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The Harry Potter Teens

Come of Age

by Lynn B

Daniel Radcliffe, Rupert Grint, and Emma Watson, in HARRY POTTER AND THE ORDER OF THE PHOENIXWe’ve seen Emma Watson, Daniel Radcliffe and Rupert Grint grow up on screen. In Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix, the magical gauntlet is passed to their new generation and the trio gathers a young army to rebel against Voldemort with style and flair. We’ve interviewed the trio several times before and watched them blossom from shy kids to confident teens on the brink of adulthood. Both Dan and Rupert have stepped outside the Potter fold with varying results; Dan in his infamous but critically-acclaimed turn on stage in the buff in the play “Equus” and Rupert in another coming of age film Driving Lessons. Emma has remained content with her studies and hanging at home between Potter films.

Today, at Beverly Hills’ 4 Seasons hotel, we sat down with the trio to learn how all this growing up is effecting them, how much fun they had in “Phoenix” finally getting to do magical battle on a large scale, how they feel about rumors that one of their characters will die in the last book, working with huge Potter fan co-star Evanna Lynch and how they feel about visiting L.A. where, later today, they’ll be immortalized by placing their hand and footprints in front of the famed Chinese Theater.

Picture Emma in cute white jeans with black and white knit sweater topped with a white pashima shawl, Rupert in his usual fun tee-shirt; this one black and white with a crown on it and “Keep Calm and Carry On” emblazoned across the front. Dan was in dark chocolate suitcoat over tie-dye brown and rust colored tee; no glasses. Let’s get to it…

AGW: Dan, did you relate to the issue of revolution in this film, being a punk rock fan?

Dan: Yeah, I love doing all that stuff to do with Harry in this film because David [Yates, the director] kept referring to Dumbledore's Army as being like the French resistance, which was a metaphor that really appealed to me. And also, Harry as a leader and a teacher was able to show off his wizarding skills. That showing off stuff was really, really fun to do. So I don't think I brought a tremendous amount of punk music into those scenes. It didn't seem to require it. I was mainly listening to Radiohead for Harry in this film. Somebody did ask me yesterday if there was one album that could be Harry's soundtrack during this movie. I think it would be ‘Okay Computer’ by Radiohead which I think tells you all you need to know about his character.

AGW: How did the London bombing affect you guys? Rupert has on his “Keep Calm and Carry On” shirt.

Dan: Oh right. I think that's what's remarkable and sort of defines the English spirit is the fact that you saw all these people being interviewed directly after the car bombings and the attack in Glasgow, and they were all just like, ‘Oh no, it's fine. We're just going to carry on’. That's sort of it I suppose.

AGW: Any comments on sports star David Beckham making his L.A. debut?

Emma: I've been watching David Beckham for years and the L.A. Galaxy, yeah, definitely I think, poor guy. He's got the pressure on, doesn’t he?

Dan: To save football!

Emma: Yeah. He’s a bit of a hero so I’m sure he’ll put it off.

AGW: Could you talk about growing up over the course of these five films?

Emma: It’s a bit of a new context when you're doing it on screen. Like I remember, especially with the earlier films, Dan and Rupert had grown like a couple of inches by the end of shooting because it was so long, or by the time the film was released. That was kind of crazy. I know on the second one I was still losing teeth, so that was interesting. One scene I kind of like had a full set then a couple fell out.

Dan: Not a full false set of teeth. It was one tooth. It wasn't like the whole mouth.

Emma: No, I was saying I had a full set of teeth and then I'd lose one.

Dan: Oh, right, okay, I thought you said, ‘I had a false set of teeth.’ [big laughter]

Emma: Oh my God, no! I didn’t wear false teeth.

Dan: Sorry. [Rupert is cracking up]

Emma: So it was kind of a weird experience, to make the whole growing up process run smoothly. We kind of had to do it without anyone realizing. I think we don't really think about it. Everyone always asks this question. ‘Is it really hard growing up on screen?’ I've never grown up any other way so I don't know. That's the way it's always been and you just kind of deal with that I guess. We've been doing it since we were so young so I can't really remember what life was like before, so I don't know.

Rupert: Yeah, for me it's just been one long experience really because it doesn't really feel like that long ago. It's only when you look back on the first ones you sort of realize how much we've grown up I guess. It's been really fun. I've enjoyed every moment of it so it's been really cool.

Dan: I don't think you realize when you're growing up. I think it's just one of those things that sort of just happens to you and somebody shows you a photograph of yourself when you were 10 and you recoil in horror [laughter]! To us, as Emma was saying, we've just grown up. We don't think of ourselves as having grown up on screen. But yeah, it's been great. It's been really good fun. We've met some of the people who we're really, really good friends with through these films who we probably wouldn't have had the chance to meet had we not done them, so it's been fantastic.

AGW: How will it feel to have your prints at the Chinese theater?

Emma Watson in HARRY POTTER AND THE ORDER OF THE PHOENIXEmma: I was amazed they asked us. I was like, ‘Wow’. I couldn't believe it. That's such a big deal. I was really, really, really flattered. It's just amazing to be doing it.

Dan: Yeah. That’s for sure. But, when you see those other names, I think we all were like- -

Emma: Really? Us? You sure?

Dan: Yeah, I don't know. It's amazing. It's absolutely just fantastic. I think we're all just a little bit in shock that we've been asked. It's amazing.

Emma: It’s really cool.

AGW: Did you do ‘Equus’ to prove you're more than Harry Potter? Do you look ahead to after Potter?

Dan: I do give it a lot of thought. That question was asked to me in a rather more brutal way the other day. I think what they meant to say was, ‘Is there life for you after Harry Potter?’ But what they said was, ‘Will you live after Harry Potter?’ on the red carpet. I don't know what they're planning for me after the seventh film. But yeah, Potter's never something I would want to distance myself from because I'm incredibly proud of it. It's given me the most amazing opportunities and I've met some of the most fantastic people and got to work with these brilliant actors. But I certainly also want to establish myself as an actor in my own right rather than being just the actor who plays Harry Potter. It’s just as much if not more to prove to myself that I can do it than to be able to prove it to the audience. Because there will always be people who see us as our respective characters no matter what we do. But ultimately that's more their problem than ours because they are not the people who are going to be stopping us from doing other different things.

AGW: You actually got to work with a huge Potter fan on this film. What was Evanna Lynch’s [who plays Luna Lovegood] reaction being such a fan being on the set? Was she just bowled over?

Emma: It's really funny. I guess like the fifth time around, Dan, Rupert and I, the studio's so big we have little golf carts and we're going along and there’ll be like a giraffe… - no.

Dan: We had a giraffe?

Emma: No, no, no. Maybe not giraffes but we've had like goats, we've had bats [at the studio].

Dan: We have had goats and bats.

Rupert: Armadillos.

Emma: Armadillos, that's why you'll be going past and it's like, ‘Oh, yeah, yeah’, And we're sort of past the stage that it effects us. Like a giraffe could go by and I wouldn't care.

Daniel Radcliffe in HARRY POTTER AND THE ORDER OF THE PHOENIXDan: We've obviously been so adjusted to it we've not even noticed.

Emma: So anyway, the point is that when you step on set, these amazing sets, we kind of take it for granted at this point. And when you see Evanna Lynch's face every time she steps on set, it kind of humbles you again and it makes you realize just how amazing the whole experience is. It's stops you from getting- -

Dan: Blase'

Emma: And taking it for granted. It was really nice to have someone who's so genuinely just completely excited and just in ecstasy every time she saw something new. It was really nice.

Dan: We did have one moment though when it was very, very hard to present an idea to David Yates if Evanna was standing next to you because if you said something and it was even slightly wrong from the technicality of the book, she would not- -

Emma: She would be looking at you like [scowling].

Dan: And you would be in deep trouble. So you'd sort of have to be quite careful. Whenever I talked about the wording of the prophecy and she was there, I'd just be like, ‘Where's the book?’ But no, it was fantastic to have Evanna around because she is such a massive fan of the books and the films so it was lovely to have that enthusiasm.

Emma: I remember actually after watching the film, the person I was most nervous about finding out their opinion was Evanna. I went up to Evanna just like, ‘What did you think?’ I was really, really scared. But she loved it so I was like, ‘Okay, as long as she likes it, we're good. We're all good. That's good.’

AGW: Dan, where did you go to play the darkness in Harry this time around? Did David Yates share ideas about the role? Or did any of the other actors inspire you?

Dan: I don't know, I think everybody's got that side of them which they can draw upon when they have to if they're trying to act it. David Yates was just incredible throughout the film and what was remarkable about David was that he had the same enthusiasm on the last day of filming as he did on the first. Which on a 10 month shoot is quite an achievement. So working with David was fantastic and I can't think of some specific notes that he gave me in terms of Harry’s darkness. I just remember him coming up with very, very real, accurate direction the whole time.

AGW: Can you give an example?

Dan: For instance, there was one scene very early on in the film when Harry's asleep and he's having nightmares and then he wakes up suddenly. I was doing a lot of that sort of movie type of ‘Ah!’ Sort of waking up. And David just says, ‘Dan, no one does that. Just open your eyes.’ Yeah, you're absolutely right. You do see it in films a lot of the time when people are lying straight down in bed and they suddenly sit bolt upright. If you try and do that, it's incredibly difficult to do, let alone when you're half asleep. Also, working with Gary Oldman in terms of the scenes concerning his death in the film, sorry if I spoiled that for anybody. You've read it. He was just a fantastic person to be around. There was the one bizarre bit where he said to me, literally the moment of his death and my immediate reaction to it we were filming. He said, ‘Dan, in this next one, do you mind if I do something a little more physical?’ And I was thinking, ‘Maybe he's going to give me a hug’ or something like that. And he grabbed me and shook me violently for 30 seconds while screaming at me. And then he sort of backed away slowly and that’s when you suddenly regress and I just started to cry. It was this really weird thing but he obviously knew it would work. I don't know if he's done it to people in the past but certainly it worked then. He was amazing.

AGW: Do you have an inside track to reading the last book, and how does the publicity about the book effect you?

Rupert Grint in HARRY POTTER AND THE ORDER OF THE PHOENIXRupert: Yeah, it's quite exciting, particularly this one because there's so much hype about it and everyone's got their own little theory of who's going to die. That's the big question. I don't know really. I'm really looking forward to it.

Dan: Who do you think's going to die?

Rupert: I think it could be you actually.

Dan: Oh, man. I mean, I do think absolutely there's always going to be that hype around it but the thing is, with the books and the films, it's not just hype. It's deserved because they do get better and better and more exciting. My favorite book is the fifth and my favorite film is the fifth as well. To be able to say that five movies into a franchise is I suppose quite rare. But I don't know how the book releases affect us. I think you're very, very anxious about what's going to happen. I don't think we get totally distressed by it, do we really?

Emma: I get a bit distressed.

Dan: Do you?

Emma: I get a bit distressed. I remember seeing this interview and I've always just been convinced that Hermione's going to make it. Apparently this hacker has been claiming that she's going to die. This interviewer sat down and she was like, ‘Well, this hacker is claiming what's going to happen and she's not going to make it and she's the one.’ I was just like, ‘No, no, no. You don't understand. She's meant to be with Ron and she's meant to just…’ I just have all these ideas in my head about what was going to happen. It was all just ruined. It was horrible but I guess, from an acting point of view it would be good to have a death scene or to die. I mean, we obviously have like hugely invested interests but I think mostly we're really big fans ourselves.

Dan: Yeah, exactly, so we are looking forward to finding out with the rest of the world as well. We certainly don't get any inside information. When I saw Jo at the premiere the other day, I just said, ‘How many people worldwide have read the book?’ At this point it's under two weeks before it's released and under 10 people have read it still which is pretty incredible. But could you imagine being one of those people? How fantastic would that be? My God.

AGW: How much fun was it getting to kick butt with your magic as a team this time? Was it fun filming those battle scenes?

Emma: Yeah, definitely. Ron and Hermione kind of took a bit of a backseat on the last one, watching Harry do all the tasks and stuff so it felt really nice to kind of be back in the action again. We had a couple of stunts to do, on a couple of harnesses and that sort of thing which was really fun. We actually had a dance choreographer in. All the different spells had different choreographed specific movements that went with them. So we had a couple of classes like that which was really good fun. I think this is the first one that you really see the craft behind magic and you get to see the craftsmanship. I know, it looked really impressive. I think especially that scene at the end between Dumbledore and Voldemort was really brilliant.

AGW: Was it fun for you guys too?

Guys: Yeah.

AGW: Anything hard about it?

Dan: I found the dance lessons quite tricky actually. I found I was getting really frustrated with myself when I couldn't get the moves right. But yeah, it was good. Whereas before, it's just been [pretending to hold his wand] point at something, say the word. Now he [Harry] was starting to build the art just to show a distinction. When it came to the film, we didn't really get to do a lot of the stuff that we learned Daniel Radcliffe and Gary Oldman in HARRY POTTER AND THE ORDER OF THE PHOENIXin the [class] but all the adults were. And it just made it so that [before] there was actually a distinction between the adults and the young kids in terms of the skill. It was fun. One of my favorite lines in the film is when Gary [Oldman] says, ‘Get away from my godson!’ and then punches Jason Isaacs in the head. Me and Gary, we were Butch and Sundance on that day. It was just fantastic. So no, I had a lot of fun, definitely.

Rupert: Similar to everyone really. In the last one, Ron's been a bit of a wimp and sort of stayed away from the action side. This time it was quite cool that he got to be a bit tougher and got to fight so it was kinda neat.

AGW: Who do you admire who has footprints at the Chinese theater?

Dan: I think John Wayne's there so that's pretty cool. My favorite John Wayne line, it's a really early John Wayne movie and it was obviously improvised because nobody could have scripted this. He walks out of a saloon and he's walking through the square and he's quite young, and there's all these birds in the square and he walks in and they all flutter away and he goes, [Using a good John Wayne accent] ‘Get outta my way, pigeon.’ Which is just fantastic. So if I can have my handprints next to that man then that would be awesome.

AGW: And how do you like visiting L.A.?

Rupert: L.A. is really cool, yeah. It's been really fun. It's just really different to everywhere else. I really enjoy it. It's been really, really good, hasn't it?

Emma: Yeah, it's really funny. When I came the second time to LA, there were so many things I didn't know about it. Apparently my dad went to like the [La Brea] Tar Pits yesterday which I was just like that was so weird.

Dan: What's he doing at a tar pit?

Emma: It's this massive tar pit which basically loads of animals basically fell into.

Dan: Oh God, that's horrendous! Maybe a giraffe stuck in the tar! [everyone laughs hysterically]

Emma: Yeah, it's nice that we actually had a day yesterday when I was able to see LA which is really cool.

Dan: [Thinking about animals stuck in the tar]. That's deeply disturbing.

Emma: It's not. It's really cool. It's like history. You can see it.

Dan: I was about to say that LA's very clean.

Emma: [laughing] So it's been really nice and the reception we had yesterday was amazing. I've had a really good time here and everyone's been really friendly. It's been really fun. It's been good.

Dan: It is a strange town I think. It's totally different from I think anything we've really experienced before and I don't know, it's hard, it's very spread out. It's just hard to get my head around fully really. It's just like nothing nowhere I've ever been really.

Emma: It's very distinctive. You know you’re in L.A. The weather’s nice. We’re all enjoying that.

Dan: Yeah, yeah, absolutely. That's the first thing you notice because it's warm. Coming from England where they’ve had storms and things recently.

AGW: Have you gotten to see “Phoenix” in 3D Imax yet? How do you think it will be?

Dan: I haven't seen it that way. I have heard about it. It's going to be fantastic. It's going to be terrifying.

Emma: I was about to say, it's scary enough as it is. In 3D, people will be like…

Ralph Fiennes as Lord Voldemort in HARRY POTTER AND THE ORDER OF THE PHOENIXDan: Also, there's one moment where Ralph as Voldemort sort of apparates and he comes from the side of the screen, sort of pushes forward and suddenly appears. That's gonna scar people. That's going to be hysterical. No, it's great. I've not seen it like that though, no.

Emma: People will jump. Honestly, people will be jumping out of their seats.

Dan: Would they have the glasses?

Emma: Yeah. [She rolls her eyes like, that's how you see 3-D, dummy]

Dan: I don't know, maybe they give you a visor or something. Or like the guy in ‘Star Trek’ who had the thing.

AGW: Geordi?

Dan: Yeah.

AGW: If your characters were looking for significant others, what would their personal ads be?

Emma: Hermione's quite serious. I think she takes everything a little bit too seriously sometimes. That's why I think that if Hermione and Ron do end up together, I think they'll be really good because they're really different. They're really mismatched but they kind of balance each other out and kind of complement each other like that. So I guess Hermione's ad would say: ‘someone to make her laugh. I don't know, just like a good kind of caring guy I guess’.

Dan: I'm actually just thinking of the personal ad that you would write to Rupert. No! Not Rupert, to Ron. [telling us] That's not a story! I don't know what Harry's would be at all. ‘Cursed male seeks, I don't know, uncursed female’ I suppose. Yeah. For Hermione.. ‘Bookish 16-year-old seeks quirky redhead’. There we go, that's the advert.

AGW: In book six, Ron gets a girlfriend. Rupert, did you learn anything from Daniel's kissing scene?

Rupert: Yeah, Ron does get a girlfriend in the next one. I think it's a little bit intense so I don't know. I did a little kiss, I did another film called Driving Lessons and there's a little kiss in that. It was quite an uncomfortable experience, on this tiny set with all the crew watching. I didn't really enjoy it too much but we have to wait and see. It's going to be interesting.

AGW: Emma, your character Hermione says it's exciting to break the rules. How does that apply to your life?

EW: Yeah, I'm sorry to disappoint you. I'm deeply uncool really. I really never break the rules. I just never really have a problem with that. I'm not scared to say what I think or if I really disagree with something then I'll say it, but I'm not kind of like a born rebel. That wouldn't be a description of me. I guess it was fun to play her like that, definitely. The film's quite dark and I think that kind of element added something light. It's just kind of like’ what is up with Hermione? What is going on?’

Dan: It got a fantastic reaction yesterday when she said that.

Emma: Yeah, it got a big laugh. In the film, that kind of got a good laugh so I'm quite chuffed at that. I guess I was able to do things from such a young age that I never would have been able to do. Always traveling and being given all this responsibility and freedom, so I've never really had any barrier to break I guess. I don't really have anything to rebel against. I’m kind of free to do what I want to do. I'm quite lucky really.

AGW: Dan, you did another film too, right?

Dan: I did. That's not come out yet. That will be out later this year. [I play] a character called Maps and it's called December Boys.

pictures copyright Warner Brothers, 2007

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