The Daily Telegraph

Pattinson says to get the best roles, ditch British accent

Twilight actor says he uses Denver drawl at auditions to disguise who he is and get gritty parts he wants

- By Hannah Furness

IT WAS once considered something to aspire to, recognised all over the world and used by actors from William Shakespear­e to Sir Laurence Olivier.

But the British accent has fallen out of favour with one of the UK’S leading young stars, who has admitted he covers up his real voice to win the edgy parts he really wants.

Robert Pattinson, who was born in London and rose to fame as a teenage heart-throb in the Twilight film series, has told how he disguised his British voice in favour of a Denver accent while on the audition circuit, in order to hide where he was from.

Saying he even created a character to attend auditions, he admitted he dreamt of a day when he was “street cast”, in a process by which he would be picked out by talent spotters for his authentici­ty without them knowing who he was.

In making his latest film, he said, he had come close to that dream due to the judicious use of pockmarks created by a make-up artist, which meant he went unrecognis­ed for an entire year despite filming regularly on the streets and subway of New York.

Pattinson began his mainstream film career as the handsome Cedric Diggory in Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire, before moving on to Twilight.

Since then, he has made a determined effort to distance himself from romantic leads, this time playing a tattooed, greasy-haired bank robber fighting to save his arrested brother.

Speaking at the Cannes Film Festival, where the gritty drama Good Time is being screened, Pattinson disclosed he had contacted directors Josh and Benny Safdie after being struck by a poster for their previous film Heaven Knows What.

“A lot of their casting seems like street casting, and I just always want to look like I’ve been street cast,” he said. “And I thought, maybe if I’m in that movie it’ll look like I’m street cast. Try and trick everybody.”

Josh Safdie added: “You were telling me that story about how you’d go to auditions with your Denver accent, because you just did not want anyone to know that you were British-born. No offence to the British.” Pattinson said: “I would do an impression. I would have another character to do an audition to play a different character.”

The actor described the film’s New York shoot as “guerrilla-style,” celebratin­g the success of small physical changes which meant no one recognised him. “I was so nervous about people finding out about the shoot and paparazzi being there, just destroying the whole illusion of it,” he said.

“It was interestin­g. Even with the make-up and the look and everything. We experiment­ed with looks and we did these pockmarks on my skin, and no one recognised me. We shot an entire movie on the streets of New York, and not even a single person took a cell phone picture. It was crazy.”

Telegraph reviewer Tim Robey gave the film four stars and said the role could win Pattinson the Cannes Film Festival Best Actor award.

“Pattinson has admirably tried, again and again, to prove he has something more to offer than an edgy pulchritud­e, but his chosen projects (Cosmopolis and The Rover, say) have been barren soil, till now,” he said.

 ??  ?? Robert Pattinson in more recognisab­le guise in Cannes for the film Good Time, in which he plays a tattooed criminal
Robert Pattinson in more recognisab­le guise in Cannes for the film Good Time, in which he plays a tattooed criminal

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