<<

Red Man

HIS PORTRAYAL OF MALCOLM X IN ONE NIGHT IN MIAMI HAS JUST GARNERED KINGSLEY BEN-ADIR AN EE RISING STAR AWARD ctor Kingsley Ben-Adir has reached a watershed moment in his career, NOMINATION AND but is yet to come to terms with it. ‘I still haven’t got my head around the idea that anything I say could be thought of as interesting to anyone,’ NOW THE SCRIPTS he declares on our Zoom call. I can’t help but laugh in response. This is ARE POURING IN. BUT, coming from the actor who is fast becoming one of Hollywood’s most AS ANNA BONET sought-after Brits; it’s probably time he started getting used to it. AIn the last 18 months alone, the 35-year-old from north-west has played two LEARNS, THE PATH American icons: Malcolm X in ’s Oscar-tipped film One Night In Miami and TO SUCCESS HASN’T Barack Obama in the The Comey Rule. He’s starred opposite Zoë Kravitz in Hulu’s High Fidelity and Anna Kendrick both in the HBO series Love Life and festive filmNoelle . ALWAYS BEEN He’s no stranger to UK screens either, having had roles as pathologist Marcus Summer in SMOOTH ITV’s detective drama Vera, and as Colonel Ben Younger in BBC One’s Peaky Blinders. And right now, Ben-Adir’s hard work seems to be paying off. He’s been nominated for the EE Rising Star Award at this year’s EE BAFTA Film Awards (previous winners include , and ), and his quite frankly outstanding performance as Malcolm X has also seen him swept up in the Oscars buzz. ‘It feels a little surreal,’ he says of it all. ‘And you know, flattering, but not in a way where I feel like…’ he pauses, and fiddles with his cap. ‘It’s a weird feeling.’ THE He does this a lot throughout our chat. Long pauses punctuate his sentences, many of which trail off into nothingness. Sometimes, they end with a smile and a simple: ‘I don’t know!’ But rather than trying to be careful about what he says, Ben-Adir is simply still figuring out how to navigate his new life in the limelight. He’s speaking to me from his flat in Kentish Town, wearing a black hoodie and NY cap, and aptly enough, this is also where his story begins. Raised in the area by his mother, a carer, his interest in acting started young; he describes watching Jim Sheridan’s 2002 film In America as a teen and ‘bawling my eyes out’. But there was never a grand plan. After leaving school at 16, he started working with children with special educational needs and behavioural problems. That was, until fate intervened. One of the parents he met while in the job happened to be an actor at the Royal Shakespeare Company and Ben-Adir realised that this could lead to an opportunity to pursue his passion. Several conversations and a few introductions later, he won a place at the Guildhall School of Music & Drama, aged 22. He’s not ashamed to say, however, that he didn’t find drama school easy. ‘I really struggled,’ he admits. ‘I failed every year and they made me audition again to get back in.’ ‘GETTING Still, he pushed on, and after graduating in 2011, found himself an agent and a handful of theatre roles. In 2013, he was cast in ’s production of Much Ado About Nothing. A CALL TO For someone who had struggled through drama school, it sounds like quite the success story, but Ben-Adir assures me this wasn’t the case. ‘The rejections stacked up,’ he says, shaking SAY I HAD his head. ‘I never had jobs lined up. Getting a call that I had a part was always a huge relief.’ Less than a decade on, however, Ben-Adir seems to be in the driving seat. When sent the A PART WAS script for One Night In Miami in 2019, to read for the role of Cassius Clay (who changed his name to Muhammad Ali after joining the Nation of Islam), he turned it down. What gave him A HUGE the confidence to say no? He takes a sip of coffee. ‘It was f*****g hard,’ he concedes. ‘But once you’ve had enough experiences of situations where your heart tells you it’s not right, and RELIEF’ you don’t listen, then you have a sh*t experience – you have to start trusting your instinct.’

36 37 May 2021 | REDONLINE.CO.UK May 2021 | REDONLINE.CO.UK XFACTO R Red Man

Set in 1964, the film portrays a fictionalised meeting of four Black icons: boxer Clay, So is love a destiny or a choice? ‘I think it is a choice,’ he decides, after a long pause. American footballer Jim Brown, soul musician Sam Cooke and civil rights activist ‘But I think love, because of the strength of the feeling – how powerful and overwhelming Malcolm X, who later was assassinated. The role of 22-year-old Clay felt ‘too young; too it can feel – can sometimes feel like it’s not a choice.’ Plus, he says, he did meet his fiancée jovial’, Ben-Adir explains. Instead, he was drawn to the vulnerability of Malcolm X’s in a coffee shop. ‘No mutual friends, no connections, no one introducing us,’ he smiles. character, and told the producers that if it became available, he was in. Two weeks before ‘So it does feel a bit like… the randomness of it, you know?’ Sounds like destiny to me, filming commenced, the actor who had been cast dropped out and Ben-Adir got the call. I say. He shoots back a grin. What followed, Ben-Adir says, was a gruelling fortnight in which he had to lose 20 As we wrap things up and I wish him luck with the awards, he gives an appreciative nod, pounds, learn the script from back to front and gain an encyclopaedic knowledge of his then tells me that he still thinks about a piece of advice he was given when studying at character. On top of that, in stepping into Malcolm X’s shoes, he was following in the Guildhall: to always treat the highs in the same way as the lows. ‘Just to stay even with it footsteps of the likes of and Morgan Freeman, who had both played all,’ he adds. ‘With the awards stuff, I don’t want to get carried away, because everything is him in the past. ‘It was a hell of a lot of pressure,’ Ben-Adir says. ‘But I go into every role fluid. There will be moments where sh*t is going really well, and there’ll be times where it’s with a healthy amount of terror.’ Plus, there was something exciting about joining that hall really rough, and you need to stay balanced.’ of fame. ‘I’m no fool; that was a serious opportunity,’ he grins. I expect there are more highs than lows to come for Ben-Adir. He laughs when I say this At its heart, One Night In Miami is about racism and the role that each of us plays in and assures me he’s still a work-in-progress. But yes, he admits, ‘This is just the beginning.’ striving for social justice. When filming at the beginning of last year, the cast and crew had Public voting for the EE Rising Star Awards is now open at ee.co.uk/BAFTA and the winner no idea that by the time it was released, global Black Lives Matter marches would have will be announced at the EE British Academy Film Awards on Sunday 11th April

been among the pivotal moments of 2020. ‘Strike with the weapon you have,’ Ben-Adir’s CUMMINGS CHARLIE PHOTOGRAPHY: character instructs Cooke, ‘your voice.’ When I ask him whether this line resonates with him personally, he gazes away, deep in thought. After a while, he nods slowly, and admits that his place in the conversation is something he’s been thinking about a lot recently – particularly as someone who isn’t on social media. ‘I think for me, my political act is ‘THERE throwing everything into the work I do; putting my energy into the roles I believe in and saying no to the ones that don’t have a positive message,’ he says. ‘I feel like I should be WILL BE doing that, rather than opening up a account and screaming on there every day.’ He laughs. ‘But ask me this again next year and maybe I’ll have changed my mind.’ HIGHS AND Ben-Adir says that working on the project was ‘just incredible’ and that he came out of the experience ‘thinking that there’s no going back’. But, it wasn’t so long ago that he LOWS, BUT considered giving up acting altogether. At the time, he’d just finished filming the second season of Netflix’s sci-fi mysteryThe OA (he played a private detective), as well as the 2019 YOU NEED Christmas filmNoelle , in which his main storyline got cut in the edit. ‘I was in serious doubt,’ he confesses now. ‘I saw a few things I’d been in, and I just felt TO STAY really disappointed,’ he shakes his head. ‘I would watch them back and go, “Is that it?” I felt lost. Like I’d hit a brick wall.’ Determined to work through it, he decided to ‘reinvest’ in BALANCED’ himself and started acting training again with a teacher in Los Angeles. ‘Then I jumped into High Fidelity with Zoë and had the most fulfilling acting experience,’ he smiles. Does he feel like he’s reaping the rewards now, then? ‘I do feel like I’ve reached a turning point,’ he says. ‘I’ve read more scripts over the past four weeks than I’ve read probably in the last three years!’ I’m curious as to what he’s looking for when he’s reading scripts now. What’s his next big ambition? ‘The ambition was always to get into this position, where you have material coming in,’ he says. ‘As a jobbing actor, you don’t get to read that many scripts. I remember seeing films coming out at festivals and wondering, “where do these come from? How do I get access to these movies?” And that’s happening now. This is the bit that I’ve been looking forward to. So it feels silly to wish this away and worry too much about what’s next.’ His upmost desire though, he says, is to stay ‘as anonymous as possible’ whatever success comes his way. ‘I want to be able to disappear into roles. And I like my life in Kentish Town,’ he muses. He speaks fondly of the same friendship group he’s had ‘since Year Seven at school’ and of spending time with his fiancée, who he tries to keep as private as possible ‘to protect her’. While he won’t be drawn on the finer details of their relationship, I’m interested to know more about Ben-Adir’s views on love, given it’s a topic that’s put under the microscope in one of his recent shows, Amazon Prime’s Soulmates. The clever anthology series is set in a futuristic world where you can take a test to identify your ideal romantic partner. Ben-Adir stars as Franklin, who has met his wife the old-fashioned way, but whose marriage begins to break down when the idea of taking the ‘test’ triggers doubt in their relationship.

38 May 2021 | REDONLINE.CO.UK