Times Colonist

Orlando Bloom puts himself in peril for new series

- MARK KENNEDY

— Orlando Bloom wanted to test himself for his latest adventure project. Not by eating something gross or visiting a new country. He wanted to risk death — with not one but three extreme sports.

The series Orlando Bloom: To the Edge, on National Geographic and streaming on Peacock, sees the Pirates of the Caribbean star shoot through the sky thousands of feet above the ground, dive into a deep sinkhole and rock climb hundreds of feet.

“While I was at moments scared for my life during the show, having come out the other end of it I feel way more capable,” Bloom tells the Associated Press.

The series was born from the pandemic, which made outside adventures even more alluring.

It met the perfect host in a man who is a natural risk-taker. When he made his Broadway debut in Romeo and Juliet, he roared onto the stage on a Triumph motorcycle.

“I’m like a collector of experience­s in some ways,” he says. “I’ve been remarkably gifted and fortunate to have some unique ones, but this was definitely like, ‘Oh, wow, I’m capable of this. Therefore I can do anything.’ ”

First up was wingsuitin­g — skydiving in a special jumpsuit that adds lift so you can glide longer before opening your parachute. Bloom’s goal was to jump out of a plane at 13,000 feet, fly three miles over the Pacific Ocean and land on the beach.

Then he heads to the Bahamas, to a 663-foot-deep hole in the ocean, with the aim of plunging to 100 feet on just one breath. After that, it’s off to Utah to climb a 400-foot tower and stand on a summit the size of a pizza box.

“We all experience fear.

It’s how we face this fear that defines us,” Bloom says in the first episode. “I never feel so alive being so close to death.”

There were some heart-inyour throat moments, like on his seventh skydiving jump, where Bloom needed to activate his reserve chute, something that is necessary just 1 in 1,000 times. And for his 21st jump, he did it holding hands with his 80-yearold uncle, Christophe­r Copeland, a master skydiver.

Usually it takes 200 solo skydives before anyone is allowed to wingsuit, but Bloom convinces his instructor in just two weeks. Katy Perry, his partner, is on hand for the first wobbly flight, embracing her man after he lands and lovingly calling him “a flying wombat.”

Bloom battles ear pain to attempt the 100-foot freedive and practising a breath exercise leaves him in tears, struggling and sweating.

Freediving turns out to require a slowing heart, conserving energy and relaxing — the opposite of most sports.

The rock climbing challenge sees a usual two- to three-year training process condensed into a week. There was added stress because Bloom broke his back in a fall in his 20s and really didn’t want to do that again.

Bloom credits his instructor­s for their patience, expertise and teaching him to trust them and their gear. His life was in their hands but very often, their lives were in his hands.

“It wasn’t just as simple as like, ‘I’m just going to go with the flow here.’ No, I learned the tools. There are protocols,” he says.

“There is a framework with which I was working. And while I was doing that, I was able to get into a rhythm, into a flow, and achieve things that I never thought I would ever do in my lifetime.”

 ?? CASEY DURKIN, PEACOCK VIA AP ?? Chris Copeland and Orlando Bloom in an episode of Orlando Bloom: To the Edge.
CASEY DURKIN, PEACOCK VIA AP Chris Copeland and Orlando Bloom in an episode of Orlando Bloom: To the Edge.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada