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Alcoholism, pipe bombs, arrests: What you didn’t know about Harry Potter stars

While Harry Potter was a dream opportunity, being cast in the franchise led to drinking problems, arrests and crippling self-doubt for the stars.

Daniel Radcliffe and Ralph Fiennes face off in Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows Part 2. Picture: Reuters/Warner Bros
Daniel Radcliffe and Ralph Fiennes face off in Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows Part 2. Picture: Reuters/Warner Bros

Being cast in Harry Potter back in the early 2000s seemed like a magical opportunity. But for the children thrust into the spotlight at such an early age, the reality was immense pressure and explosive outcomes. As they have revealed in the years since the movies wrapped, the cast struggled with alcoholism, infighting, critical derision, arrests and brutal studio treatment.

RADCLIFFE DIDN’T REALLY WANT THE ROLE

Early screen tests with Daniel Radcliffe are equal parts adorable and disarming. His unwavering earnestness and wide-eyed enthusiasm is professional child acting 101. The number of lines he has rehearsed, seemingly before being cast, is impressive. According to casting director Janet Hirshenson, Radcliffe’s signing was a nailbiter, with the boy who lived losing interest after initially having his tapes handed over to a casting director in the initial casting period.

“He just wasn’t interested. He didn’t want to be an actor anymore,” Hirshenson told the Huffington Post.

Radcliffe was only convinced to come in for auditions after the casting directors found him attending a play with his father and talked him back into the audition process.

Hirshenson said Radcliffe was chosen at age 10 because the other contenders were “not going to have the balls” to be the star.

He said was is flattered by her words, without really understanding what they were supposed to mean.

After landing the role, he told Emma Watson he liked the Harry Potter books but was actually more into WWF.

Radcliffe initially only signed on to do the first two films. His parents were nervous about the length of the filming schedule, which would have required the family to relocate to Los Angeles for the next six or seven years. The series ultimately took 10 years to film, although the shoots ended up taking place in England.

At various points, Radcliffe did waver in his commitment to the series.

“I think in a lot of people’s minds, I will always be him. It’s rather like the mafia, I guess,” Radcliffe said in 2010. “Once you’re in, you never get out.”

Daniel Radcliffe, aged 11 (centre), alongside his young co-stars Emma Watson, 10, and Rupert Grint, 11, in the year 2000.
Daniel Radcliffe, aged 11 (centre), alongside his young co-stars Emma Watson, 10, and Rupert Grint, 11, in the year 2000.

RADCLIFFE SAVAGED BY CRITICS

But despite what appeared to be a gung-ho approach to the audition process and monumental success of the franchise (which has made about $8.99 billion profit), Radcliffe has repeatedly stressed that he found his own acting lacklustre. “The thing that I will always say about myself is I was not the most gifted child actor,” he said. “When I look at other young actors, like when I look at the kids on Stranger Things or shows like that, I’m just like, ‘Holy! My god! How are you doing that?’”

The comparison is not surprising when you look at reputable film reviews from the time, which were often surprisingly harsh when assessing of the child actors’ performances.

The New York Times review of Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban savaged a then 14-year-old Radcliffe’s performance. “Mr Radcliffe, arriving at puberty, may also have reached the limit of his range as an actor,” the review said, adding his ability to show emotion amounted to a “tendency to blink and look nervous”.

Assailing the work of the child actors seems to have rippled into the consciousness of all three stars, who regularly make a habit of lambasting their own performances in interviews. The effect on their individual belief in their acting ability was strong.

“I never liked watching myself on film but I do make myself sit through it,” Radcliffe remarked in 2014.

“I’m just not very good … I hate it,” he said of his performance in Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince, when he was aged 20.

“My acting is very one-note and I can see I got complacent and what I was trying to do just didn’t come across. My best film is the fifth one (Order of the Phoenix) because I can see a progression.”

Watson, who played Hermione Granger, mirrored these feelings, saying she found learning to act on set “traumatic”. As a nine-year-old, she memorised all her lines (and everybody else’s). An unearthed clip shows her mouthing along with her co-stars as they deliver their lines. It’s actually 100 per cent adorable, but she said it brings back horrible memories.

“I created issues because of this,” she explained of her nervous tick. “I would ruin takes.”

Emma Watson (right) was so keen in the early days she learnt her co-stars’ lines too.
Emma Watson (right) was so keen in the early days she learnt her co-stars’ lines too.

GROWING UP AND ACTING OUT

Radcliffe also acted out in various child actor ways, saying he turned up to set drunk. He has not disclosed which films or scenes. He said his personality was a “problem”, being prone to being “highly addictive” and described a super un-magical life of drinking himself to blackout every single night.

The stars of Potter often described a deeply shielded life where they were ferried from their homes to set and home again, while being told what to eat between shoots. When free of the films’ clutches, Radcliffe used the snatches of free time to get wild. While he never drank “on set”, he was often still drunk during the day. “I can point to many scenes where I’m just gone. Dead behind the eyes,” he said in 2012. He got sober in 2010.

Daniel Radcliffe (centre) admitted to drinking heavily during shooting. Picture: Nick Ut
Daniel Radcliffe (centre) admitted to drinking heavily during shooting. Picture: Nick Ut

STRIPPING OFF THE ROBES

Radcliffe’s aggressive approach to proving himself came between the release of the fifth and sixth Potter movies. He appeared in a revival of the 1973 play Equus, a tale of a psychiatrist’s attempts to treat a teenage boy who is obsessed with horses. The play required a then 17-year-old Radcliffe to appear completely naked on stage for lengthy scenes, unencumbered by props.

The role was described by Radcliffe as less of an exercise in acting and more of a feat of endurance. “What I did in Equus, which was effectively stand (on stage) completely naked for about ten minutes,” he said, was about not going “Oh my god” and the audience not going “Oh my god”. Radcliffe also described seeing audience members filming and photographing him during the performance.

Clearly high on the freedom the play afforded him, the teen bragged in an interview, “I did three films last year and I got naked in all of them.” He had three Potter films left to go.

Daniel Radcliffe strips off his Harry Potter cloak in Equus. Picture: AP Photo/Peter Thompson Associates/Uli Weber
Daniel Radcliffe strips off his Harry Potter cloak in Equus. Picture: AP Photo/Peter Thompson Associates/Uli Weber

STARS ALL CONSIDERED LEAVING

At the start of negotiations for the fifth film, Rupert Grint, Watson and Radcliffe all considered exiting the franchise permanently.

“There were times when I was like ‘I’m done’,” Grint, who played Ron Weasley, said in October. “Filming Harry Potter was a massive sacrifice. You take for granted anonymity, just doing normal stuff.” He described the day-in-day-out process of being photographed in the street as “dehumanising”.

Watson went through similar upheaval and almost left, citing the major disruptions the films caused her life. While Watson was at school, her superstardom meant other students would approach her and ask her for autographs; the school took the measure of introducing a formalised point deduction system for talking to the young starlet so she could study in peace. It worked like this: if you talk to Watson three times you got detention.

In 2007 when Watson was 16, a stalker reportedly entered her school and harassed her, leading to the police being called and the actress having to hire a bodyguard. There were “further incidents” and, after the release of the fifth film, rumours abounded that Watson was out, The Sun reported. Her co-star Grint told the News of the World “Emma doesn’t want to do it anymore” and that their relationship had become prickly.

“I always try and make decisions in my life based on what’s right for me,” Watson said at the end of the films.

“They essentially moved the Harry Potter film schedule around my exam dates, which was amazing,” she said.

Rupert Grint, Emma Watson and Daniel Radcliffe promote Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix in 2007. Picture: AP Photo/Sang Tan
Rupert Grint, Emma Watson and Daniel Radcliffe promote Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix in 2007. Picture: AP Photo/Sang Tan

GRINT’S LIFE DIVIDED

Grint spoke recently about how being a child actor starkly divided his own life. Before being cast in Harry Potter, his life was decidedly working class. He was one of five siblings and his parents both worked in retail. Grint told The Guardian that when he was cast he “left school straight away and things have never been the same”.

As a younger child actor, he found being in the films fun. But the press tours and red carpet junkets were “an attack on the senses” and he “didn’t excel” in the high-pressure environment.

“It was really exciting when I was about 11 or 12, but it got harder in my teenage years. Sometimes you just want to be invisible,” said Grint, who has also described himself as a natural introvert.

Grint also said that as a youth he “feared god”, having been educated in a Catholic school, and the supernatural themes of witchcraft and the occult didn’t breeze past him. “I was quite anxious and worried about religion and the dogma attached to (the films),” he said. He also spoke about a feeling of impending doom as the film franchise worn on, that the expectation of a scandal grew in direct proportion to his fame.

“I don’t want to liken it to coming out of prison because it wasn’t a prison, but it did feel like stepping out of an institution,” he said.

Rupert Grint (right) found the press tours hard to handle. Picture: AFP/Leon Neal
Rupert Grint (right) found the press tours hard to handle. Picture: AFP/Leon Neal

STAR AXED OVER MARIJUANA

Radcliffe took the opportunity recently to defend his co-star Jamie Waylett, who was ousted from the franchise.

Waylett, who played bruiser Vincent Crabbe, had his home searched after being stopped by police for suspicious driving. They searched his car and found bags of marijuana and later found another 10 plants when in his mother’s home.

He was subsequently dumped permanently from the movies, missing out on appearing in the last two films. His life continued to spiral from this point, and he was eventually jailed for his involvement in the London riots. CCTV footage emerged of him holding a pipe bomb and drinking champagne handed to him by a looter.

His lawyer argued his case was a sad and complex one, and he had become a “withered actor by the age of 22”.

Jamie Waylett played Vincett Crabbe in five Harry Potter films before his arrest in 2009.
Jamie Waylett played Vincett Crabbe in five Harry Potter films before his arrest in 2009.
Jamie Waylett fronts caught after his drug bust. Picture: AFP/Shaun Curry
Jamie Waylett fronts caught after his drug bust. Picture: AFP/Shaun Curry
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Original URL: https://www.news.com.au/entertainment/celebrity-life/alcoholism-pipe-bombs-arrests-what-you-didnt-know-about-harry-potter-stars/news-story/72bf4c7805d0d78c813cfe1e5f87893e