Christian Bale-Seventeen Magazine
Christian Bale lumbers
into a conference room on a rainy Saturday morning. He plops down in a chair,
yawns, and wipes sleep from his eyes. Dressed in black jeans, a sweatshirt, and
sneakers, he apologizes for being late. "I'm just getting over the flu and
I'm still jet-lagged," he explains, "so I'm moving a little
slowly."
But the six-foot-two
British actor, best known for his film debut as a young schoolboy in Steven
Spielberg's epic, Empire of the Sun and more recently for Kenneth Branagh's Henry V, need not apologize. For the past few
weeks, he's been flying round and round from L.A.
to London to Prague and back again. "I've been doing reshoots for Newsies here, and
doing preproduction work on a new film, Swing Kids, in Prague,
and visiting my mom, sister and girlfriend in England. And I don't even like to
fly!" he says with a slight shudder. "Before I came here, I flew on a
plane that sounded like it had a window open the whole time." When Bale
first heard about Newsies, a live-action musical
recounting the tale of the New York
newsboys' strike of 1899, he claims he had no interest in auditioning for the
project. "I'd never sung or danced, and I didn't think I could do a
musical," he says. "I read for the film in England,
and then Disney flew me to Los Angeles
for a screen test. But before I signed a contract, I met the director [Kenny
Ortega] and told him I wasn't comfortable with the dancing and singing and I
didn't want to be a bloody Artful Dodger in a remake of Oliver!, jumping down
the street with a big smile on my face. But he told me it wouldn't be like
that, and then he lied to me about all of these different actors who had done
musicals, like Al Pacino."
After he was cast as
Jack Kelly, the head Newsie, Bale joined the rest of the film's actors and
dancers in two months of "Newsies school." He studied singing, dancing, speaking with a Brooklyn accent (circa 1899), gymnastics, and karate.
"We had a kung fu master," he recalls with a laugh. "Thirty of
us would be standing in a room doing something like t'ai
chi to this humming music. It's very relaxing, but when you see yourself in the
mirror, it's really funny!" "Filming Newsies
was a blast," he says. "By the time the cameras started rolling, we
were so prepared we were ready for anything. The blend of technically great
dancers and actors with great characterizations made it all work perfectly. "And what about his Oliver! fear?
"Sure, we're singing and dancing in the streets," he says, "but
we don't always have a smile on our faces."
Immediately upon
finishing Newsies, Bale flew to Prague to begin filming Swing Kids. It's set
in 1930's Hamburg, Germany," the
eighteen-year-old explains. "There was quite a big culture then among
teenagers who liked to dress in zoot suits and go to
swing clubs. The story is about three friends from different backgrounds who
love swing music. I play the bad seed."
In between movies,
Bale tries to squeeze in time with his family and girl - friend. "I've
been going with the same girl for three years," he says shyly. "But
she's going to a university in England
and I'm re-locating to L.A.,
where my father lives. If I had nothing to do with the film industry, I'd stay
in England,
but my hometown isn't exactly the film capital of the world."
If he never made
another movie, however, Bale says he wouldn't mind a non - celebrity life.
"I love making movies," he concludes, "but I also love my
privacy. If it all ended tomorrow, I'd just live by the sea and be perfectly
happy."
Kevin Koffler – Seventeen