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Tom Hiddleston Dances Up a Storm: ‘I Just Wanted It to Fly'

Tom Hiddleston Dances Up a Storm: ‘I Just Wanted It to Fly'

A creeping sense of dread washed over Tom Hiddleston as he read the script for 'The Life of Chuck.' He knew that its director, Mike Flanagan, wanted him to play Chuck Krantz, or, as the actor put it, 'a harbinger of the apocalypse.'
But as he read on, there came excitement, a thrill. Chuck has a secret: He loves to dance.
Hiddleston, 44, loves to dance, too, a discovery he made when he was a teenager. 'It was instinctive,' he said in a recent interview via video. 'But it was only for me. I didn't train, I wasn't in dance classes.'
He went out dancing with friends. The 1990s were his time. 'My love for Daft Punk,' he said of the electronic music duo, 'is enduring and real.'
While he is foremost an actor, Hiddleston has become something of a dance ambassador. Lean and elegant, he has the air of Fred Astaire. His limbs are long, but they don't slow him down; his feet are fast and accurate. Known for his spontaneous eruptions of dance joy — on talk shows and the red carpet — Hiddleston is a natural with rhythmic acuity and, at times, riveting attack. His dancing, whether smooth or sharp, is instinctive and shaped by coordinated fluency.
What's apparent is the pleasure he gets from it: Certainly, there is Hiddleston the man, but also discernible is the boy within. There is innocence and fearlessness in his love of motion. An avid runner, Hiddleston said, 'I've always thought of running as dancing forward.'
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