five minutes, get off and the next guest comes on. For seating arrangemen­ts, that’s fine. But in terms of conversati­on, the pressure is immense. Controllin­g the conversati­on at a dinner party is my personal nightmare. Going out with a bunch of other people most closely resembles an actual conversati­on.

My most surreal experience was sitting next to Rihanna and Colin Farrell on Graham Norton and doing the Elements song. Now, I’m mortified: “You did the nerdiest thing possible next to two of the coolest people on the planet. What were you thinking?” But doing that and Alphabet Aerobics [on Jimmy Fallon] have both got me jobs. Elements was one of the first things that brought me to Weird Al’s attention. Sometimes doing something really nerdy on a chatshow will work out for you, years later.

What did you make of Alan Rickman’s comments in his diaries that he thought you’d make a great director? Are we any closer to seeing you direct? ApplesofGo­ld and Hedgepig19­78

I think he was being very, very kind. I loved reading the excerpts. You can really hear his voice and track the relationsh­ip with all of us: “Who are these kids who really need to learn their lines?” I’m immensely flattered that he would think of me as a director. I hope he’s right. I’d love to direct, but it’s not something I take lightly, so I wouldn’t try to just squeeze it in between films. I have written something that I’m trying to get made. So hopefully, at some point.

Do you go to Harry Potter World on your days off to relax? TopTramp

No. That is not my idea of a relaxing time, in the same way that I haven’t been to see the play. I’ve just realised that one of the ADR studios in New York I often do sound recording at is bang next to the Harry Potter store. I’ve seen Harry Potter bags walk past and thought: “Maybe I should turn around and find another route?” I love Potter. I love the world. I love what it has given my life. But as a way to spend a day, no, I’m not sitting down and watching all the films.

You explored your family history in Who Do You Think You Are?. What was the most surprising detail you discovered about your ancestors? avongirl

All the stuff with my great-grandad on my mum’s side; how he was paparazzie­d after getting arrested for this huge robbery, so there are newspapers with my great-grandad on the front, falling over in the arms of the police as he’s dragged out. The mysteries of why my mum’s side of the family changed its name at one point …

What other reality shows would I do? Almost all no, I’m sure. I’ll be at home watching I’m A Celebrity, thinking: “I could do that,” until they get to the gross food stuff. I can dance, with enough choreograp­hy, but I don’t think I’d be nearly good enough for Strictly. Even The Masked Singer seems too insane for my insane tastes. My girlfriend of 10 years [actor Erin Darke] is American, and the show she most wants us to go on is Bargain Hunt. I unironical­ly love Bargain Hunt. But she doesn’t want to go on the celebrity one. She just wants us to go on a normal episode. She can’t understand how, in America, on any gameshow, the thirdplace loser prize is $1,000, but on Bargain Hunt, they go: “You’ve won. Here’s £3.50.” She also thinks she’d be better than anyone on it. If I go on Bargain Hunt and do badly, I’ll never be able to watch Bargain Hunt again, and I don’t want to strip myself of that pleasure.

How do you keep your eyebrows tidy? Tristanite

Plucking. I let them get pretty out of control on the theory that I’ll be in front of a makeup artist soon enough who will say: “Jesus, we have to do something about this.” They had to be plucked from the first Harry Potter film; I have no qualms about it.

Does Daniel Radcliffe cook well? vira_sh

Absolutely not. This is why I can’t go on MasterChef. I have about four dishes, and I’m not going to admit what they are because two are so embarrassi­ng, they’re not even dishes. There’s no way I’m having my rubbish cooking ability consigned for ever to the Guardian! I can keep myself alive in a house if all else goes wrong, but that’s about it. Talking of Weird Al: three weirdest things you would take to a deserted island? feytasiicH­ave you watched this programme, Alone [on Prime]? They drop people at very isolated parts – mostly Canada in the series I’ve watched – with their own cameras. I would bring flint and steel, because that’s all you need to light a fire. My girlfriend and I once did a primitive fire-making course at a hotel that offered this as a service, up in Pennsylvan­ia somewhere. The guy had an Altoid tin full of cotton balls covered in Vaseline, which work as really good fire starters. So my Altoid tin, my Vaseline cotton balls and my flint and steel. That’s both practical and weird.

Have you ever weaselled out of getting recognised by claiming to be a lookalike? Syntropic_Garden

That doesn’t work. The problem is, particular­ly in the early days, if someone said: “Are you Harry Potter?” and I said yes, they’d be like: “No, you’re not!” If they said: “Are you Harry Potter?” and I said no, they’d be like: “Yeah, you are!” So either way you end up in an argument and the interactio­n has gone very poorly.

What’s the weirdest thing about you? feytasiic

God, I don’t know. Maybe my career? I think I’m pretty normal in most of my life. Yes, I’m obsessed with Bargain Hunt, I can’t cook, and I stay in hotels where they have fire-making courses. Hey, you never know when you’re going to make fire. I couldn’t even get the kindling going but Erin would be very disappoint­ed if I didn’t tell you that she at least made smoke.

• Weird: The Al Yankovic Story is released on 4 November on the Roku Channel, available on Roku devices, Sky Q and Now TV

• This article was amended on 3 November 2022 to correct the word Altoid, which was spelled wrongly due to a transcript­ion error.

 ?? ?? Radcliffe in Weird: The Al Yankovic Story, with Quinta Brunson as Oprah Winfrey. Photograph: Aaron Epstein/© 2022 The Roku Channel
Radcliffe in Weird: The Al Yankovic Story, with Quinta Brunson as Oprah Winfrey. Photograph: Aaron Epstein/© 2022 The Roku Channel
 ?? ?? ‘I’d love to direct’ … Daniel Radcliffe. Photograph: Jeff Vespa/@portraits/Rex/Shuttersto­ck
‘I’d love to direct’ … Daniel Radcliffe. Photograph: Jeff Vespa/@portraits/Rex/Shuttersto­ck

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