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Andy Nyman: The news is full of horrors that you can't begin to let into your head
Yahoo UK
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27/12/2023
Andy Nyman speaks to Yahoo UK about his career in acting, writing, magic and more for Origin Story.
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News
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00:00
The news every day is just full of horrors that you can't begin to let into your head.
00:05
What first sparked your interest in acting?
00:15
I always loved doing school plays and stuff, so I always had that bug.
00:20
I was lazy at school and it used to drive everybody a bit mad
00:26
because I sort of had ability but never wanted to use it.
00:29
And my mum, when I was probably 13, 14 or something,
00:35
had seen there was a little local drama group in Leicester.
00:40
So she said, "Why don't you go there and see if that suits you?"
00:45
And I did and it did. And that was it, then the bug bit.
00:49
And I knew... I already had a feeling that I loved drama and stuff.
00:56
I'd done little shows at the other youth club I'd been to.
01:01
But the real change for me was when I went to see Jools at the Pictures.
01:06
And as a little curly-haired Jewish kid with glasses,
01:11
sitting watching this incredible film and seeing up on the big screen
01:15
this little curly-haired Jewish guy with glasses, Richard Dreyfuss,
01:19
and I just saw that and thought, "Oh my God.
01:22
"Oh my God, you can be in films and you don't have to look like
01:27
"Paul Newman or Robert Redford as it would have been then,
01:29
"or Brad Pitt or, you know, pick a ludicrously God-like human being now
01:35
"who stars in films."
01:37
I suddenly realised, "Oh my God, you don't have to look like that.
01:40
"You can look like that."
01:42
Which I kind of did.
01:43
So that was the moment then that I knew, "Oh, I want to be in action,
01:47
"I want to be in films."
01:48
You've worked in lots of films and TV,
01:50
but you've also worked significantly on stage and in theatre.
01:53
So I wanted to ask, how would you describe your early experiences on stage?
01:58
Well, stage is just thrilling.
01:59
I mean, I'm very blessed to be an actor and I love it.
02:05
And I always feel incredibly grateful that it works.
02:09
Any time I get to act, I just love it so much.
02:13
Being on stage is so wonderful because it's such an immediate form.
02:17
So to get to the last big stage thing that I did
02:19
was Fiddler on the Roof.
02:21
So to play Tevye on a West End stage is just the most amazing feeling.
02:29
Next year I'm going to be doing another musical, actually.
02:32
I'm going to be doing Hello Dolly at the Palladium.
02:34
So it's the whole package.
02:37
Walking through a stage door as an actor, it never gets boring.
02:43
It's always a thrill, let alone being in the wings
02:47
and walking out on stage and just feeling like, wow.
02:51
Is there any role that you've played in film, TV, theatre, etc,
02:56
that you would approach differently now, you think?
03:00
That's a really good question.
03:01
I actually, the honest truth is no.
03:04
Not because I think I've done them perfectly.
03:06
But what's interesting is I remember when I left drama school,
03:10
so I'd have been 21, and you sort of think, come on, I'm brilliant.
03:14
Let me play King Lear.
03:15
I can act.
03:15
I know everything about life.
03:17
But the reality is you kind of play the parts,
03:23
seem to, as long as you're drawing from yourself,
03:26
it's always the right time.
03:28
So the fact that, again, to talk about Tevye for a minute,
03:31
the fact I played Tevye, who's married for 25 years
03:36
and his children are leaving home.
03:38
Well, the fact I managed to play that as a man who was married for 30 years
03:42
or 29 years at that point, whose children are leaving home,
03:47
just means you're playing it in a different way
03:49
than you would have done if you'd have got the role 15 years earlier.
03:53
Equally, I think that it's easy to beat yourself up over things
04:00
and look at them and think, oh, you blew that.
04:02
You could have done it like that.
04:03
Why didn't you do that?
04:04
And of course, if you're forensic about things, you can do that.
04:09
But I've sort of tried to retrain myself to just only choose work
04:15
that I think I can be proud of and then work really hard
04:20
and hope that the results show when you do it.
04:24
I don't mean, oh, they show what a hard worker he is,
04:28
but so that you can walk away from it.
04:30
And when you're asked a question like that, not think, yeah,
04:32
I wish I could do that again because I blew that.
04:35
I just feel like I played an unbelievable variety of roles
04:40
and blessed to have done that and feel like I've given them all my best shot.
04:45
You also work with magic, which I think is so cool.
04:50
I wonder, when did you kind of first begin getting interested in magic
04:56
and wanting to perform it?
04:57
Well, I loved magic when I was a kid.
05:00
My uncle bought me a magic set and I kind of got into that and practical jokes.
05:05
The two sort of go hand in hand.
05:06
You know, often a magic shop would sell jokes as well,
05:08
they'd have jokes and tricks.
05:10
So I always loved that.
05:11
But then I really properly got into it about 30 years ago,
05:15
about the same time I left drama school.
05:17
And Jeremy Dyson, who is my co-writer, co-director on Ghost Stories
05:23
and our novel, The Warlock Effect, he's always done magic.
05:27
And he moved to London and said, oh, let's go to this magic shop.
05:29
And I was like, I'm 22.
05:30
I don't want to go to a magic shop.
05:31
I'm not a kid.
05:32
And of course, I walked in and it was like, oh, my God.
05:36
So I just fell in love with it then and then I've done it ever since.
05:41
And, you know, it's a major obsession in my life.
05:44
I absolutely love it.
05:45
My son loves it and he's very good at it as well.
05:47
And he also creates.
05:48
So it's a great shared passion for us.
05:51
And how did your collaboration with Derren Brown first start?
05:54
I got a phone call out the blue from a guy called Andrew O'Connor,
05:58
who had a company called Objective.
06:00
And they said at that time nobody was doing mind reading magic.
06:03
It was something apart from like three of us.
06:05
It was not in fashion.
06:07
So I was quite well known in the magic world for the stuff I was doing.
06:10
And I got this phone call out the blue saying, we want to offer you
06:13
a one hour special on Channel 4 doing mind reading magic.
06:16
To which I said, thank you, but no, thank you.
06:20
I'm an actor. That's what I love.
06:21
That's I'm not interested in in getting famous as a magician.
06:26
But whoever you find, I work with them and I write for them.
06:31
And that they came back about six months later,
06:36
it was a slightly longer process than that.
06:38
But they came back and said, we found this guy, Derren Brown.
06:41
Had you ever seen him?
06:42
And I had seen him at a magic convention.
06:44
He was incredible.
06:46
And they said, well, we want you to work together.
06:48
And that's how it happened.
06:49
And that is 24 years ago, something mad like that.
06:53
So we worked together.
06:55
I wrote and directed with Derren
06:57
the first 10 years of the telly up until the lottery prediction.
07:01
I sort of wrote everything.
07:03
Derren and I wrote everything up until then.
07:06
And then I've written and directed all of the stage shows apart from one.
07:09
And how would you describe your experience writing for the stage?
07:12
You know, you've got these magic shows, of course, and you will go stories play
07:16
as well. But how would you find your experience writing?
07:18
I love it.
07:20
I've always worked in collaborations, Roxy.
07:23
It's the best way for me to work.
07:26
And it's funny, I don't.
07:29
It's hard work, creating anything is hard, hard work.
07:34
And you have to learn to kill your darlings and ideas
07:39
that you love that you realize aren't going to work.
07:41
You have to let go of them or ideas that you love that the other person doesn't.
07:44
You have to either compromise or let go of those.
07:46
But I really love it.
07:47
It's endlessly tricky and challenging.
07:50
But when it works, the results are really rewarding and exciting.
07:56
You know, I mean,
07:56
the pride of going to see something like Showman, the last Derren Brown show.
08:01
Or Ghost Stories, you know,
08:05
hearing an audience reacting to the play of Ghost Stories
08:09
or the film of Ghost Stories, and there's just nothing like it.
08:11
What were the movies that you loved growing up, but also
08:16
do you remember your first cinema experience if Jaws wasn't the one?
08:20
We were a big film going and theater going family, you know.
08:23
So I have very, very fond memories of all
08:28
going to the ABC or the Odeon in Leicester, you know, to see whatever that,
08:33
you know, the big Disney release would have been or we went all the time.
08:38
So I don't have there are lots of sort of memories within there.
08:43
You know, Jaws is an absolute banger of a memory
08:47
just because, again, it's easy to forget that that film changed cinema.
08:52
Literally, you know, if you think cinema is only 100 plus years old
08:56
and that film is, I don't know, how old is it?
09:00
Forty five, 50 years old now, something mental like that.
09:03
So literally halfway through how long cinema existed.
09:08
Here comes a film that transforms the way cinema is released.
09:16
And invented what a blockbuster was, you know, everything,
09:21
everything led on from that, it's quite incredible.
09:24
So to be able to have seen that, let alone
09:28
the Richard Dreyfuss connection, let alone as a kid
09:34
who was scared of horror films and stuff to have to go and see what is basically
09:40
a horror, you know, a monster film, a monster movie that had some proper
09:44
horror jumps in it, I mean, you know, and then the other absolutely
09:49
massive one was The Fog, John Carpenter's The Fog.
09:52
My sister wanted to go see it, but as I said, I was a scared kid.
09:56
So I'd have been 14.
09:57
It was a double A as the rating used to be.
09:59
And I didn't want to go see it.
10:02
And she said, Oh, come with me.
10:03
It'll be fine.
10:04
It's not scary.
10:05
It has to be an X if it's scary.
10:07
So we went to see it.
10:10
And of course, I mean, it is an absolute banger.
10:13
An absolute roller coaster ride, masterpiece of sort of
10:18
thrilling ghost story.
10:21
And I was terrified, but loved it.
10:25
Loved it.
10:26
You kind of touched on it just now, but I wanted to kind of ask
10:30
about your experiences with horror, like growing up and how that kind of
10:34
interest in the genre, I guess, developed because you kind of talked about
10:38
how it started.
10:39
I can't underestimate.
10:43
No, wrong.
10:44
Overestimate, overstate what horror has meant in my life.
10:49
And that is a real surprise to me, because I was, as I keep saying,
10:55
a scared kid.
10:56
You know, I did not watch anything.
10:58
I'd run away from it.
10:59
Anything that scared me.
11:00
And so I can't quite believe that horror has become this,
11:06
you know, sort of obsession in my life.
11:12
But it's funny as you grow and change, because when you're younger
11:16
around the video, nasty, you want to see the worst thing
11:19
you can possibly imagine.
11:21
You know, the most violent.
11:24
There are no taboos.
11:26
You just want to see anything and everything you can.
11:29
But as you get older and you become more aware of your mortality
11:33
and you get married and have kids and there are people around you
11:37
that you worry about, worry for.
11:40
Your tastes change.
11:42
You don't want to see.
11:43
I mean, I saw a film recently, Speak No Evil.
11:46
I don't know if you've seen that.
11:49
I wish I'd never seen it.
11:51
I mean, it's so I mean, it's an incredible piece of work,
11:54
but it's so wretched and so profoundly upsetting and haunting.
12:01
Well, that would have meant nothing to me when I was a kid.
12:06
The news every day is just full of horrors that you can't begin to
12:10
let into your head.
12:11
I mean, I don't really watch the news.
12:13
I don't really go on social media.
12:14
It's just too much.
12:15
Asian horror
12:17
is very akin to British ghost stories I've always found,
12:23
because as culture, you know, they're sort of there's nothing
12:27
within Asian horror or the British ghost story
12:30
that feels akin to America or Americans.
12:34
It is a completely different sensibility because.
12:38
The sensibility of the Asian cultures,
12:41
and I realize that's as a broad generalization.
12:44
But it's the same as the British culture,
12:48
which is terrible fear of embarrassment,
12:52
terrible fear of being judged publicly,
12:57
absolutely being buttoned down and private.
13:01
You could epitomize both of those cultures like that,
13:06
as generalizations.
13:08
Consequently, a lot of the horror that comes out of those two cultures,
13:12
I think, you know, if you look at Dark Water, that could be an M.R.
13:16
James story.
13:18
Old Boy has sort of
13:23
Hitchcock's Britishness stamped all over it.
13:28
You could go back in time and give young Andy any advice
13:34
to change his origin story or change his story.
13:37
What would it be and why?
13:40
I wouldn't change anything.
13:42
I wouldn't change anything.
13:44
I'd love to come out with some wise thing.
13:47
I would tell him not to worry.
13:49
Everything will be fine.
13:51
But no, life is what it is.
13:53
I've had a fantastic life, you know, ups and downs like all of us.
13:57
Pain, happiness like all of us.
14:00
That's what life is. It's unavoidable.
14:02
But I wouldn't change a thing.
14:04
And I love that I still get to swim in the same sea
14:07
that I have loved since I was a kid.
14:10
Still get to do all the same things.
14:12
My God, that is a blessing and a half.
14:15
A blessing and a half.
14:16
(upbeat music)
14:18
(upbeat music)
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