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Hugh Dancy Explores the Unknown on ‘Hannibal’

Photo Source: Stephanie Diani

There is a remarkable moment between Hugh Dancy, as Will Graham, and Mads Mikkelsen, as Hannibal Lecter, late in the second season of NBC’s bloody good “Hannibal.” Together in Lecter’s office, the doctor and his patient are beginning to face off as Will tells Hannibal that he’s fantasized of killing him.

“How would you do it?” Hannibal calmly asks.

“With my hands,” Will says. But first Dancy pauses for a length of time not typically seen on network television and certainly not on what is, at its core, a high-concept procedural. But those lulls amid the gore are one of the many things that set this stylish series apart from its network cousins.

“There are some really wonderful pauses between Mads and I,” says Dancy, who then adds with a laugh, “and broadly speaking, that’s because one of us is trying to remember the lines.”

Returning June 4 for its third season, “Hannibal” is loosely based on Thomas Harris’ 1981 novel “Red Dragon,” which first introduced readers to the cannibalistic Hannibal Lecter as a psychiatrist aiding the FBI and Will Graham from behind bars in the hunt for a serial killer. Dancy, the British heartthrob best known at the time of his casting for such films as “Confessions of a Shopaholic” and “Adam,” admits he hadn’t read the novel and “had no real understanding or conception of Will Graham as a character” when he signed on for the role.

As it happens, Will and Hannibal have limited interaction in the book, but series creator Bryan Fuller says he saw the potential to “unpack a rich and complicated story”—one that “went to the heart of a very strange male friendship.”

In Fuller’s version, Will has been deemed potentially mentally unstable and referred to psychiatrist Hannibal, who recognizes the darkness within Will and goes to great lengths to exploit his fragile mental balance, which includes luminous, terrifying fantasies and lost time.

But keeping track of the storyline, the plot twists, what is fantasy and what is reality, and whether Will is fascinated by or wants to brutally murder Hannibal, are constant and dizzying challenges for Dancy.

Because Will has “fantasies or reveries or nightmares or whatever form they might take,” as Dancy says, the actor notes it’s important to figure out where the emotion is coming from. “And not just so we can have a cool sequence or see me all covered in sweat. Or maybe both those things are great. But it’s more, like, Where’s this taking us and what’s the note we want to strike?”

Another element that needs continuous defining is the relationship between Will and Hannibal. “The headspace is so abstract in terms of where he is in relation to Hannibal at any given time,” Dancy points out. “Do they love each other? Do they hate each other? Are they just pretending? Does he know that I know that he knows? Is it a game? Is it another game?

“I mean, there was a point in the beginning where Mads and I were just basically making our best guesses based on what we knew about the episode that we were currently shooting and hoping that we wouldn’t get a scene that just convoluted us,” the actor adds.

Dancy explains Hannibal as “the still point to a turning world while Will is constantly shifting,” and while most actors on television grasp their characters eventually, Will remains a mystery to Dancy—something he hopes enhances his performance.

“A point about Will is that he doesn’t know who he is and Hannibal knows who he is; [Hannibal] may be a nasty guy, but he’s so happy. He’s much fun. He has no qualms. So if you kind of resolve that about Will, or if I felt resolved about it, I think it would become quickly redundant,” Dancy says.

But while he claims to thrive in the unknown, Fuller can attest that the actor knows more than he lets on.

“When we sat down with him, he was so insightful about the character right off the bat,” Fuller says. “He has such great ideas and insight that I end up rewriting the scenes to include a lot of his ideas because they’re so rooted in the world and in the complications of the character.

“An actor like Hugh, who really understands storytelling on many different levels, is just a great tool to have in a showrunner’s toolbox.”

As for Mikkelsen, who first worked with Dancy on 2004’s “King Arthur,” a scene partner like Dancy is invaluable when sussing out the layered material of “Hannibal.”

“We do call each other in the middle of the night and go over scenes that we have to shoot tomorrow and figure out how we can either improve them or understand them,” Mikkelsen says.

“I like to talk about the material and he likes to talk about the material, and then we both like to shut up and get on with it,” adds Dancy. “Some actors like to talk more and some like to just do it. So we have a kind of similar approach: being ready when you arrive and then being on the same page and then just throwing all that away and getting into it.”

Back in Hannibal’s office, their prep thrown away, Will has answered Hannibal and the two of them face one another. Will admits that doing bad things to bad people feels “good” but he can’t resist adding a twist to the duo’s complicated, tangled relationship. “I don’t want to kill you anymore,” he tells Hannibal. “Now that I finally find you interesting.”

For viewers, of course, “Hannibal” has never been anything but. / Read More

credit: backstage.com , tumblr

May 27th, 2015
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Tao Okamoto interview with Japan Times

She mentions her time on the Hannibal set as well as Hugh and other cast members.

“With ‘Batman v Superman’ I was always on the outside as I was only on set a couple of days a month, whereas in ‘Hannibal’ I was more directly involved everyday so it was important to build relations with the cast and crew. At first I felt like a stranger who was jumping into a family that already had a lot of success together. It was nerve-wracking, but everybody went out of their way to make me feel at home,” she says.

I had most of my scenes with Hugh Dancy (Will Graham), who was great. It’s like his show so he makes a big effort to look after everyone. He didn’t even mind me asking lots of questions, even though some of them were probably inane. Mads Mikkelsen (Hannibal) was another gentleman, offering to carry heavy props for me. Laurence Fishburne (Jack Crawford) was the same. I thought he might be quite intimidating, but he was super sweet telling me stories about his wife. In one scene he saw I was struggling with the weight of a weapon so he came over and whispered some advice in my ear. He could have said it aloud, but he didn’t want to be showy.

“Everybody was like that. It’s a high-profile cast yet there was no pretentiousness on set at all. I remember Gillian Anderson (Bedelia Du Maurier) struggling with a word, I think it was ‘biggest’ or ‘worst,’ she just couldn’t seem to hit it. Rather than throwing her toys out of the pram, though, she just kept on going, desperately trying to get it right. I thought it was inspiring watching someone who has been at the top of her profession for so long working so earnestly without any airs and graces. In order to improve as an actress I know how important it is to learn from people like that.” / Read Full Interview

April 30th, 2015
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New Season 3 poster

Mashable has an exclusive look at the new poster for Hannibal: Season Three. You can view it by clicking on this link to go to their article over at mashable.com.

April 23rd, 2015
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Harrowing first-hand accounts of Gallipoli landings revealed in two never-before seen diaries

The below is only an excerpt, please click here to go to the article to read it in full.

Two harrowing first-hand accounts of the disastrous Gallipoli landings – said by historians to be the most detailed ever seen – can be revealed for the first time today.

The diaries of Petty Officer David Fyffe and Captain John Dancy give a chilling glimpse of the First World War campaign, which will have its 100-year anniversary marked tomorrow.

Mr Dancy talks of the waters being ‘pink and frothy with fallen men’, while Mr Fyffe describes a ‘floating shambles’ on one of the first ships in the failed invasion, the SS River Clyde.

The former collier ship was supposed to sail straight onto the shore and spill thousands of men onto the Ottoman Empire’s shores, but it beached 80 yards out on arrival in April 1915.

This left troops to wade through the stormy waters, with the soldiers desperately trying to tie together boats to form a gangway to the beach as enemy fire rained down on them.

Some 86,000 Turkish, 29,500 British and Irish, 12,000 French and 11,000 Australian and New Zealand (‘Anzac’) troops died during eight months of fighting in modern-day Turkey.

The diaries have been published alongside those of Mr Dancy whose great-grandson is actor Hugh Dancy, star of TV series Hannibal and husband of Homeland actress Claire Danes.

He was a surgeon who describes his attempts to treat men ‘impaled upon this double-gauge barbed wire’ and leave others who were ‘sunk too deeply in the thick prickly scrub’.

He also writes about the terrifying approach to the Turkish beaches where men jumped overboard and ‘did not reappear again’ under the enemy fire.

Mr Dancy, who was also 24 and attached to the Australian Army Medical Corps, describes his own death-defying run for the Turkish coast.

He wrote: ‘Several fell as they ran; and on the beach I saw even more men lying untidily, some quite still and others making an occasional movement.

‘Then I jumped over into two feet of water and waded heavily ashore. The lapping edge was already pink and frothy with fallen men.

‘Shrapnel was flying in all directions save mine. It was a blind gamble with it because in the dense smoke and dust up-beach, few men could easily sight a chosen target.’

During the landings he was tasked with setting up a first aid post on the beach but soon realised he would be a sitting duck.

He left the bloody shoreline and returned to the support vessel HMS Queen Elizabeth, which was converted into a makeshift hospital.

He wrote: ‘Even as I arrived a doctor was rummaging about inside an abdomen for a large piece of shrapnel, which, to his evident amazement, he suddenly found in his hand.

‘I washed up quickly and rushed to the rescue by putting in a row of stitches in double-quick time while the victim came round sufficiently to take an almost intelligent interest in the proceedings.

‘I was kept hard at it for hours, committing miracles of surgery which, for all I knew, might have had me struck off the Rolls anywhere else.’

His diaries came to light after Mr Van Emden spoke to Mr Dancy’s son John, 94, who lived next door to his sister.

Mr Dancy said it had spent most of the past century locked in an old leather trunk in his attic after his father returned from the war and lived out his life in Cornwall.

Read more: here.

April 23rd, 2015
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Deadline Gallipoli: The Full Story

[KGVID width=”480″ height=”268″]http://hugh-dancy.net/news/wp-content/uploads/2015/04/DGDocumentary.mp4[/KGVID]

Made For Foxtel
World Premiere
Saturday, April 25th at 7:30pm (1×60’)

Presented and narrated by Sam Worthington, Deadline Gallipoli -The Full Story is an exhilarating documentary, which follows the making of the landmark drama mini-series about four journalists who fought the upper echelons of the military to get the truth out about the audacious but ill-fated Gallipoli campaign of 1915.

This is the untold story of the journalists who battled against a brutal censorship regime imposed during WW1 – the story at the heart of the politically charged, high-octane drama – is a story of our times. The gulf between the Gallipoli campaign and the theatre of modern war may span a century, but the struggle to find the truth in war reportage, often skewed by propaganda, mythmaking and censorship, remains as challenging today as it was in 1915.

The documentary explores the drama producers’ decision to tell a well-known story from a new angle. Theirs is the point of view of the four journalists: Charles Bean, Ellis Ashmead-Bartlett, Phillip Schuler and Keith Murdoch who find themselves unable to report the truth they bear witness to. Though they understand that truth may sometimes be a casualty of war, the futility and carnage starts to weigh heavily on them. Two of them mount an offensive of their own with extraordinary results. These are the first truly embedded war correspondents whose actions and defiance ignite a change in the campaign’s course and whose commitment to the stories of fighting men turn Gallipoli from a strategic failure into legend. / source

April 22nd, 2015
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Deadline Gallipoli – Part One: Screen Captures

I have added screen captures of Hugh in part one of the two part mini series, Deadline Gallipoli. You can view the album in our photo archive by clicking on the thumbnails below. Remember to tune in Monday at 8.30pm on Showcase to view the second part!


Another article about the mini series popped up on the web, you can view it by clicking the link below:

April 20th, 2015
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Deadline Gallipoli Press Articles and New Images

I have added two new images to our photo archive in the Deadline Gallipoli category, one still as well as a promotional image.

Various press articles have popped up around the web. You can click on each title below to read them.

April 18th, 2015
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Joel Jackson mentions Hugh Dancy in an Interview

You can read the entire interview by clicking on the ‘read more’ text below.

Continue Reading

April 14th, 2015
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April 12 – Sunday Style – Scans

Thanks to my friend from jessica-degouw.net, I have added scans from Hugh’s article in the April 12th issue of Sunday Style to our photo archive.

April 11th, 2015
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Interview with Sunday Style

Hugh Dancy promotes mini-series Deadline Gallipoli and talks about life as an actor, husband and father
ACTOR Hugh Dancy, the 39-year-old Brit, receives a lesson on the Gallipoli legacy and the ins and outs of Aussie Rules.

You play British war correspondent Ellis Ashmead-Bartlett in the new mini-series Deadline Gallipoli, which marks the centenary of the campaign. Did it feel like you were working on something quite meaningful?
My feeling is that you have to put aside any sense that a story you’re telling is important, because as soon as you think that’s going to carry you along in some way, you’re doomed.

It doesn’t matter if it’s comedy or horror, you just have to get down to the nitty-gritty.

I’ve worked on projects before that dealt with significant moments in history, but it was certainly a learning curve when I arrived in Australia [for filming] to fully understand the significance Gallipoli has here.

I hear you attended your first AFL game while you were here?
Yes, I went to a few of them, actually.

I went with Joel [Jackson], who plays Charles Bean in the film.

He is West Australian and steeped in Aussie Rules, so we went for a pint and he drew a beer picture, dipping his finger in, to explain the rules.

I reckon, by the end of the game, I had a good grasp of it.

I don’t know if I could play it, but I was pretty good at watching it.

You’re filming Season 3 of Hannibal – of which YouTube has some fabulous blooper reels. It’s a weird sight to see people laughing next to a gruesomely murdered body. Have you become desensitised to seeing gore?
Well, the thing is, you’ve got this gruesome, bleeding corpse in front of you, but behind it are people lounging around, having a sandwich, waiting for you to finish your acting so they can get on with their job.

You wouldn’t want to be queasy at the sight of blood in your job right now…
The funny thing is, my introduction to Deadline Gallipoli came through [Australian director] Michael Rymer, who worked on Hannibal.

He told me to look at the script and said it would be a “nice palate cleanser”.

I thought he was right – it was a breezy character – then I got 20 pages in and thought, “Hmm… it’s not really light comedy, is it?”

Going back a little, I read that acting was forced on you as punishment at school – is that right?
That is true.

I was only 13, so we’re not talking about getting into a lot of trouble, but I was sent to theatre while at boarding school to keep me busy.

All I was meant to do was nail this, paint that… and then the more time I spent there, the more I liked it, and I never left.

Your parents are academics. How did they react when you told them you were sticking with acting?
I know my parents love me and have a healthy appreciation for my intellect, but I’m not under any illusions they thought I’d be an academic, put it that way!

They were supportive, but I think when they saw my work to begin with, they were horrified and thought it wouldn’t last.

Frankly, from what I remember of that work, they were justified [laughs].

Your wife, Claire Danes, stars in Homeland – how many times a day are you asked for spoilers?
Not many.

Maybe people are asking me all the time and I don’t notice it.

Maybe you’re asking me right now? I always say I know nothing… it’s not true.

Claire has said she drinks a lot more tea and booze since marrying an Englishman. Have you picked up any American habits?
Cocktails.

I wasn’t really into them until I married an American.

Booze-drinking covers all the bases; I don’t think it’s only the English, especially after spending time in Australia.

No nation holds a monopoly on that kind of habit.

I might have to have a word with my wife.

What’s next for you?
The way our lives work is that, shortly after I finish here, we’ll have a few weeks’ break and then Claire is back on Homeland.

So everything flips.

And you’re on dad duty with two-year-old Cyrus?
Exactly. That’s the idea.

I guess that works out well – having different filming schedules?
For the two of us as a couple, it’s incredibly balanced.

For us both to be working on things we love still, several years in, is remarkable.

* Deadline Gallipoli airs Sunday April 19 and Monday April 20, at 8.30pm on Showcase.

Download the Sunday Style iPad app from iTunes for Hugh’s thoughts on his dad’s accidental 15 minutes of fame

Source.

April 11th, 2015
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