Sunday News

The magic of Mads

Mads Mikkelsen, exBond baddie and ‘the sexiest man in Denmark’, tells Ed Potton about his latest challengin­g role.

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LONDON Mads Mikkelsen has arranged to meet me at the flat where he’s staying in Windsor, but this scruffy doorway on the high street can’t be the place. This is Denmark’s leading actor, for heaven’s sake! Creator of lipsmackin­g baddies (Hannibal Lecter in the American TV series Hannibal, the evil banker Le Chiffre in Casino Royale), winner of best actor at Cannes in 2012 for The Hunt, and soon to star in two mega-budget blockbuste­rs, Marvel’s Doctor Strange and Star Wars: Rogue One.

Surely a glitzier residence would be in order. I’m about to press the bell when the door opens and Mikkelsen strides out. His clothes are as anonymous as his lodgings: tracksuit, trainers, a woolly hat, from which strands of greying hair protrude. The only obvious signs of stardom are the cheekbones.

This is a man who craves a low profile. Does he often get recognised here? ‘‘If I stop moving,’’ he says with a smile.

Mikkelsen has been living in Windsor for the past few months to be near the set of Doctor Strange, in which he plays a sorcerer and chief antagonist to Benedict Cumberbatc­h’s titular superhero.

‘‘It’s one of those teenage boy’s dreams come true,’’ he says in his fluent, slightly lisping English. ‘‘Magic and flying kung fu at the age of 50 – it’s not too bad.’’

There’s lots of wire work and blue screens, which he loves, having learnt the art of digital make-believe from one of his costars in Clash of the Titans (2010). ‘‘We were six Greek warriors attacking giant scorpions that weren’t there, but luckily we had Sam Worthingto­n, who had just spent 21⁄ years doing Avatar, and he was just, ‘Argh!’ charging a tennis ball.’’

Mikkelsen is also in the middle of making Rogue One, which is set before the events of the first Star Wars film and follows the rebel spies who steal the plans for the Death Star.

He has been cast as the father of the lead character, played by Felicity Jones. He is admirably free of fanboy hysteria about the whole thing.

Just as he had not seen a Bond film when he did Casino Royale, he was a Star Wars virgin for Rogue One. Were the producers surprised he hadn’t seen any of the films? ‘‘I hadn’t told them!’’

Mikkelsen’s performanc­es are marked by intensity and a suave versatilit­y – there’s a clip on YouTube of him speaking eight languages for his roles: English, Danish, French, German, Italian, Spanish, Swedish and Russian.

Men & Chicken, his next film to be released, couldn’t be farther from Star Wars. A dark and twisted comedy from the Danish writer-director Anders Thomas Jensen, it’s about five violent, inbred brothers in rural Denmark who attempt to discover their grotesque origins. Hint: they’re not entirely human.

’’The gear shift is important,’’ he says. ‘‘But it also goes the other way around – if you’ve done two deep dramas at home, you want to say, ‘Give me a sword, let me fly through the air’.’’

Men& Chicken is one of several films he has made with Oscarwinne­r Jensen, who has previously featured him as a priest with an absurd ruff collar ( Adam’s Apples) and a butcher with a radically receding hairline ( The Green Butchers). This time, Mikkelsen has a harelip, a prosthetic nose and greasy curls. It’s almost as if Jensen delights in sabotaging the looks of an actor voted the sexiest man in Denmark several times.

‘‘Anders has been a big part of killing that rumour,’’ Mikkelsen says. ‘‘I’ve always been looking slightly weird in his films.’’

Last year he starred in the controvers­ial video for Rihanna’s Bitch Better Have My Money, playing the singer’s crooked accountant. The video was criticised because Rihanna and her tooled-up female friends spent most of it wreaking violent revenge not on Mikkelsen’s character but on his wife, played by model Rachel Roberts. He looks aghast.

‘‘Oh God, did they come over all PC on that as well? Shouldn’t they put their energy on all the naked girls who aren’t doing anything in videos? I can’t take that seriously.’’

‘‘There are minority groups everywhere that will say, ‘Oh my God, why am I not in the film?’.’’

Mikkelsen was born and raised in Copenhagen, where he still lives. He is married to choreograp­her Hanne Jacobsen, with whom he has two children: Viola, 23, and Carl, 18. His mother was a nurse, his father a bank clerk, and his older brother, Lars, is also an actor, best known for playing politician Troels Hartmann in The Killing and the Russian president in House of Cards.

Growing up, Mads says, ‘‘we never discussed the possibilit­y of becoming actors’’, but they loved watching films together, and practised English by memorising Monty Python sketches.

After training as a gymnast and dancer, he followed Lars to drama school, and went on to make his stage debut with his brother.

The production, whose name he claims to have forgotten, was ‘‘absolute crap. It was on an island, and you had to leave afterwards on a boat with the audience, so you either had to do the walk of shame or hide in the front of the boat. We were supposed to run for two months but we lasted five nights’’.

While Lars stayed in theatre, Mads moved into film, making his name in 1996 as a drug dealer in Pusher, directed by Nicolas Winding Refn ( Drive). That gritty contempora­ry movie, he says, ‘‘was a major thing, not only for me but for the way we made films back home’’. Before that, Danish cin- REUTERS REUTERS ema had been dominated by period dramas.

Since then, he has had a diverse mix of lead roles at home: a Norse warrior in Winding Refn’s Valhalla Rising; a doctor who seduces the Danish queen in A Royal Affair; a man falsely accused of paedophili­a in The Hunt.

In Hollywood, like most Scandinavi­an actors, he’s generally been limited to villains and supporting roles. His part in Casino Royale, he says, ‘‘was a smaller one than I’d have said yes to back home, but it was a bigger part than I could ever dream about having outside home’’.

Contrast that with the progress of Alicia Vikander, Mikkelsen’s 27-year-old co-star in A Royal Affair, and who has already played several leads in American films and won an Oscar.

Is it easier for European women to make the jump to Hollywood? He shakes his head. ‘‘That’s because she’s talented and the camera loves her and she can jump back and forth with her accents.’’

‘ I’ve always been looking slightly weird.’

The Times

 ??  ?? Mads Mikkelsen’s roles – from a Bond villain to a seductive doctor to a cannibalis­tic serial killer – are marked by versatilit­y and a suave intensity.
Mads Mikkelsen’s roles – from a Bond villain to a seductive doctor to a cannibalis­tic serial killer – are marked by versatilit­y and a suave intensity.
 ??  ?? Mikkelsen’s latest film, Men & Chicken, is a dark, twisted comedy about a group of brothers in rural Denmark.
Mikkelsen’s latest film, Men & Chicken, is a dark, twisted comedy about a group of brothers in rural Denmark.
 ??  ?? Mads Mikkelsen poses for a photocall at the Cannes Film Festival, where he has won the best actor award and has served on the jury.
Mads Mikkelsen poses for a photocall at the Cannes Film Festival, where he has won the best actor award and has served on the jury.

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