Bangkok Post

Now a dad, Eddie Redmayne is in new groove for Grindelwal­d

- ANDREA MANDELL

Hold the wand, because Eddie Redmayne now has homegrown skills when it comes to taming tiny creatures.

The 36-year-old actor laughs describing last New Year’s Eve, when he dressed up his eldest child, Iris, 2, as a Niffler, the adorably mischievou­s platypus-like creature in J.K. Rowling’s Fantastic Beasts series.

“She was toddling at the time, just running around causing complete havoc,” says Redmayne, noting his whole family got in “fancy dress” as characters from Fantastic Beasts that night. “When I read the second script, in which there are baby Nifflers ... it was like I was method acting. I felt like I knew how to handle the baby Nifflers!”

Fantastic Beasts: The Crimes Of Grindelwal­d (in Thai cinemas Thursday) picks up in 1926, just weeks after the first film, as the fearsome, deceptivel­y magnetic Gellert Grindelwal­d (Johnny Depp) breaks out of a New York prison and crosses the Atlantic to raise a dark resistance of true-blood wizards in Europe.

The sequel also finds classic introvert and magizoolog­ist Newt Scamander (Redmayne) grappling with newfound fame inside the wizarding world as his former instructor, Dumbledore (Jude Law), tries to enlist his help in neutralisi­ng Grindelwal­d. And when not caring for his case full of bellicose creatures, Newt is flummoxed to find himself quite awkwardly in love with criminal-chasing Auror Tina Goldstein (Katherine Waterston).

“What [Rowling] manages to do is to tell stories that feel completely contempora­ry yet also expose the fact that history repeats itself. She seems to shine a light on that, while also creating escapism,” says Redmayne, sinking back into a couch inside West Hollywood’s Palihouse hotel.

In real life, the Oscar winner is now a father of two (son Luke was born in March) with wife Hannah Bagshawe. Redmayne seems to have found a new rhythm, filming a Fantastic film roughly every two years while fitting in an occasional passion project.

In fact, Redmayne just wrapped The Aeronauts with his Theory Of Everything co-star Felicity Jones. “Well, almost finished the film,” he says ruefully, glancing down at his ankle, which is encased in a brace. “Because on the penultimat­e day, I walked on a crash mat, tripped and ruptured the tendons in my foot.”

Still, he’s “incredibly happy” these days. Actors often lead nomadic lives, jumping from set to set around the world. “That’s not how I would like to live my life,” says Redmayne. “I’m quite an ordered, methodical person.” Fantastic Beasts has afforded him time to spend with his brood at home (the franchise shoots outside London, where Redmayne is based).

“My wife is much more free-spirited in that way, so she was all up for travelling,” Redmayne says. “But it’s wonderful to know with these films, if they continue to happen, that there’s a kind of consistenc­y where very couple of years there will be a period where our roots will be [there].”

Redmayne, as gracious a movie star as they come, is now confrontin­g a new conundrum. It’s unavoidabl­e that Crimes Of Grindelwal­d must also contend with a cloud of bad publicity that has settled over Depp, the sequel’s title character.

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