RAY STEVENSON: WORKING CLASS HERO
BY
ALEX SIMON
A staple on British television since the early 90s, Ray
Stevenson has made a career of playing hard men and heartbreakers, taking
advantage of his rugged good looks and 6’4 rugby player’s frame. Born in
Ray made a recent stop in
Ray Stevenson: Pullo’s a fun guy. I like him a hell of a lot, actually. I like the fact that he’s a very black and white guy, very straight and honest in his own way. He’s very into gambling, whoring and fighting, but there’s also no agenda with him. There’s no gray areas, really. He enjoys all his vices, and his life affords him that. He doesn’t have any ambitions to be a general or a centurion. He’s more than happy to be a grunt soldier with the other men around him.
He’s a classic working class hero.
Exactly. He’s an everyman.
But the danger in that is a character like that could become a kind of
pastiche, and become too diluted, but it’s been great to try and breathe some
life into him.
I love the way you and your co-star Kevin McKidd play
off each other. The two of you are a real study in contrasts.
We are sort of the flip sides of the same coin. Neither of them would admit to their own weaknesses, but each one quite clearly sees the weaknesses in the other one, as well as the strengths.
It’s always an interesting dynamic when two men who
are initially enemies are thrown together and forced to become allies.
Yeah, and there was a
precedent for this, as well. In Caesar’s journals—he kept journals throughout
all of his campaigns—he only spoke about generals, senators, and other great figures
of the time. There was this one section where he talks about these two ordinary
centurions who hated each other and were always at loggerheads and trying to
best each other on the battlefield, just at each other’s throats. What brought
them to Caesar’s attention was that each one had risked his own life on more
than one occasion to save the other one. And they were called Lucius Vorenus
and Titus Pullo! Just to know that these names actually walked the Earth and
came to the attention of Caesar is a wonderful thing for an actor. They’re not
just a made-up device. The names themselves, they give you a kind of
responsibility.
That’s interesting, because I kept thinking of the
movie The Defiant Ones (1958).
(laughs) Yeah, sure. There’s
so many parallels throughout movie history, aren’t there? The friendship either
grows or is torn apart, in spite of themselves. One would always defend the
other with his life, but would never tell the other one about it.
Tell us about some of your co-stars. I just interviewed
lovely Miss Polly Walker. Tell us about her.
She’s just lovely. One of the
greatest things she brings to the character, which is why I think it could only
be Polly Walker playing Atia, is the fact that no matter what she says or does,
you forgive her! I can’t describe that quality, but everything she does, she
does for her children, yet she’s completely evil! But it doesn’t matter. You
can’t help but fall in love and be seduced by her, just like everyone else is. She’s
bold, she’s playful, she’s a great member of the team. And it was like that
with everybody. It was just a great ensemble group of actors, and producers and
directors, as well. There was no sense of detachment from anyone.
HBO has really become the place where all the
interesting projects that no major studio has the balls to make have a shot at
being produced.
I nicknamed them HB Bold. We
were shooting multiple 35mm cameras, with hundreds of extras, it was like
shooting a major studio picture. I mean our sets at Cinecitta dwarfed them all,
including the sets from Gangs of New York.
They recreated so much of the ancient city, it’s just breathtaking. Every day
you’re reminded just how lucky you are
to be part of a project like this. Jobs like this are rare.
This is your first trip to
I’m intrigued, because it’s
one of those places you’ve seen so many times on film, you’re almost
over-familiar with it. You recognize almost every corner or turn, avenue, shop
or street, yet you don’t know it at all. Even though it seems familiar, it’s
completely alien territory.
Tell us about King
Arthur, which I understand was a tough shoot for a variety of reasons.
Yeah, it was. Six months, we
were out there in
You guys should’ve made it at HBO.
(laughs) Ain’t that the
truth! But that said, you’re dealing with a big studio picture, and dealing
with the great and the good, and you have to finally say look, it’s your
dollar.
It’s decisions based on commerce and not art.
Yes, but somehow, art still
manages to come through.
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