From Drogheda to Hollywood: a rite of passage for Colin O'Donoghue

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From Drogheda to Hollywood: a rite of passage for Colin O'Donoghue

25/02/2011 11:00 am
page: 12

After years of doing the rounds on Irish TV, 30-year-old Drogheda native Colin O'Donoghue put together an audition tape and sent it off to Hollywood.

Not only did the tape get looked at, it landed him the pivotal role in The Rite, a film based on true events. In the film he plays Michael Kovak, a trainee American priest who decides to give up seminary school.

But just as he is about to take off his dog collar and hand back his cassock, he is persuaded to enroll on a course to train exorcists at the Vatican.

Once in Rome he is sceptical of all he sees and hears, so his tutor (played by fellow Irishman Ciarán Hinds) sends him to meet with an unconventional Welsh Jesuit priest (played by Anthony Hopkins), an encounter that results in a serious rethinking by the young trainee and a direct encounter with demonic forces.

We met up with Colin for a drink and a chat in the swanky surrounds of the Merrion Hotel to talk about witnessing demonic possession, working with an icon and the lack of love scenes in his Hollywood debut.

By Nick Bradshaw

JOE: Afternoon Colin. So after years of appearing on TV in things like The Clinic, The Tudors and the mighty Fair City, you’ve gone and become an overnight sensation…

Colin O’Donoghue: Yeah, I mean it’s funny cause even to me it feels like an overnight thing, despite the fact that I’ve been slogging it out for ten years here in Ireland.

It’s strange to be here now, doing interviews in the Merrion Hotel. I just had lunch with Ciaran Hinds who is one of my heroes. It’s all a bit insane.

JOE: Not only have you become an overnight sensation, but you’ve put your head over the parapet in a big-budget Hollywood film opposite Anthony Hopkins. Plus you’re in just about every scene of the film. Talk about putting yourself out there…

Colin: Yeah, I’m pretty much in every scene. I think I won’t know exactly how much all of this affects me until the film has been out for a while and everything dies down.

At the moment I still have to be on my game for interviews and stuff like that, so I'm still in the mix and caught up in the world of film, so things haven't hit me yet.

I’ve never experienced anything like this. Even when I did the Clinic, I didn’t have one of the main parts, and in the Tudors I had a very small part, so I’ve never been privy to this sort of thing. It’s weird at the moment to be here in Ireland promoting a film from Los Angeles.

JOE: Is Ireland still your home?

Colin: Yeah, my wife and I have our home in Drogheda and we’re very happy to be there. It’s great to come home, relax and take yourself out of a type of world that in a sense is not real.

I think it’s important for me to live here in Ireland and stay grounded. LA is a great city and wonderful place to be, but it’s very easy to get caught up in the madness.

JOE: In The Rite you have a lot of scenes with Oscar-winning film legend Anthony Hopkins which must have been a great experience, but at the same time it must have been pretty daunting.

Were you in awe of him, and if so, how long did it take to get beyond that?

Colin: Up until the first day of shooting I was completely in awe. Then I had to consciously say to myself, ‘That’s Anthony Hopkins, I’ll give myself 20 seconds to freak out a little bit, then I have a job to do’.

There wasn’t much time to stand around awestruck – you’re working 12 to 13 hours a day with no days off. It’s a job and people have expectations from you because they’re employing you.

I think people have this idea that it’s all glitz and glamour. It’s not. At times it’s very tough work, you’ve a job to do and you’ve to deliver on that.

JOE: Your main co-star has a reputation for calling up his female counterparts on film and pretending to be Hannibal Lecter. Did he do the same with you?

Colin: No he never called me up to do that, but he definitely did stuff to me on set. I’d turn around and he’d be standing right there, giving the menacing stare, sniffing the air and doing the whole Hannibal Lecter thing.

He also does unbelievable Tommy Cooper and Marlon Brando impressions. We were promoting the film in Mexico and he did his Brando impersonation for me, which is incredible. His face changes and he literally looks like Brando. It’s unbelievable.

He’s an amazing man: he composes, he paints, he writes, he’s a real renaissance man.

(more)

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