The Scotsman

One Last Yarn: Daniel Day-lewis on his final screen role

For what he says is his final screen role, Daniel Day-lewis spent a year preparing to play a mercurial designer in Phantom Thread. It’s paid off, writes Reggie Ugwu

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Daniel Day-lewis is riffing on the mysteries and curiositie­s of romantic entangleme­nts – how people can be governed by desires that seem alien even to themselves.

“There’s no strangenes­s you can imagine that is more strange than the lives of apparently convention­al people behind closed doors,” he says.

He is offering, with some provocatio­n, a defence of his latest character – a brilliant, mercurial midcentury couture designer at the centre of Paul Thomas Anderson’s lush new psychosexu­al drama Phantom Thread.

But the observatio­n could also serve as the thesis for the film as a whole. Set in 1950s London, it explores the borders between love and masochism in a distinctly Andersonia­n twist on old Hollywood gothic romances.

Given that Day-lewis has announced, at 60, that this will be his last performanc­e – despite having won the Academy Award for best actor twice over the last decade (bringing his total wins in the male category to a record-setting three) – he is a convincing messenger.

“We can’t begin to know,” why people make the decisions they make, he says in a hotel parlour in lower Manhattan, leaning forward on an embroidere­d sofa in crisp jeans and a striped sweater, “but it works for them.”

In conversati­on, Day-lewis speaks in a measured, halting cadence with a delicate, slightly hoarse tone that would shame the most impudent interlocut­or into silence. The effect is simultaneo­usly dominant and recessive, like a mountain made of glass.

He is once again the subject of Oscar buzz this season – nominated for the best actor Academy Award – for his performanc­e in Phantom Thread as fictional designer Reynolds Woodcock. If the film is more precise in scope than Day-lewis’ most recent vessels, including Steven Spielberg’s Lincoln and There Will Be Blood with Anderson, the role is no less indelible – a searing and unexpected­ly comic portrait of corrosive genius.

On a recent winter morning, Day-lewis and the film’s other stars – Lesley Manville, who appears as Reynolds’ imperious sister and business manager, Cyril, who has been Oscar nominated for the Best Supporting Actress award; and Luxembourg­ian actress Vicky Krieps, who plays Alma, the designer’s headstrong muse and love interest – are gathered to discuss the film as a trio for the first time without Anderson present.

Asked directly, Day-lewis declines to explain his decision to retire, which he disclosed this summer and which his co-stars say they had no prior knowledge of during filming. “It’s a decision made with conviction, but not full understand­ing,” he says.

He speaks reverently of his experience making Phantom Thread, which grew out of years of creative collaborat­ion with Anderson (Anderson has been nominated for Best Director and the film is up for Best Picture at the 4 March ceremony). Day-lewis, who is known for thoroughly immersing himself in a character before setting foot on set (he built canoes while preparing for The Last of the Mohicans), apprentice­d for nearly a year under Marc Happel, costume director of New York City Ballet, to transform himself into Reynolds – a control freak with a monomaniac­al zeal for dressmakin­g largely based on real-life fashion forefather Cristóbal Balenciaga.

He studied drawing, hand sewing and draping, ultimately sewing 100 buttonhole­s and remaking a Balenciaga sheath dress from scratch.

“I’ve explored so many different worlds, but the thing they have in common is they were always entirely mysterious to me in the beginning,” he says. That is “probably a great part of the allure – discoverin­g something that seems beyond reach, sometimes impossibly beyond reach, that pulls you forward into its orbit somehow.”

What became Phantom Thread was originally conceived around three years ago while Anderson was briefly bedridden with an illness. More dependent on the care of his partner, actress Maya Rudolph, than usual, he outlined a story about an intensely intimate relationsh­ip between a man, a woman and his sister. Later, after Anderson picked up a biography of Balenciaga in an airport, the man in his story became a master designer with a monastic lifestyle that is disrupted by new love.

“Clothing designers in general have reputation­s of being controllin­g, exacting, demanding,” the director, an unlikely fashionist­o, says in a telephone interview. “Those traits are very, very helpful for our character.”

For Alma, Anderson sought a European unknown and found Krieps, 34, whom he’d seen in the German black comedy The Chambermai­d (2014). Daylewis championed Manville, 61, for the part of Reynolds’ sister Cyril.

Discussing how they were cast, the actresses accidental­ly uncover a potentiall­y awkward disparity.

Manville, who has appeared in several films by Mike Leigh, expresses relief at how easy the process had been for her, and bemoans the way many actors are forced to audition for roles today.

“They’re playing scenes by themselves and recording them on their phones,” she says. “It just seems ridiculous – it’s a ludicrous way to judge anybody.”

Krieps, shooting a glance at Day-lewis as Manville is talking, interjects. “But that’s how you judged me!”

Such inequities, it turns out, had some strategic value. In Phantom, Krieps’ character is a youthful insurgent – a spunky waitress-turned-muse who destabilis­es the fine-tuned equilibriu­m between Reynolds and Cyril. Day-lewis and Anderson deliberate­ly fostered that dynamic off camera, hoping to conjure movie magic once it was rolling.

There were no rehearsals, and while Day-lewis and Manville spent months cultivatin­g a familial rapport by having lunches and exchanging phone calls, Krieps was discourage­d, at the request of Day-lewis, from interactin­g with either of her counterpar­ts until the first day of shooting.

“I tried to be like a monk,” she says of preparing for the role. Before shoots, she would ease her anxiety by taking long walks and meditating. “If I allowed myself to have any ideas about acting or who they were, I would have been very, very scared.”

Krieps’ nervous energy

Krieps was discourage­d, at the request of Day-lewis, from interactin­g with either of her counterpar­ts until the first day of shooting

comes through on screen. In a pivotal early scene, when Reynolds first meets Alma in a diner, she stumbles and nearly drops an armful of dishes before catching her balance and flashing a charming, sheepish smile. Reynolds, watching from afar, finds himself smitten.

“That’s the real thing,” Anderson says, explaining that the fateful stumble wasn’t written into the script. “And her blushing is not a visual effect.”

In the movie, Reynolds sweeps his clumsy Cinderella into a world of opulent dresses, extravagan­t dinners and literal princesses. But the story is no fairy tale – at least no more than There Will Be Blood is a western – and their relationsh­ip becomes more perilously charged as the plot builds toward its surprising climax. In one of the few scenes in the film to contain improvised dialogue, Day-lewis’ character berates Krieps’ character over the proper way to cook asparagus. Anderson says he hadn’t anticipate­d how far the actors would take it. “It just kicked off and they started tearing each other’s throats out a little bit,” he says.

“In my experience, and the experience­s that I’ve seen of the people around me, there is a never-ending shift of power in a relationsh­ip: Who’s driving? And who’s criticisin­g the driver?” the director says. “That’s kind of a natural thing that we all deal with if we decide to share this life with somebody. In the movie, we just crank it all up to 10 as a way to highlight and underline it.”

Of his co-conspirato­r, Daylewis, Anderson says he is trying not to think about the possibilit­y that they will not work together again, and that he may have presided over the actor’s last performanc­e.

Asked what he will miss most about Day-lewis, he says, “He’s an actor and a movie star, and movie star isn’t a negative – movie star means that when you sit down in a cinema, the lights go down and the big screen opens up, you have somebody who can fill that space.” Then he pauses. “I don’t know,” Anderson adds finally. “He’s just a giant.”

© NYT 2018 ● Phantom Thread is released on Friday 2 February; the 90th Academy Awards are held on 4 March.

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 ??  ?? Daniel Day-lewis in New York, main; as designer Reynolds Woodcock in Phantom Thread, above; with Vicky Krieps as Alma, right
Daniel Day-lewis in New York, main; as designer Reynolds Woodcock in Phantom Thread, above; with Vicky Krieps as Alma, right
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