
Harvest star Harry Melling: ‘I was surrounded by titans like Fiona Shaw. I was starry-eyed as they told me stories about theatre work'
Harry Melling
is having a moment. Long past his days as Dudley Dursley, Harry Potter's pampered, odious cousin, Melling has quietly become one of Britain's most intriguing character actors.
His latest role, in the
Cannes
hit Pillion, marks a new chapter for the transformative performer. Produced by Element Pictures, the engaging film, a queer BDSM romance costarring
Alexander Skarsgård
, follows Melling's Colin, a poignantly awkward traffic attendant, as he becomes the submissive partner to Ray, the charismatic leader of a motorbike club.
A tender, kinky biker comedy with surprising echoes of Ealing Studios comedy, Pillion, the directorial debut of Harry Lighton, got an eight-minute standing ovation at its premiere at the French film festival in May – and generated an unexpected intimacy-co-ordination challenge to do with a picnic table.
The unassuming Melling is full of praise for his colleagues and for Robbie Taylor Hunt, the intimacy co-ordinator who supervised the sex scenes.
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'Robbie did such an amazing job,' says Melling. 'He was really thorough and also allowed enough room for us to play and have fun. It felt like the intimacy was always an extension of the narrative and Colin's character. It wasn't like this separate, sexy moment.'
Pillion: Harry Melling and Alexander Skarsgård in Harry Lighton's film
The ecstatic reception at Cannes is no surprise. Melling has emerged as an auteur's favourite, working with the Coen brothers, on
The Ballad of Buster Scruggs
; a solo Joel Coen,
The Tragedy of Macbeth
; David Gray, on
The Lost City of Z
; Amanda Kramer, on
Please Baby Please
; and Michael Winterbottom, on
Shoshana
.
[
Michael Winterbottom on Shoshana: 'The film is about political violence. That theme is acutely relevant with what's going on in Gaza'
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]
'Touch wood, I hope I can keep working with such brilliant, visionary directors,' he says. 'Because, when it comes to film, it really is about them. As an actor, it's never about you, not really. You're there to support their vision, to give them enough material to take into the editing room and shape into the story they want to tell.'
In this spirit, Melling has finished shooting Butterfly Jam, Kantemir Balagov's long-awaited follow-up to Beanpole, alongside
Barry Keoghan
.
Before that there's the Greek director
Athina Rachel Tsangari
's Harvest, her first film in English. Alongside collaborators such as
Yorgos Lanthimos
, Tsangari is a pioneering film-maker of the Greek weird wave, the cinematic movement famed for its deadpan tone and surreal, unsettling storytelling.
'I saw
Chevalier
before our first meeting,' Melling says. 'That was my introduction to Athina's work. It's an extraordinary film, right? I knew that she had this project. I didn't know anything about it. It was just a general meeting to catch each other's vibration. And I just fell in love with her instantly.
'She's such an artist, with a distinctive voice and a way of telling stories that feels very different to anything I have done before. She sent me the script but without any role attached to it. That's a very nice way of entering a story, because you are navigating from every angle.'
An intriguing medieval folk western set in Scotland's Inner Hebrides archipelago, Tsangari's fourth feature brings together a fine cast – it also includes Caleb Landry Jones, Rosy McEwen, Arinzé Kene and Frank Dillane – in an adaptation of Jim Crace's novel.
Set across seven hallucinatory days in a nameless village, Harvest follows Walter Thirsk (Landry Jones), a townsman turned farmer and outsider in a superstitious, tight-knit community. The fragile rural life is shattered first by a mysterious barn fire – prompting the scapegoating of three strangers – and, soon after, by the arrival of Edmund Jordan (Dillane), the ambitious, pitiless cousin of the local lord, Master Kent (Melling), who asserts his claim on the land and threatens their communal traditions.
Nominally the kindlier lord who believes in land-sharing, Kent, struck by bumbling indecision, causes tensions to escalate, as greed, superstition, and fear of recently arrived outsiders take over.
Harvest: Harry Melling in Athina Rachel Tsangari's film
'When I first read my character I thought, well, he's stuck in an impossible situation,' says Melling. 'He's trying to please everyone. And if I try and do that, then at no point will the audience be too angry with him. Because he hovers between these different worlds, caught between the oncoming modernity and looking after old friends. He does care for the villagers. But it's a film full of characters who keep sitting back and don't know how to take action. The audience is constantly moving between different points of view. Who's right and who's wrong keeps shifting.'
Melling was born in London in 1989, the son of the children's illustrator and writer Joanna Troughton and the animator James Melling. His grandfather is Patrick Troughton, best remembered as the second Doctor in Doctor Who. Storytelling is in the DNA.
'I think I caught that fascination with stories as a young child,' he says. 'Between reading my mum's picture books as a kid and then going to the theatre too young to watch, I just fell in love with stories. I knew that I'd love to do anything I could in that realm. It seems like one of the most extraordinary things that human beings can do.'
Melling was catapulted into the public eye by appearing in five of the eight Harry Potter films. His role was small but memorable, particularly for Dudley's physical transformation and eventual moment of uneasy redemption in The Deathly Hallows, a scene that was ultimately cut from the final film.
Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix: Richard Griffiths, Harry Melling and Fiona Shaw as the Dursleys in the 2007 film directed by David Yates
Melling has deliberately distanced himself from the world of Harry Potter. He was a notable absentee from the 20th-anniversary television special Return to Hogwarts and has rarely spoken about the series, choosing instead to focus on theatre and independent film.
'One thing I did get from the Potter films was a curiosity about cinema,' he says. 'How things work with different directors, I was always fascinated by that. To me there's such a mystery around film: why a particular take works, why something doesn't work. It's something you are always trying to catch as an actor.'
After those films he enrolled at London Academy of Music & Dramatic Art.
'I felt like I didn't know anything,' he says. 'I understood how a set worked. I understood the logistics. But in terms of performing I was just so hungry for knowledge. I went to drama school so naive and just wanting to get better and bridge the gap between being a child actor and a senior actor.
'I was surrounded by titans like
Fiona Shaw
. I was starry-eyed as they told me stories about theatre work. When I left I just did theatre for a long time. It's great to be doing more movies, but I'd love to get back.'
The Pale Blue Eye: Robert Duvall as Jean Pepe, Christian Bale as Augustus Landor and Harry Melling as Edgar Allan Poe
When
Christian Bale
teamed up with him for
The Pale Blue Eye
, a murder mystery from 2022 in which Bale's seasoned detective is assisted by a young Edgar Allan Poe, the veteran actor was full of praise for his screen partner. 'He just made me only see him as Poe afterwards,' Bale said.
Melling has retained a soft spot for the 19th-century American author of The Raven and The Tell-Tale Heart.
'I just adored playing him. He's such a strange creature, and to have an opportunity to play against Christian Bale was wonderful. It was daunting in the sense that a lot of people were coming to that movie with an idea of who Edgar Allan Poe was. Luckily, because he was slightly younger, I had a bit more room to play with. But if I had to have a pint with any of my characters I'd probably say Edgar Allan Poe.
He pauses, almost apologetically. 'But really any of them.'
Harvest is in cinemas from Friday, July 18th
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Irish Examiner
3 hours ago
- Irish Examiner
Bob Vylan, Fontaines DC, CMAT... 15 highlights of All Together Now this weekend
Best Headliners Fontaines DC Main stage, Friday, 10.30pm Simply put, one of the hottest acts on the planet right now. The Irish rockers released their fourth album Romance last year and, having played to some 45,000 people in London's Finsbury Park at the start of July, they haven't looked back since. A triumphant homecoming is expected. CMAT plays Saturday at All Together Now. (Photo by Xavi Torrent/Redferns) CMAT Main stage, Saturday, 8.30pm With third album Euro-Country arriving at the end of August, it's impossible to resist Dunboyne's finest Ciara Mary-Alice Thompson, aka CMAT. From Primavera to Glastonbury's she's played a host of festivals this summer and puts on a joyous, two-stepping set. Bring your cowboy hat. Wet Leg Main stage, Friday, 8.45pm A few years on from their debut single Chaise Longue, the Isle of Wight duo have swelled to a fulsome five-piece and released critically acclaimed second album Moisturizer at the start of July. They had live shows and festival sets in mind when recording it so expect Rhian Teasdale - the formerly unassuming frontwoman who looks every inch a rock star now - and Hester Chambers to pass this weekend's test with flying colours. BEST SINGALONGS Primal Scream Main stage, Sunday, 8.15pm They put out their 12th studio album Come Ahead last November, but the besuited Bobby Gillespie et al will serve up what'll basically amount to a greatest hits set at ATN this weekend. Filling the space left by Michael Kiwanuka, who announced on Monday that he's had to pull a host of upcoming shows due to illness, take your pick of Scream hits: Come Together, Loaded, Country Girl, Movin On Up, and Rocks will all feature. Nelly Furtado Main stage, Sunday, 10.15pm It's 19 years since Nelly Furtado released her bestselling third album Loose (featuring Maneater, Promiscuous, and Do It Right). She played Forbidden Fruit last summer, her show featuring flames and a host of backing dancers. In a hits-laden set, it's likely that I'm Like a Bird will have the whole ATN site singing along. John Grant Something Kind of Wonderful, Saturday, 7pm The verbose American, who gained Icelandic citizenship a couple years ago, released his sixth studio album The Art of The Lie last summer and we expect him to come out on stage with CMAT for their collaboration, Where Are Your Kids Tonight? Just over two years since the death of Sinéad O'Connor - ATN 2023 was like a tribute to the late singer - who loaned backing vocals to Grant's track GMF, that song should inspire a devoted response. 'And don't forget you could be laughing 65% more of the time.' Singalong Social Main stage, Saturday, 4pm The brainchild of Aoife McElwain, Singalong Social has featured at festivals big and small across the country, plus myriad other events from weddings to social functions. Even the most cynical watcher-on (ahem) will be lepping and shouting along with the boiler-suited Craic Mechanics. No guilty pleasures here - just bangers. And fun for the whole family too. Best dance Bicep. Bicep Main stage, Saturday, midnight The Belfast duo present their Chroma AV DJ set on Saturday night - basically expect a feast for the eyes and a blast of the rest of your senses. They mix their own tunes, like the irrepressible Glue, into a stunning DJ set. They've released heavy dance tracks under the Chroma title in the past year. Not for the faint of heart. Collie, Sally C Arcadia, Sunday, 10.30pm Arcadia is one of the standout areas at ATN, centred around 'The Afterburner', an immersive, flame-blasting art piece that's impossible to mix. Tasked with keeping spirits high on Sunday night are two of Ireland's finest DJs Collie and Sally C. Expect the former to bring deep house vibes and the latter to post the heaviest techno of the weekend. Immerse The, er, immersive Immerse stage, like Arcadia, is a feast for the eyes, a 360-degree audio-visual experience. It will feature two-hour sets each evening from acts like Max Cooper, HAAI, Blawan, and the likely coolest person on site this weekend Shanti Celeste - playing until 3.30am Monday morning. Whether it's Donal Dineen's Cumbrian Club or the newly relocated Ping-Pong Disco, ATN's dance offering covers all bases. Best of the Irish Lisa O'Neill. Lisa O'Neill Main stage, Friday, 7pm We've seen the Irish traditional musician in the smallest of spaces over the years, but earlier this year, and backed with a five-piece band, Lisa O'Neill was on support duties for Pulp's show at the 3Arena. Jarvis Cocker is a huge fan and she sounded bigger than ever. The new songs point to a more expansive sound too, but the voice remains the same: Unmatched, exceptional. Sloucho The Circle, Sunday, midnight An Irish hyperpop producer, Sloucho keeps his identity hidden by a mask as he builds full worlds - sometimes literally: Check out the immersive OUCH™ Fragments of Eternity gig in full at Dublin venue The Complex on YouTube. One of the most exciting up-and-coming acts around. Fizzy Orange/Madra Salach Bandstand Arena, Sunday, 6pm/The Last City, Friday, 3pm There are a couple acts pulling double duty over the weekend, but one of the hardest-working bands around right now are indie rockers Fizzy Orange who regularly double up - whether at festivals or at their own headline shows - as traditional music act Madra Salach, who offer versions of songs by the likes of the Pogues. Morgana Lovely Days, Saturday, 3.30pm One half of Saint Sister, who are currently on hiatus, Morgana is prepared to party but ready to cry in her solo guise. Often found in beautiful gowns and a disco-ball helmet, she released debut EP Party Killer at the start of summer. You'll hang on her every word of millennial life travails, while stomping your feet. Darren Kiely Lovely Days, Friday, 8.30pm We saw Kingfishr play to a heaving tent on Friday evening at ATN 2024. Most likely to pull a Kingfishr this time around - they were last seen selling out a couple of dates Live at the Marquee - is Limerick singer-songwriter Darren Kiely. He's amassed millions of listens with tracks such as Sunrise and looks unstoppable. Florence Road Something Kind of Wonderful, Friday, 4.20pm Signed to Warner Records and with a support slot with Olivia Rodrigo already under their belts this summer, Florence Road sold out a headline show at the Academy in Dublin in December in minutes. The four piece from Wicklow are just about out of their teens and have been hailed by the likes of NME as 'distilling the anxieties of young adulthood'. Best Cork Altered Hours Flourish, Saturday, 11.30pm Ahead of the release of their third album Lay There With You at the end of August, Cork five-piece the Altered Hours come out of relative hibernation for their first show in over a year this weekend. Frontwoman Elaine Howley has been busy with her own solo stuff, but together the Altered Hours pack a punch like few others. Cliffords Flourish, Friday, 4.45pm Kicking things off at 4.45pm on Friday, Cliffords, newly relocated to London, have one of the best frontpersons in music in Iona Lynch. They released their latest rollicking EP Salt of the Lee at the end of May and are coming off slots at Glastonbury and Latitude festivals. Biig Piig. Biig Piig Lovely Days, Saturday, 5pm Born in Cork in 1998, Biig Piig aka Jessica Smyth grew up in Marbella. With a dark, pulsating, late-night vibe, she's long been seen as the next big thing. She released debut album 11:11 on Sony in February and is likely to get the crowd jumping on Saturday afternoon. Bob Vylan Bob Vylan (Something Kind of Wonderful, Sunday, 6pm) have been dogged by controversy since their set at Glastonbury, which was broadcast live on BBC. The punk rap duo led the crowd in chants of 'Free, free Palestine' and 'Death, death to the IDF'. Since then they have had festival and Gogol Bordello tour supports pulled. They said they don't want to be the story, and they're unlikely to be the only artists expressing outrage at Israel this weekend. Expect them to get uproarious support on Sunday evening. Talking the talk There's so much we want to pack in this weekend at ATN. As well as the music, there is comedy featuring Tommy Tiernan, Reggie Watts, Peter McGann, and Aoife Dunne, among others. At the Global Solidarity Hub, there is a climate discussion with Sean Ronayne, a storytelling workshop with Seanchoiche, the 'Crappy Music Quiz', and even more comedy with the Wild Geeze. Also keep an eye out for the Great Oven Disco Cantina, which is building a cultural bridge between Palestine and Ireland - artists from each state have been collaborating all year to construct two Great Ovens that were decorated at IMMA and will be unveiled at ATN.


Irish Times
10 hours ago
- Irish Times
Gwyneth: The Biography review - Gwyneth Paltrow's world is notoriously hard to break into. This book takes a shot
Gwyneth: The Biography Author : Amy Odell ISBN-13 : 9781805465713 Publisher : Atlantic Guideline Price : €15.99 Gwyneth: The Biography opens, where else, with the vaginal egg, an episode that has come to stand for Paltrow's general ability to sell dumb ideas to credulous rich women using widespread mockery as her marketing rocket fuel. (In case you need a reminder: this was the $66 jade egg Paltrow sold via her lifestyle brand Goop that promised various health benefits upon insertion.) Amy Odell's book, billed as delivering 'insight and behind-the-scenes details of Paltrow's relationships, family, friendships, iconic films', as well as her creation of Goop, takes no particular stand on this, nor on many of Paltrow's more divisive episodes, instead offering us what feels like an earnest jog back through the actor and wellness guru's years of fame. The author writes in the acknowledgments that she spoke to 220 people for the book, in which case we have to assume that a great many of them had little to say. To be fair to Odell, whose previous biography was of Anna Wintour , another difficult and controlling subject – although Wintour did give Odell some access – Paltrow's world is notoriously hard to break into if she's not on board with a project; the author quotes numerous hacks tasked with profiling Paltrow for magazines who found themselves iced out of her networks, and the same happens to Odell in the early stages of research. Odell's task only gets harder in the second half of the book, which tackles the Goop years. Since, she claims, many of its staff signed NDAs, those sections lack even the modest stream of gossip that enlivens the first half. [ I'm pulling the Goop plug – no jade eggs are going in my yoni Opens in new window ] Which, by the way, is perfectly enjoyable. I ripped through Odell's account of Paltrow's youth as the simultaneously indulged and benignly neglected daughter of two show business big guns, the actor Blythe Danner and the producer and director Bruce Paltrow. Danner is prim and unemotional; Bruce Paltrow is more demonstrative but still emotionally evasive, and Odell reheats some well-documented episodes between father and daughter, such as the trip they made to Paris when Paltrow was about 10, during which Bruce told her: 'I wanted you to see Paris for the first time with a man who will always love you, no matter what.' (Paltrow, in interviews, has always offered up this story as a moving tribute to her dad's love for her.) Odell also tells us the (I think) new detail that, when Paltrow was older, 'her dad once gave her lace underwear as a gift'. It's a small addition but it stands out against what feels like the book's trove of reconstituted material. In 1984, when Paltrow was 12, the family moved from LA to New York . We learn that she felt outclassed at Spence, the Upper East Side private school where the money is older and the blood bluer than in the Danner-Paltrow household. We also learn that, in spite of this, Paltrow – whose biggest nightmare is listed in the senior school yearbook as 'obesity' – manages to form a clique around herself that may or may not have been involved in the drawing of a penis on the library wall. It's small potatoes but we'll take it. READ MORE Odell goes into great depth about the Williamstown theatre festival – presumably because the old theatre lags actually agreed to talk to her – a storied annual event in rural Massachusetts where Danner takes her daughter every summer, first to watch her mother on stage, and later, to act herself. I liked these passages, in which you get a real sense of a summer stock scene that has always attracted top actors and their nepo babies. At one point, a barely teenage Paltrow takes the assistant director's seat and the head of the festival fails to ask her to move. Paltrow is entitled, wan, sometimes foul-mouthed, intensely focused and in these scenes, really comes alive. By studying her mother on stage, she learns how to be an actor. And so on to the Hollywood years, where everything becomes less fresh and more familiar. We slog through the background to productions of Emma, Shallow Hal and Shakespeare in Love and then we get to Harvey Weinstein , who during the first flush of #MeToo, Paltrow accused of making a pass at her. Odell quotes from Jodi Kantor and Megan Twohey's book, She Said, but there's not much more to be harvested on a story broken and pursued by such good reporters. What's left is a trawl through a lot of things we already know – although there is one very funny motif from those years, which involves Paltrow miming throwing up behind the backs of people she dislikes, one of whom is Minnie Driver . (Team Driver all the way, here, obviously.) Also an old friend of Paltrow's claims 'she invented ghosting', which sounds about right. Finally, Goop: this was a story I hadn't been paying much attention to lately, and so a genuine surprise of the book is to learn that the company founded by Paltrow in 2008 has been a much shakier business than advertised. We know that Goop paid to settle a lawsuit brought by the California Food, Drug and Medical Device Task Force over false claims about the health benefits of the vaginal eggs. And we also know it accepted judgments by the US National Advertising Division about other false claims. But, as Odell puts it, Paltrow's 'middling run as the CEO of Goop' has ensured that the company 'hasn't experienced sustained profitability … and has lacked a clear business strategy as it pingpongs from one of Gwyneth's ideas to the next'. Here's a reveal: that Paltrow is such a massive cheapskate she used Goop's food editors to cook for her. 'In the office,' writes Odell, 'it was common knowledge that the food editors would go to Gwyneth's house after work and make her dinner under the guise of 'recipe testing'. When she and Brad Falchuk were living apart, the food editor would bring dinner to his house, too, which wasn't a light lift in LA traffic.' She also asked vendors to donate their services to her and Falchuk's wedding in return for advertising. Gwyneth Paltrow at a special screening of The Goop Lab in Los Angeles, California, on January 21st, 2020. Photograph:The difficulty with all this is that Paltrow is a charmless subject who never rises to the level of monstrous. She's an actor, a so-so businesswoman – Kim Kardashian , as Odell points out, has had much greater success with her company, Skims. The story, then, is less about how Paltrow became this figure in the culture than why on earth she was elevated in the first place. Odell doesn't have the time or the inclination to get into this, instead offering pat lines such as, 'love her or hate her, for over 30 years, we haven't been able to look away'. At the very end, Odell draws a line between Paltrow's peddling of pseudoscience on Goop and Robert F Kennedy Jr, 'a fellow raw milk drinker' and Trump's vaccine-sceptical health secretary, which feels like a sudden turn towards a more interesting and confident authorial voice. If only it had piloted the whole book. – Guardian Gwyneth: The Biography by Amy Odell is published by Atlantic


Irish Times
13 hours ago
- Irish Times
Little Shop of Horrors review: Bord Gáis Energy Theatre's first homegrown show is a sure-footed take on the cult musical
Little Shop of Horrors Bord Gáis Energy Theatre, Dublin ★★★★☆ It's a rare piece of dramatic art that dispenses with every lead character by the curtain call, but Howard Ashman and Alan Menken's Little Shop of Horrors is unusual in many ways. With its unlikely cast of sadistic dentists, sidewalk bums, stoop-sitters and man-hungry plants, it situates itself firmly on the dark and shadowy side of the street. As the dumb but darling Audrey (Jacqueline Brunton, euphonious) puts it, 'You don't meet nice guys on Skid Row.' Yet what about the bumbling botanist who sleeps under the counter at Mr Mushnik's Flower Shop? Seymour (David O'Reilly, endearing) may not have deep pockets, but he does have green fingers with which he can turn his tribute flytrap, Audrey II (voiced by Kenneth O'Regan), into gold. There is a Grimm lesson here worthy of any age-old fairy tale: where personal ambition is concerned, there are always sacrifices to be made. [ Dublin's biggest theatre is staging its first production. Will its Little Shop of Horrors pull off a coup? Opens in new window ] In this first, admirable home-grown production from Bord Gáis Energy Theatre, collaborating with Theatreworx, no such sacrifices are visible to the audience. Maree Kearns's sweeping Skid Row set spares us no grimy detail, with a revolving floor facilitating easy shifts between indoor and outdoor settings, including the blood-spattered horror show of Dr Orin's pleasure palace. Performances too are very strong. Garry Mountaine's Mr Mushnik is part mensch, part schmuck, leaning into the klezmer cadences of Ya Never Know. Johnny Ward's Orin is a seedy comic tour de force. Playing the key collective role of the story-setting chorus, Ghaliah Conroy, Precious Abimbola and Aoife Dunne do more than justice to the dominating doo-wop rhythms of Menken's score. READ MORE Little Shop of Horrors: David O'Reilly and Garry Mountaine Little Shop of Horrors: Precious Abimbola, Ghaliah Conroy and Aoife Dunne David Hayes, the production's musical director, maintains measured control over the shifting musical styles, although issues with sound levels and mics on opening night swallow some of O'Reilly's solo vocals. Claire Tighe, directing, is sure-footed in her vision of the cult material, leaning firmly into its campest qualities, as Audrey II grows and gets hungrier and hungrier. Chris Corroon's puppetry does too. It goes for Jim Henson-style theatricality more than realism, which makes the dark denouement far more palatable. Those schooled on Frank Oz's 1986 film may be surprised to realise that Somewhere That's Green has more than one interpretation, as John Gallagher's lurid lighting for the finale makes clear. But, following the logic of life and legends, it was never going to end any other way. Little Shop of Horrors is at the Bord Gáis Energy Theatre , Dublin, until Saturday, August 9th