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#movie: the queen and the welshman
dailytudors · 1 year
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Derek Godfrey as Owen Tudor with Dorothy Tutin as Catherine of Valois, Dowager Queen of England 
BBC’s The Queen and The Welshman (1966)
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shining-magically · 4 years
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this quarantine has caused me to read the entirety of Howl’s Moving Castle for the hundredth time in the span of a day
The movie is obviously fantastic but I have decided that I will never stop mourning the decision to pare down Howl’s character and not have him be bratty, irritable, a total cad, always in a losing battle of wits with Sophie, and a Giant Fucking Drama Queen and purposeful pain in the ass like in the book
also a Welshman who just really loves his little niece and also rugby and drives a shitty car
what a good character, thank you Diana Wynne Jones
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hearts-hunger · 5 years
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Funny How Love Is || bxjxg
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Summary: After a long day of failed auditions, Joe can’t stop thinking how he’s never quite good enough. Funny how love is always there to drown out doubt and remind him of how loved he is, especially by his two boyfriends.
Pairings: Ben Hardy x Joe Mazzello x Gwilym Lee || poly!borhap boys
Genre: Fluff, slight angst
Word Count: 4k
Warnings: None!
A/N: Hello lovelies!! I promised I’d give you some fluffy bxjxg by the end of the day, so here it is! That pic of Ben and Gwil on Gwil’s insta got me so soft that it actually kickstarted my dumb brain into writing for them again, and of course I had to write Joe in too. I hope you like it! ♡
Joe didn’t know exactly what it was that had made his day so horrible. Maybe it was the traffic, which he despised but usually tuned out of by calling one of his boyfriends. Maybe it was the fact that his phone had died just as he tried to call, leaving him stuck in the motionless car with no distractions. Maybe it was the same five songs that every radio station seemed to play, those top hits that he liked to dance to when he was tipsy but really would be happy never to hear while sober. Maybe it was the words of the casting director that kept echoing in his head without anything to drown it out, repeating over and over choice phrases that he’d been no stranger to in his acting career. We just don’t think you’re right for the part. You’ve got some good ideas but we’re going in a different direction. Sorry, Mr. Mazzello. We’ll give you a call when we decide.
Yeah, he knew what that meant. He’d get no such call, he could guarantee. Maybe it was arrogant on his part, but he’d thought that after landing Bohemian Rhapsody, casting directors everywhere would be begging for him to come audition for them. He’d found it was kind of the opposite; no matter how much money Borhap had made, Joseph Mazzello still wasn’t a big name in Hollywood, and people were looking for big names. Names that had made it onto more than one A-list movie in the past two decades.
He gripped the steering wheel a little tighter than necessary - really, traffic was crawling, so he could have put the car in park - and took a steadying breath. One rejected audition didn’t mean his whole career was coming to an end. He needed to be patient. He needed to keep trying.
He needed to stop hearing that damn casting director’s voice on repeat, is what he needed.
He fiddled with the radio again, tuning it to the station that played oldies and actually played Queen pretty consistently. No such luck this time, though - David Byrne’s voice crooned out through the speakers in its clipped way, oddly grating to Joe at the moment.
He turned the radio off with a huff. “Yeah, I’m about to be a psycho killer if this traffic doesn’t start moving.”
He was ready to be home. It had been a long and disheartening day, and he was just ready to be home and lay on the couch in sweatpants and watch reruns of X-Files on Fox. Maybe have some wine, possibly take a long and boiling hot shower. Anything to self-soothe from having to submit to the mortifying ordeal of giving his all to an audition only to be rejected, yet again.
“Finally,” he muttered to himself as traffic began to move. He eased the car up to the speed limit after inching forward for nearly half an hour and felt some of the tension in his shoulders ease.
He got home over an hour after he said he’d be back, night starting to fall over Belgravia and easing the temperature down with a cool breeze through the darkening sky. Looking up at the second floor windows of the brownstone, he couldn’t help but feel comforted at the warm light spilling between the sheer curtains and onto the street below. Double checking the car was locked, he headed up the steps to the front door, straightening his shoulders so as not to immediately give away how tired he felt.
The sound of “Funny How Love Is” greeted him as he closed the front door behind him, drifting in from where it was playing softly in the living room. He put his keys and his wallet on the little catch-all table in the foyer as he closed the door behind him.
“Honey, I’m home,” he called.
“Oh, fuck you!” came Ben’s voice from the living room.
Joe gave a surprised laugh at the reply, a smile crossing his face for the first time all day as kicked off his shoes. He made his way into the living room and found Ben on the couch, intently playing Mario Kart.
“That’s one hell of a way to greet your boyfriend,” Joe teased.
Ben gestured hopelessly to the screen. “I was in first place and Toad ran me right off.”
Joe saw Ben was playing Rainbow Road, and he could understand his boyfriend’s frustration. “So, that wasn’t directed at me?”
Ben looked mildly panicked. “God, no, sorry.” He gave Joe a smile. “Hi, honey. I’m glad you’re home. Come here.”
Joe sat next to Ben on the couch as he paused the game, tossing the controller aside in favor of taking Joe’s face in his hands and giving him a few gentle kisses.
“There,” he said. “Better?”
Joe couldn’t help but smile. “Much better, thank you.”
He propped his feet on the coffee table and leaned his head on Ben’s shoulder, enjoying the closeness. “You can keep playing if you want. Gotta show Toad who’s boss.”
Ben laughed, a warm and comforting sound, taking the controller in hand again as he started another race.
“And if you can’t beat Toad on Peach Beach, I’m officially disowning you,” Joe added.
Ben snorted. “Okay, dad, thanks.”
Joe was content to sit in silence and watch Ben play, listening as he sang along with Queen in his warm voice.
“Funny how love is everywhere, just look and see,” he sang almost out of habit. “Funny how love is anywhere you’re bound to be.”
Joe closed his eyes and breathed a sigh of relief, sinking into the sound of Ben’s voice and the feel of his warmth. Ben was practically a furnace; he usually wore his dozens of soft hoodies not because he was cold but because he was a very tactile person, enjoying physical touch and substituting with sweatshirts when he couldn’t have any.  
“So… how did your audition go?” Ben asked as the track switched to “Seven Seas of Rhye”, distracted by the video game but still wanting to engage with him.
Joe started to say that he didn’t want to talk about it, but he was saved from answering Ben as Gwil appeared on the stairs. Gwil smiled as he came down to the living room with a hoodie in hand, the corners of his eyes crinkling behind his round glasses.
“Thought I heard you come in,” he said. “How was your day, love?”
“Fine,” Joe said, trying for nonchalance. “Do you have a headache?”
While Gwil usually wore his glasses closer to bedtime and both Ben and Joe adored it, thinking it made Gwil’s sharp-featured beauty look a bit softer, they’d also learned that he wore them when he got headaches.
“No, thankfully,” Gwil said. “But my contacts were bothering me a bit.” He tossed the hoodie to Ben, who paused his game to pull it on.
“I couldn’t find the one you asked for,” Gwil said. “So I just grabbed one of mine.”
Ben gave him a smile. “‘S perfect, love, thanks.”
Gwil watched Ben go back to the game with a gentle smile on his face. That was Joe’s favorite part of being in a relationship with the two of them, seeing how they looked at each other like they hung the moon.
Joe warmed as that same gentle affection was turned on him, Gwil studying his face with a shadow of concern in his own before holding his hand out to Joe.
“Come on into the kitchen with me, Joey.”
Joe sighed and took Gwil’s hand, standing from his spot next to Ben on the couch. He almost wanted to stay with the blonde, knowing that Ben wouldn’t ask him questions about his day while he was focusing on the game. Gwil, though, had no such distractions, and Joe felt the weight of his admittedly vague answer between them.
“Tea?” Gwil asked, filling the kettle at the sink.
Joe took a seat at the bar. “Sure. Thanks.”
“There’s dinner leftover if you want some,” Gwil said, setting the kettle to heat on the stove. “I wasn’t sure if you’d eaten, since you came home later than you said. I tried to call but it went straight to voicemail.”
Joe ran a hand over his face. “Yeah, my phone died right as I left and I got caught in traffic. What’d you make?”
“It was Ben, actually,” Gwil said with a smile. “Chicken parmesan. I can heat some up for you if you want.”
“That’s ok,” Joe said. “I might have some later.”
In all honesty he felt kind of queasy at the thought of admitting that he hadn’t gotten the job. He stared blankly at the kettle on the stove, the casting director’s voice kept ringing in his ears. You’re just not what we’re looking for.
“Joe,” Gwil said.
He looked up to see Gwil taking three mugs down from the cabinet. “Hm?”
Gwil’s smile was colored with a bit of sadness. “I asked you what kind of tea you wanted.”
“Oh, sorry. Um, whatever you’re having. I don’t care.”
That wasn’t necessarily true; Ben and Gwil both knew Joe’s favorite tea was Darjeeling, and Gwil fixed it for him despite his answer. Joe felt a strange kind of ache as he watched Gwil make tea for the three of them, humming softly to himself, wiping up a spilled drop of water with the sleeve of his cozy black sweater. It was the same kind of ache he’d felt before they were together, when he’d found himself wanting to be held and comforted by the tall Welshman but not knowing how to ask.
“Where’d you go?” Gwil asked, giving him his tea.
Joe drew his mug close. “What do you mean?”
“You were miles away just then,” Gwil said. He smiled. “Just wanted to see where you’d got off to.”
“Nowhere,” he lied, running a hand over his face. “Just tired, that’s all.”
Gwil looked like he was about to say something, probably pushing back on the “just tired” excuse, but Ben’s voice cut him off from the living room.
“Did you make tea?” he asked.
“Yes, love,” Gwil called back. “Yours is ready if you want it.”
A moment later, Ben came into the kitchen; he took a seat next to Joe at the bar, pulling the sleeves of Gwil’s hoodie over his hands.
“Thanks,” he said as Gwil handed him a mug.
“My pleasure,” Gwil said, leaning on his elbows on the counter close to them. He bobbed his tea bag a few times, the water turning a honey color as the herbal tea he always drank seeped in.
“Say, you didn’t ever tell me how your audition went,” Ben said, nudging his shoulder lightly against Joe’s.
“You were a little distracted,” Joe said, trying for a joke and also trying to avoid the question again.
Ben smiled. “Yeah, but now I’m all yours. How was it?”
Joe wrapped his hands around the mug, feeling the warmth of it against the sudden chill of anxiety that made its way through him. “Um...” He felt a vague fight-or-flight feeling kick in, and searched for a way to get out from under the question without it being woefully obvious.
“Yeah, I’ll tell you all about it in a minute,” he said, standing. “I’m just gonna… go to the bathroom real quick.”
Oh, good job, Joe. He mentally kicked himself as his boyfriends gave him looks that mixed confusion and concern.
“Is everything ok?” Gwil asked.
Joe rubbed the back of his neck like he did when he was nervous, immediately making himself stop as soon as he noticed he was doing it. It was his biggest tell when he was lying or upset, and if they hadn’t already seen right through him like he was sure they had, his hand on the back of his neck was a dead giveaway.
“Yeah, fine.” Again, he tried for a joke. “I had to pee before I left, and sitting in traffic didn’t do me any favors. I’ll be right back.”
Before either of them could say anything or he could embarrass himself further, he made his escape up the stairs to the master bathroom. He could have gone to the guest bathroom downstairs, but he wanted a whole floor’s difference between him and his boyfriends who were surely talking about him now that they were alone. He splashed cool water on his face, glancing up at his reflection; he was red-cheeked with embarrassment, and he only flushed deeper when he thought of going back downstairs again. They’d probably take the hint and not ask him about it again - doubtless they’d guessed he didn’t get the part - but he’d still made such a huge deal about it that they were sure to walk on eggshells around him.
As he turned off the faucet and buried his face in a towel, he heard quiet bickering coming from the other side of the bathroom door.
“He obviously doesn’t want to talk about it,” Gwil was saying in a hushed voice. “Maybe we should just let it drop.”
“Maybe something’s really wrong,” Ben insisted, his tone matching his boyfriend’s. “Maybe it hasn’t got to do with the audition at all.”
Gwil was quiet for a moment. “You don’t think he’d hide something important, do you?”
Joe could picture Ben shrugging in response.
“He’s been like this since he walked through the door,” Ben said. “I’m worried, Gwil. This seems like a lot of fuss for one silly audition.”
“I agree,” Gwil said. “But maybe you’re right. Maybe it’s something different.”
Joe sighed. Why couldn’t he have just admitted he didn’t get the part and gotten it over with? He felt bad that he’d whipped his boyfriends up into a state of panic with his behavior; he knew it was childish. To have to go and tell them that it was indeed just the failed audition that had gotten him this upset, and not some life-threatening news worthy of a whole charade like the one he’d put on, was nearly too much to bear. He couldn’t hide in the bathroom forever, though, and after a few steadying breaths he went out into their bedroom.
Ben and Gwil broke apart from where they’d been talking closely together on the foot of the bed, trying to act as if they hadn’t just been in intent conversation about him. He almost smiled as he shrugged off his jacket and went to hang it in the closet; it was a small comfort that they were as bad as he was at acting like everything was fine. He stayed in the closet longer than he needed to, trying to buy himself some time or wait for them to say something.
Their hushed voices started up again, and Joe heard Ben say he was going to ask.
Gwil took Ben’s hand as he stood, trying to get him to sit back down. “Wait, Ben, just - ”
“Joey,” Ben said in his regular speaking voice, the baritone colored with concern. He gave Gwil’s hand a reassuring squeeze before letting it go and coming over to the closet.
“Please tell us what’s wrong,” he said.
Joe brushed past him and went to take off his watch, setting it on top of the dresser. “Nothing’s wrong,” he said, feeling a flare of frustration. Why couldn’t they have just let it go?
“Come on, sweetheart, you’ve been acting out of sorts since you came in the door,” Ben said. “We’re just worried about you.”
Joe huffed and carded his hand through his hair. “Fine,” he said. “I didn’t get the part, but you already knew that. That’s what’s wrong. Now can we please not talk about it any more?”
The words tasted bitter on his mouth, and now that he’d said them instead of just implied them, they couldn't be taken back.
“So…” Gwil ventured, “it is just the audition?”
“What, that’s not enough?” Joe snapped. He didn’t like that he was talking to his boyfriends like this, but he couldn’t seem to get a hold of his frustration and shame.
“No,” Gwil said, a bit surprised at Joe’s tone. “I mean, not getting a part is never fun, sure. But you’re not usually like this about it.”
Joe gave a derisive laugh. “Yeah, because I’ve had so many failed auditions that we know how I’m going to react to them.”
“That’s not what I meant,” Gwil said, pained that he’d wounded his boyfriend further. “We’ve all had plenty of failed auditions before. What I meant was that even out of the three of us, you’re usually the one who takes it best.”
That was true, and it was probably most of the reason why they were pressing him so hard about it this time. Gwil would brood and mull over his audition for hours on end if he didn’t get one, trying to see what he’d done wrong; Ben could get downright sulky if he got turned down. Joe, though, was always the one to crack a joke, to say that he hadn’t wanted the part anyways, to say they were probably going to go with someone else because the industry had a thing against redheads. He’d rarely taken a loss like he had this one, and he didn’t blame his boyfriends for being overly concerned.
Joe ran a hand over his face, annoyed at the sting of tears he felt.
“What was it about this one that made it so hard, Joe?” Gwil asked. “I don’t remember you saying you wanted it that badly, but I’m sorry if you did and I forgot.”
“No, it’s ok,” Joe said tiredly. Truth be told he hadn’t been very excited about this part, but at this point he figured he’d take what he could get.
He almost laughed. Of course, he’d been scraping the bottom of the barrel and had still come up empty. That was par for the course, wasn’t it?
“I just…” He shook his head. “Maybe it’s time to throw in the towel, you know?”
Ben and Gwil both frowned, surprise and confusion warring for dominance in their expressions. Ben sat at the foot of the bed again next to Gwil, both of them waiting patiently to hear what Joe meant even as they worried over him. Gwil put his hand over Ben’s to let the younger man know that it had been good to get Joe talking about this.
Joe sighed. “It’s been months since awards season, and I haven’t gotten any jobs.”
“That’s nothing to worry about, though,” Gwil said. He gave a wry smile. “You don’t get jobs lined up like that unless you work for Marvel or something.”
“You did,” Joe protested. “Both of you got jobs as soon as you got off Borhap.”
“Not big ones, though,” Gwil said. “Top End’s only playing in Australia, for god’s sake.”
“And I’ll only be in Six Underground for ten minutes, tops,” Ben agreed. “It’s not like I’m headlining my own box-office hit.”
“Still,” Joe said, unconsoled. “They’re still jobs. You’re still actors that people want to cast. I’m just…”
You’re just not what we’re looking for, the casting director’s voice filled in for him. That had been the constant, through all of it - everybody else could get a job, but Joe was never what anybody was looking for.
He hung his head. “Maybe I’m just not good enough.”
If he’d expected wild protest from his boyfriends, he didn’t get it. For a split second he had the dreadful feeling their silence was agreement, but no sooner had the thought crossed his mind than he felt Ben’s arms around him, pulling him close. He let himself be held, burying his face in Ben’s hoodie.
“Oh, Joey,” Gwil said, running a hand over his back and gently kissing the parts of his face that weren’t hidden against Ben’s chest. “That’s not true and you know it.”
“Why can’t I get a part, then?” he asked, his voice muffled by the fabric of Ben’s hoodie.
Gwil sighed. “I dunno, love. All I know is that every one of those movies would have been lucky to have you. You’re incredibly talented, Joe. You just haven’t found the right part yet.”
“And everybody who said no to you has no idea what they’re missing,” Ben agreed. He pulled back to look at Joe’s face, brushing away the few tears that Joe hadn’t managed to keep at bay. “Okay?”
Joe nodded. “Okay.” He knew he wouldn’t be fully convinced until he landed another job, but for now it was enough to lean on his boyfriends’ confidence in him.
“Sorry about…” He sighed. “Everything. I should have just told you.”
“That’s ok, love,” Gwil said. He brushed back Joe’s slightly mussed hair. “Why don’t you have a bath, hm? Wind down a bit before bed, how does that sound?”
“Only if you two join me,” he said.
Smiles surfaced on both of their faces.
“I think that can be arranged,” Gwil said, at the same time Ben said “do you even have to ask?”
Ben and Joe got comfy pajamas laid out for the three of them while Gwil drew the bath, leaving the bathroom lights off. They came into the bathroom greeted by the scent of rose bath salts and the warm glow of the candles they’d bought for just this purpose. Joe wasn’t even in the bath before he felt the tension leave his tired body, his boyfriend’s gentle hands helping him out of his clothes and into the warm water enough to erase a lifetime’s worth of worry. Gwil got in behind him and Ben across from them, their legs tangled together in the middle. Joe leaned back against Gwil’s chest as Gwil comfortably wrapped his arms around him. Ben traced up and down Joe’s thigh with a gentle touch.
“Okay, Benny?” Gwil asked.
Ben smiled. “Perfect. Though you both owe me lots of cuddles when we get in bed.”
Both Gwil and Joe gave a soft laugh.
“Come here, you,” Joe said, leaning forward to kiss Ben. The feel of Ben’s mouth on his and Gwil’s warm hand on his back made Joe almost lightheaded with happiness. He rested his forehead against Ben’s for a minute, drinking in the closeness of the two people he loved most in the world, the two people who showed him tirelessly that he was good enough, even when everything else was telling him he wasn’t.
He leaned back against Gwil and kissed his scruffy jaw, feeling Gwil’s smile.
“Thank you,” Joe said. “Both of you. I don’t know what I’d do without you.”
Gwil twined his fingers with Joe’s. “Lucky for you, you’re stuck with us.”
Ben took their entwined fingers in his hands and brought them to his lips, peppering them with gentle kisses and tracing circles over their knuckles with the pad of his thumb.
“Gwil and I love you so much, Joey,” Ben said against their hands. “You’re perfect, you know? Absolutely perfect.”
Joe’s cheeks pinked and he turned his face to hide against Gwil. Gwil chuckled and kissed his temple.
“It’s true, love,” Gwil said. “You are perfect. And pretty soon some casting director’s going to see that as plainly as we do, I promise.”
“I love you,” Joe said. That one was just for Gwil, and he knew it; he drew Joe closer and gave a sigh of contentment.
“I love you too, sweetheart.”
Joe lightly nudged Ben in the ribs with his heel, drawing a giggle from the blonde as Joe had hoped it would. Ben was very ticklish, and his innocent laughter was one of the most beautiful sounds Joe had ever heard.
“I love you,” Joe told him. He couldn’t help but smile at Ben’s grin.
“I love you too, Joey,” he said. “Even more than Mario Kart.”
Gwil gave a huff of a laugh. “Charming.”
“It’s okay, Gwil,” Ben said. “I love you more than Mario Kart too.”
“Did I ever mention how irresistible your skills for romance were?” Gwil asked.
They all laughed and settled closer to each other, limbs tangled in the warm water, Ben’s skin fairly shimmering in the gold light, Gwil’s big hands belying their true softness as they traced over whichever parts of his boyfriends he could reach. Ben hummed “Funny How Love Is” in the companionable stillness, and Joe felt it was rather appropriate. Funny how love is everywhere, just look and see. Funny how love is anywhere you’re bound to be.
Even if he never got cast again in his life, he’d still gotten Borhap, and that was the only that mattered because it was what brought him to Ben and Gwil. Tomorrow brings love in the shape of things. Even if tomorrow brought audition after failed audition, it would still bring him another day with the two loves of his life. It would still bring him to loving and being loved in a hundred different ways by the two people who made everything right in the world, no matter what.
story taglist: @sunflower-borhap-boys @mimibarnes
forever taglist: @tv-saved-the-teenage-girl @dashlilymark @hazah
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ramajmedia · 5 years
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Rocketman: Was Taron Egerton Really Playing the Piano?
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When taking on the role of Elton John in musical biopic Rocketman, the singing came easily to star Taron Egerton, who actually performed "Your Song" as his audition piece for the Royal Academy of Dramatic Art. Egerton sings all of the songs in the movie, sometimes joined by his co-stars. However, he didn't know how to play piano before being cast, which posed a challenge when playing a musician renowned for his piano skills.
Enter Michael L. Roberts, an acclaimed multi-instrumentalist who served as the vocal, piano, and performance coach on Rocketman - teaching Egerton to play some songs, and teaching him how to make it look like he was playing others. One scene where Egerton can be seen playing an entire song authentically is Elton John's first performance at the Troubadour, a famed Los Angeles club, which becomes the stage for a gravity-defying rendition of "Crocodile Rock." Egerton trained for weeks before production began in order to be able to nail the technical aspects of playing piano and, more importantly, really selling the performance on camera.
Related: Rocketman Interview: Director Dexter Fletcher
In the lead-up to production, Roberts worked not only Egerton but also his younger counterparts: Matthew Illesley, who plays the youngest version of Elton John (or, as he was known then, Reggie Dwight), and Kit Connor, who plays a young adolescent version of the singer. Both had to be strong performers in their own right, with Illesley leading the movie's opening number, "The Bitch is Back," and Connor kicking off the complex and chaotic "Saturday Night's Alright For Fighting." Here's what went into making Rocketman's musical performances, according to Roberts.
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How long did you spend working with Taron - teaching him to half play piano, half pretend to play piano?
It worked out as about two to three hours a day, five days a week, for six to eight weeks in pre-production. And then I was there on set with him every time he was at the piano to to give reminders and help structure each scene.
What was the most challenging song in the film?
I think when you when you watch it through the sheer volume of movement, things to remember, and being suspended on wires, it's got to be "Crocodile Rock" in terms of just sheer incredible feat of performance.
Elton is very flamboyant in his style on the piano, but does he have any particular kind of tics or specialities?
I think he's fundamentally, irrespective of the of the visual element, he's born out of very solid classical piano technique and a really deep rooted sense of blues and rhythm of blues. And so I feel that permeates everything that he plays.
What was it like working with the younger Eltons?
Fantastic. So the first thing with young Matt Tillesley is there's no sense of inhibition at his age, and he was actually a very good piano player. He was putting us all to shame, day after day on the set. So my piano coaching with him was very easy, but you've got that boundless sense of complete lack of inhibition which means that he's responding honestly to everything, and the joy that you see in his face and what really gives that gives you that sense of what a warm child Elton was, is so much down to his sense of boundless freedom in that regard. As far as kids are concerned he's just this consummate professional at this incredible young stage of his life.
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Are there are any particular scenes in the film way you can watch and see that it's Taron playing that song all the way through?
Yeah. So whilst the sound that you're hearing is is recorded afterwards, obviously, "Crocodile Rock" is pretty much entirely Taron. Everything you see him hitting is for real. And "Your Song," "Benny and the Jets," when he's in the Queen costume, all of that is for real. And leading into "I'm Still Standing" at the end. Whenever you see his hand reach out, he knows he knows exactly where he was going for.
So if you wanted to fake being able to play the piano, how would you go about it?
Fundamentally it's the question of the rhythm. If you're hearing something that sounds crazy heavy blues licks, and you're seeing someone be very small at the instrument then obviously that's not going to be believable in any way, shape or form. When you actually get close up on the actor at the piano then everything about the body rhythm and the hand rhythm is what will either make it look convincing or give it away in terms of someone faking it.
It's a tough one, but do you have a favorite Elton John song?
No [laughs]. I think it's impossible. "Candle In The Wind" resonates with me emotionally as a Welshman, from the 1997 moment in so far as the Princess Diana's funeral. That was the first time having been so familiar with all of Elton's works that I really felt a sense of emotional connection to it. And I think "Crocodile Rock" was the most fun on this film, and "Your Song" was the most magical to be just off the side of the set for.
Rocketman is now available on 4k Ultra HD, Blu-ray, DVD and Digital.
More: Every Elton John Song In Rocketman
source https://screenrant.com/rocketman-taron-egerton-playing-piano-real/
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