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THE AMERICAN DANE
FROM:B. T. Newspaper November 2001
Viggo Mortensen’s ties to Denmark have always been strong. But with the
role as Aragorn in LOTR he really got in touch with his inner viking.
NEW YORK: Gondor’s rightful king is found. His name is Viggo
Mortensen. And will – according to Gandalf’s crystal ball – be a megastar
in the slipstream of the film trilogy LOTR.
But as VM barefoot and in jeans and black, longsleeved T-shirt with
flames licking on the sleeves and on the chest, almost tiptoes through the
door to room 1831 in New York’s exclusive Regency Hotel, he doesn’t
exactly signal megastar.
Or when he places cigaret paper and tobacco on the table in front of him,
shyly looks up and with a homebrewed Jutlandish and Mid-Sealandish
accent says: “Dav!” (i.e. “G’day”).
VM has a Danish father and an American mother. Who met each other in
Norway! And moved to New York, where Viggo was born. His father was
originally a farmer, like his brother Henry down at Jystrup in Mid-Sealand.
But the father changed his clogs for a suit to walk the business way.
"“My father was very restless, travelled a lot. And then so did we,” Viggo
says about his years of growth that spans from New York to South
America. And Mid-Sealand which he still tries to pop by each year.
Altogether he has spent maybe 4-5 years out of his 43 in Denmark.
Which in percentages isn’t much. But nevertheless it takes much more
space up within him.
“I very strongly feel that I share a common past with my family in
Denmark. And feel connected to the Scandinavian mythology, when I walk
in the forest at Jystrup, where there are many tales told of what has
happened. The Danish woods look like Tolkien’s, they are the kind that
doesn’t look dangerous, but if you walk alone by night in the forests of
Denmark, you can feel the energies of the past. I felt that already as a child,
back then when I played with swords there outside my uncle’s farm, played
and felt like a viking. I imagined that I was the only one who had ever
experienced that feeling of being connected to the past. Then you become
teenager and think it was naive of you to think like that. But as grown up –
and especially with the physical distance to Denmark – there comes a
stronger, more direct link to the past, of which I was strongly reminded
when doing this movie. Maybe because I chose the starting point of this role
as a game, which I like to think makes the mind open and strengthens the
connection to an unknown past. In any case during that time I was
reminded of my roots and of really to appreciate my ties to them.
"
As might show from the quote above, VM is not one of that kind of actors
where you insert a dime and then they jabber on for half an hour.
Everything he says is well-considered, well-founded. No smart pop-quotes
fly from his mouth. The closest you get is his comment about his co-working
with the movie star Liv Tyler, who after all is his great love in the trilogy.
“She’s in the movie,” is his ultra-short answer that speaks for itself!
A couple of hours. That much time VM had to make the decision about the
role of Aragorn. The shootings had started. There was nervous tripping on
the other side of the globe in New Zealand.
" “I’m a very indecisive person. Given the opportunity I could easily use 18
months of time to think things over. And this time I not only had to consider
the part. But also that everybody else had started long before. I knew none
of them in advance. Had never been to New Zealand. No knowledge of
swordfighting, apart from when I was a kid, as I told you before. But my
son thought it sounded too good. Even so when I explained to him that I had
to be away for a long time. And the irony is that I now play a man who is
even more indecisive than myself,” he says with his little shy smile, and
admits that his decision didn’t gave much peace to the mind.
“As well personally as professionally I was afraid. But at the same time I
felt it would be something that I one day might regret, if I said no. Not
because it’s a big Hollywood movie, ‘cause things like that are extremely
uninteresting to me. But I knew that I would always feel like a coward, if I
didn’t at least give it a try. Because usually there is a reward. That first
shows much later.”
"
It already showed on the airplane on the way to NZ, where VM got in
touch with his inner viking, when he – for the first time – began reading
Tolkien’s books and got familiar images on the retina.
"Images from when I was a little boy, stories I had heard as goodnight
reading, or sagas, fairytales, and poems I’d read. Because Tolkien’s
universe is really very much inspired by the whole Nordic mythology, by the
old Icelandic sagas, like Vølsungesaga. That wasn’t the only reward. The
more I read, the more I realized that Aragorn too is afraid, although he’s
one of the bravest, most honest and loyal of the characters in the trilogy.
But you really know very little of him until well into the second book.
Aragorn is a man who – because he knows as much as Gandalf and
Galadriel about the past of Midgård, about the time when the races
understood and respected each other – knows that it is dark times they’re
living in, and not least why and where the greatest peril lies. He also knows
that his own race is doomed to die out, and that that is the reason for his
hidden upbringing by the elves, who has brought him up as one of their own,
in spite of the fact that he doesn’t look like them. And although they have
tought him about themselves and other races, he also knows that they once
were the bravest and most noble, but were too weak when it came to it.
And he fears that the same will go for him in a hard pressed situation. That
he’s not made of the necessary stuff. That was the fear I recognized, the
fear of not being made of the right stuff. But now I’m here, so…"
And well on his way to become a megastar as the hero of the trilogy?
"As I said it takes quite a long time before you really get to know Aragorn.
So I think it will be Elijah Wood or Ian McKellen who gets the attention at
first. Aragorn, he’s one of those who slowly work their way up, only to step
into character in the end"
So you will not be a star until 2003?
“We’ll have to wait and see.”
VM says – VM who, how flat and hollow it may sound on paper, shows
an incredible modesty and humility about his profession – and looks down
into the table, while he fumbles with one of his homemade cigarets.
"“No matter what happens with the movie, how it will be, how it will fare, to
me the most important is in the story itself. That all of the members of the
fellowship are complex. They all have heroic moments, like they have
moments of doubt that has to be overcome in order to serve Good. And
especially in these times after the tragedy in USA, where isolation, paranoia,
prejudices and mistrust sets the stage, it’s important to be reminded that
once there was a sense of solidarity. In spite of how our means of
communication have been improved throughout the years, today there is a
medieval mistrust towards other nations and other people, from USA and
vice versa. Therefore I hope that the movie will show that the road to unity
exists. Because, as Tolkien says himself, nothing is born evil. The Ring in
itself isn’t any more dangerous than a knife lying on a table. It’s when
someone gets in contact with it that danger ensues.” "
They say it with one mouth. All of the colleagues. The director. The
producer. Viggo, he became Aragorn. They were one. They went their own
way. Viggo, they say, didn’t hang out in New Zealand bars after work. He
kept on his costume and went for the woods. And when he came out, he
acted with what they call “trademark intensity”.
Once again he has a hard time not looking away.
“There are many who’s just as serious and intense as I am,” he says
silently and slowly.
The first day Viggo showed up on the set in NZ, he got on his costume
and was handed a sword.
"I was literally thrown into practice by the legendary swordmaster Bob
Anderson. I simply was handed the sword: “This is how you do it” he said,
and let a small army of stuntmen at me, and I just had to defend myself as
best as I could,” Viggo says, without answering if he BECAME Aragorn.
“Well, I take my work seriously. And I like concentrating. It is true that I
wore my outfit once in a while, when I went fishing after work, but…"
It wasn’t obvious that VM would become an actor. He thinks himself that
it’s some of his father’s restlessness that made it and kindled his curosity.
As he expresses it:
“It has probably something to do with plainly being
interested in life, interested in the experience of being someone else. But for
me it has always been the journey that’s the interesting part. Not the
destination. I feel like that with LOTR as well. I’ll be happy if people like
my work and the movie, but to me it’s all the experiences that counts.”
Do you think you have achieved what you dreamt of, as an actor?
“Yes, in that way that the journey has been interesting. But I don’t think
you’re ever truely finished. Because I’ve been in good movies, and in
movies where I haven’t been satisfied with myself or how the movie turned
out. There’s always something that can get better. But I’ve been lucky.
‘Cause I’ve had the opportunity of making money and expressing myself as
an actor. So I’m not going to sit here and cry, although sometimes it has
been frustrating. Because I have no influence, I don’t own the end result.
But I own my experiences from NZ.”
Last chapter in the story of VM is what, when it comes it, after all is the
core of his nature. His need to express himself. That acting cannot fully
fullfil. Even before he really became an actor, he wrote poems. Just like
exhibitions with as well his paintings as his photos frequently can be seen in
distinguished galleries. Without it having anything to do with the degree of
his fame as an actor.
“I had no idea he was an actor. Just that he is an incredibly gifted visual
artist. His creative energies are boundless,” one of New Yorks highly
esteemed gallery owners, Rober Mann, said. And added: “He doesn’t need
to paint for a living. But in order to live, he needs to paint.”
Is that how it is?
“I guess so. I really am incredibly frustrated in those periods, where I don’t
get the time to do it. As for example in NZ. But there I took time some
evenings, even though I had been working since 5 a.m. and soon had to get
to work again. Before I went to bed I read a little, painted, wrote or just sat
and thought for a while. That’s something everybody needs. What I do
off-work is just my way of expressing my thoughts. And I’m in control and
directly influencing how they’re are used.”
You are not an altogether typical Hollywood actor, are you?
“There are other people who are like me. I know that. Other people who
also want a little bit of control of what they’re doing. And not always think
that acting is art.”
Viggo politely shakes hands with me. Takes his cigaret paper and tobacco
and says in his homebrewed Danish dialect: “Vi ses!” (i.e. “See you!”), and
tiptoes just as bashful as he came on his bare feet out of suite 1831.
Viggo Interview
FROM: Short excerpt of a longer Viggo Mortensen interview in 'Ekstra Bladet' (Danish) Newspaper November 2001
"“I’ve only fought with wooden swords as a child, but in connection to
the movie I’ve had plenty of real swordfighting lessons from the legendary
swordmaster Bob Anderson. Aragorn is after all a true warrior, who with
his life and sword will defend the little hobbits. By the way I had also a lot
of riding lessons, and we were taught to talk in a special English dialect,”
Viggo explains about his preparations for the role.
VM: “Aragorn neither loves nor fears to fight. He regards it as his duty to
fight Evil and make sure the ring ends up the right place. The hobbits live in
a peaceful society that you can compare for example England. They live in
a safe and peaceful ignorance, while the warriors Aragorn and Boromir
constantly protects and secretly all the time fights the evil in the surrounding
woods. I compare it to a fight for democracy.
This film is the greatest thing I’ve experienced. And it has been fantastic
to work with some of the best actors in the world. Among others Ian
McKellen and Christopher Lee. It’s also an incredibly great story that
doesn’t just live because of the many special effects. You can compare
LOTR with Star Wars if you want, but I think that the characters in LOTR
are more individual, original and expressive. Star Wars is more of a
surface-story, while Peter Jackson has worked a lot with expressing the
characters’ minds and their doubts and hopes,” Viggo explains. "
Many women find you incredibly sexy in movies?
“So I’ve heard, and my colleague Sean Bean says so too! He plays the
warrior Boromir,” Viggo says with a big laugh.
Does the movie show some of Aragorn’s more romantic sides?
“Yes, Aragorn has for a long time been deeply fascinated and in love
with the royal elf girl Arwen, played by Liv Tyler, and that love developes. I
will not reveal anymore for now.”
For the time being you can walk around unnoticed, but surely that’ll soon be
over?
“Yes, with the role of Aragorn the anonymous life is over. LOTR is
maybe the greatest movie in the world ever, and of course that creates
attention. I really don’t know how I feel handling the huge fame that follows
such a role. Maybe I should go hide myself a couple of years in Middle
Earth,”
Viggo says, but promises that he will do everything he can to attend
to the movie’s opening here in Denmark on the 19th of December.
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