Orlando Sentinel (Sunday)

Calva takes detour to star in ‘Babylon’

Mexican actor had ambitions to become writer-director

- By Carlos Aguilar

A VHS tape of “Peter and the Wolf,” the Disney animated short from 1946, played on repeat at home when Diego Calva was growing up in the 1990s.

Both terrified and tantalized by that first cinematic obsession as a child, Calva discovered the power of audiovisua­l storytelli­ng in the unnerving leitmotif of the villainous wolf.

“Without being able to put in words, it made me realize that I was a little box of feelings and that movies could make them surface,” Calva explained, speaking in Spanish. “That hooked me.”

After only one major independen­t movie, the actor from Mexico City is starring alongside Brad Pitt and Margot Robbie in his first megabudget American production: director Damien Chazelle’s silentera revel “Babylon,” about the grotesque origins of the Hollywood film industry and why movies fascinate us.

Calva, 30, received a Golden Globe nomination for best actor in a musical or comedy for his performanc­e as the Mexicanbor­n Manny Torres, who slowly moves up the ranks in 1920s Hollywood — from catchall production assistant to influentia­l producer.

His character functions as the story’s driving force: as both the link between Pitt’s and Robbie’s characters — two successful, often deranged actors — and as the viewer’s guide to this decadent world. Calva gives Manny an adoring naivete about the movies, which fuels the character’s determinat­ion to become a part of them, even if his devotion eventually backfires.

While Calva worked hard to win the part, performing wasn’t his original dream. Calva had ambitions to become a writer-director, he explained in a recent interview.

From a young age, he surrounded himself with friends a few years older who were making short films. Calva helped out in miscellane­ous positions behind the scenes of those independen­t shoots, whether it was catering or holding a boom mic.

On one such set, he was asked to step in for an actor who hadn’t shown up, which led to more jobs, mostly unpaid, in front of the camera. He eventually landed his first lead in a feature film, appearing in director Julio Hernandez Cordon’s 2015 gay drama “I Promise You Anarchy,” a festival hit.

The story follows two male skateboard­ers in a tumultuous romance as they become involved with criminals traffickin­g human blood on the black market.

“Within five minutes of meeting Diego, I knew he was the right person for the part because of his confidence and charisma,” Hernandez Cordon said.

That introducti­on to performing profession­ally, however, didn’t dazzle Calva enough to make him push his filmmaking aspiration­s aside.

He went on to enroll at the Centro de Capacitaci­on Cinematogr­afica, one of Mexico’s preeminent film schools, to study directing. But to stay afloat financiall­y, Calva took on acting work, which created a conflict with the institutio­n’s policies.

Ultimately, he chose to leave the school and returned to acting full time, appearing on TV series and in supporting parts on the big screen, and putting on acting workshops for kids.

It was during this period that the opportunit­y to audition for the third season of the Netflix hit series “Narcos: Mexico” arrived. He aced it. And while playing real-life drug lord Arturo Beltran Leyva on the show introduced him to production on a larger scale, Calva couldn’t anticipate what would soon come his way.

As Chazelle searched in late 2019 for a fresh face to star in “Babylon,” he came across Calva’s image amid a stack of headshots. The Oscar-winning director was struck by the actor’s gaze.

“There was something of a dreamer in his eyes, something of a poet,” Chazelle said. “But I had no idea if he could act.”

The character he envisioned Calva for, Manny, is partly inspired by two Latin American filmmakers whose careers started to take off in the 1920s: Enrique Juan Vallejo, a Mexican cinematogr­apher and director, and Rene Cardona, a prolific Cubanborn director.

Calva submitted several self-taped auditions and met with Chazelle online during the early months of the COVID-19 pandemic. The more intrigued Chazelle became by Calva, the more it also became apparent that the actor had

limited experience and that his English needed work.

Chazelle and Olivia Hamilton, his wife and a producer of the film, “debated whether it was a gamble worth taking with Diego,” Chazelle said. “She had this full 100% unwavering belief in him.”

Several months into the casting process, Calva began to feel overwhelme­d by the life-changing magnitude of the opportunit­y, which seemed closer to materializ­ing but not yet certain. Aside from executing Chazelle’s increasing­ly specific notes about his line delivery, improving his English became a priority.

In late 2020, Calva traveled to Los Angeles to meet with Chazelle and Robbie, who would play Nellie LaRoy, a fictional starlet and Manny’s love interest.

Using his cellphone,

Chazelle filmed the chemistry read between Calva and Robbie in his backyard. Their palpable energy convinced him that Calva could deliver on his potential.

“He had this kind of Al Pacino-level ability to command the camera without seeming to do anything,” Chazelle said. In fact, Pacino’s arc from innocence to corruption as Michael Corleone in “The Godfather” films served as a key reference for Calva’s turn.

Robbie admired Calva’s ability to improvise in his second language.

“It’s so transforma­tive to act with him because he’s so present that you forget you’re doing a scene,” Robbie said. “He was the greatest scene partner I could ever wish for.”

As Manny rises in

Hollywood, he loses perspectiv­e, even denying his Mexican identity and claiming to be from Spain. Calva, grounded in advice from his mother, said he believed that wouldn’t happen to him.

“I don’t want to lose my childlike outlook on life, my ability for wonder,” Calva said. “I want to remember the road back home and know that if I make mistakes, I won’t lose myself.”

For now, Calva plans to remain in Mexico City and build his burgeoning career, but whenever he’s wanted on this side of the border, the actor will joyfully oblige.

“They invited me to this party,” Calva said with a hint of mischievou­s glee. “Getting me out of Hollywood is going to be difficult.”

 ?? CARLOS JARAMILLO/THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? Diego Calva, seen Dec. 4, stars as Manny in “Babylon.”
CARLOS JARAMILLO/THE NEW YORK TIMES Diego Calva, seen Dec. 4, stars as Manny in “Babylon.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States