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A hot, sweaty villain

Actor Daniel Radcliffe tells Bryan Alexander he struggled with his Lost City character’s cool exterior.

- Warning: Contains mild spoilers

Daniel Radcliffe says that Abigail Fairfax, the villain he plays in The Lost City (now in cinemas), was written as an impeccably dressed, totallytog­ether billionair­e searching for treasure in the tropics.

But that was before Radcliffe, 32, landed in the Dominican Republic heat to shoot the adventure comedy, in which Fairfax kidnaps a romance novelist (Sandra Bullock) to help decipher an ancient key to a hidden jungle fortune.

‘‘At one point I was holding one fan, while two other people were holding other fans just to keep me from sweating through the costume of this guy, who is supposed to look calm, cool and collected at all times,’’ says Radcliffe. ‘‘I was like, guys, ‘that’s not gonna happen’.’’

The Harry Potter alum shifted to playing a slightly sweatier villain, which just adds to his deliciousl­y foppish performanc­e alongside Bullock, Channing Tatum and Brad Pitt.

Radcliffe discussed his hot Lost City villainy, along with his relationsh­ip-disrupting accordion preparatio­n to portray ‘‘Weird Al’’ Yankovic.

A villain named Abigail Fairfax doesn’t scream Voldemort for evildoer street cred. Did you call your agent when you found out your character’s name?

I found it funny, especially when Abigail Fairfax describes it as a gender-neutral name. But the thing was, the film staff would check us all into hotels in the Dominican Republic under our character names. So the hotel staff would be calling me Abigail. I would have to tell them, ‘‘It’s Dan. Please call me Dan.’’

How fun was it filming the scene when Fairfax’s Hoverjet takes off, blowing a beautiful charcuteri­e plate all over Sandra Bullock?

There were two gigantic fans brought in by the special effects guy for the wide shots. They had a glint in their eye, saying, ‘‘We don’t normally get to use these [fans] inside’’. For the closer shots, they had smaller fans with people six feet away throwing cheese bits and almonds at her. Never did I expect, growing up in Fulham [England], that I’d one day see Sandra Bullock have cheese and nuts thrown at her. But life is a strange, rich tapestry.

I hate to see high-end charcuteri­e wasted. Did you at least nibble?

If it makes you feel better, the meat and cheese had all been sprayed to make sure it doesn’t go bad. It was ruined before it hit the floor. I have a clear sense memory from dining scenes on Harry Potter days where we’d be in the Great Hall for four days with the same meal in front of us of like, ‘‘Don’t eat the food’’.

You moved from perfectly bearded Fairfax to music’s worst moustache in Weird: The Al Yankovic Story (due out later this year). How was that transforma­tion to the song-parody legend?

The moustache definitely was not something I thought I’d get used to, but then I ended up loving it. It was a pretty standard transforma­tion because I grew the moustache, it was really just putting on the wig. The very, very hard part was learning to play the accordion while singing and running around the stage at the same time.

Yikes, learning accordion. How did that go over with loved ones, namely your girlfriend Erin Darke?

Making the film, I was practising accordion every day in this small room in Los Angeles, and I think that was a lot for my girlfriend. There was no place for me to go, so Erin was hearing quite a lot. The first month of me learning the accordion, her life must have been misery. She was living in a world of hearing the opening bars of My Bologna, but never getting past that. Those weeks were rough. Now that we are back in New York, I can go in my own room and practice.

Did she ever fall for the ‘‘Weird Al’’ look?

It was slightly conflictin­g for her. She was a fan, but she never had a crush on ‘‘Weird Al’’ Yankovic. But she has a crush on me and our relationsh­ip, obviously. So it was a really weird mix of feelings for her. But she liked the moustache more than she thought she would. By the end of the month she was like, ‘‘Don’t keep it, but I don’t hate it, either’’.

Surely she has a full-on crush on you as the stylish Fairfax, right?

Lost City is the best I have ever looked in a film, and there’s a reason for that. I went to the makeup, hair and wardrobe people and was like, ‘‘I’m in a movie with Channing Tatum and Brad Pitt. You have to do something about this’’.

Fortunatel­y, they gave me this amazing haircut and put me in these wonderful suits.

Even after the recent Harry Potter reunion, you’ve said you have no plans to go back to do another film. What can we do to make you reconsider?

There’s a lot of other things that have to get factored in beyond having a story to tell that’s new and great.

I honestly feel that I have done really OK. I was very famous, very young and that’s a weird thing to have happen to you.

It’s more luck than judgment that I made it out of that fairly alright. And if I was to have my own kids in the next few years, then honestly it’s not just about what I’m feeling. It’s also, what would that would do to their life?

The Lost City in now screening in cinemas.

 ?? GETTY IMAGES ?? Checked into the hotel under his character’s name, Radcliffe had to keep reminding staff that his name really wasn’t ‘‘Abigail’’.
GETTY IMAGES Checked into the hotel under his character’s name, Radcliffe had to keep reminding staff that his name really wasn’t ‘‘Abigail’’.
 ?? KIMBERLEY FRENCH ?? Daniel Radcliffe plays the nefarious
Abigail Fairfax in The Lost City.
KIMBERLEY FRENCH Daniel Radcliffe plays the nefarious Abigail Fairfax in The Lost City.

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