The Guardian (USA)

‘The new DiCaprio’: how Leo Woodall became one of UK’s hottest exports

- Nadia Khomami Arts and culture correspond­ent

You’d probably never heard of him two years ago and now his blue eyes and floppy sandy hair are everywhere – from magazine covers to TikTok montages.

Searches for Leo Woodall multiplied this week with the announceme­nt that the actor has been cast in the fourth Bridget Jones film, Mad About the Boy, crowning a whirlwind few months for the man who has stolen hearts and become one of Britain’s hottest exports.

It has been suggested that Woodall, 27, will play the dashing young teacher who Bridget (Renée Zellweger) starts sleeping with after the death of her husband, Mark (Colin Firth). Breathless fans claim Woodall is taking over the mantle of “romcom king” from Hugh Grant, who is also reprising his role as Bridget’s former flame Daniel.

The excitement is hardly surprising after the actor’s recent roles – first as cheeky Essex boy Jack in HBO’s second season of Emmy-award winning The White Lotus, and then as endearing toff Dexter Mayhew in Netflix’s hit adaptation of One Day.

“Leo Woodall has been at the centre of two of the most high-profile series of the last 18 months, which really seem to have contribute­d to his quick ascendance,” said AlexGoat, the chief executive of youth culture consultanc­y Livity. “Whilst his characters in White Lotus and One Day are on paper very different, they share many attributes – swagger, charm, and a damaged nature. It’s those flaws, and that authentici­ty, which seems to appeal to younger audiences.”

Woodall and his co-star, Ambika Mod, have been described as pivotal to the success of One Day, which went straight to number one in the Netflix charts when it premiered this year and introduced new generation­s to the David Nicholls novel.

“He’s incredibly hard-working and dedicated, very subtle and expressive and unafraid of being raw and emotional,” Nicholls said of Woodall after the Bridget Jones announceme­nt. “He has a vulnerable quality that was perfect for Dexter, who in another actor’s hands might have been unbearable. Even when saying or doing terrible things, you sense the decency and good intentions.”

Woodall was born and raised in Shepherd’s Bush, west London, in what he has described as a “fairly posh middle-class” family. He originally wanted to be a PE teacher or stuntman before deciding to pursue acting after watching an episode of Peaky Blinders aged 19.

It was a path that almost felt fated. His father, Andrew, is a character actor known for parts in Belle and The Riot Club, and his stepfather, the Scottish actor Alexander Morton, had appeared in Casualty, Luther and Taggart.

While Woodall’s talent for acting is clear, pop culture experts have also traced his popularity to what they see as his cross-generation­al appeal.

“He reminds me of Leonardo DiCaprio with a cheeky chappy edge,” said the journalist and podcaster Pandora Sykes. “Leonardo was the pinnacle: more than mere man, he was a popculture moment.

“It’s like we’re getting a bit of that, again. All the other up-and-comers in Hollywood – Austin Butler, Jacob Elordi, Tom Holland, Timothée Chalamet – feel quite young and green, the preserve of gen Z. But I think Woodall is particular­ly charming to the millennial woman: there’s this sense of him having been there and done that. Of nothing fazing him.”

Jess Barrett, the assistant editor of Grazia magazine, added: “It’s not often that a Leo Woodall comes around, and when he does your teen hunk muscle memory comes flooding back. It’s hard not to get a little crush even though you know you’re too old. There is a 90s incarnatio­n of Leo DiCaprio or Jared Leto energy to his appeal.

“As Bridget Jones’s love interest in the latest film, us geriatric millennial­s will be powerless to his charms.”

Woodall is the youngest of three siblings and considers himself the “baby” of his family. Though he was “a bit spoilt” as a child, he has described how things became more difficult when he went to a “shit school” in

London, where he “didn’t really give a fuck” about his grades and violence was not uncommon. It’s a period he jokingly refers to as “the dark years”.

After graduating from ArtsEd drama school in Chiswick, Woodall made a few unmemorabl­e forays into the industry, appearing in an episode of Holby City and, “for five minutes”, a young adult vampire drama.

It was in 2021 that he found himself watching the first season of White Lotus while holed up in a hotel room with Covid, and “quickly fell completely in love with it”. He auditioned for the show’s second season after watching videos of The Only Way is Essex’s Joey Essex. It did the trick. The Americans, including showrunner Mike White, were equally confused and thrilled by him. One month later Woodall was staying at an empty Four Seasons hotel in Sicily and running into Michael Imperioli at the gym.

Throughout the show, what stood out was Woodall’s ability to steal every

 ?? Photograph: Zoe McConnell/The Observer ?? Fans claim Leo Woodall is taking over the mantle of ‘romcom king’ from Hugh Grant.
Photograph: Zoe McConnell/The Observer Fans claim Leo Woodall is taking over the mantle of ‘romcom king’ from Hugh Grant.
 ?? Leo Woodall and Ambika Mod in One Day. Photograph: AP ??
Leo Woodall and Ambika Mod in One Day. Photograph: AP

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