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Friday, July 09, 2004 - Page updated at 12:00 A.M.

Movies
Clive Owen plays Hollywood game his way

By Luaine Lee
Knight-Ridder Newspapers

DAMIAN DOVARGANES / AP
Clive Owen's latest films are "King Arthur" and "I'll Sleep When I'm Dead" (which opens next Friday). "Croupier," in 1998, introduced him to audiences outside his native England.
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BEVERLY HILLS, Calif. — When he was a schoolkid in Britain's lower-class Midlands, Clive Owen wanted to be an actor. He didn't even try to hide his passion from his jeering schoolmates.

"Here was me and this guy Dominic, who wanted to be a guitarist. He said 'guitarist' and I'd say 'actor,' and they'd go, 'Ye-a-a-w-h.' The teacher would encourage them to laugh, 'Get real.' But I was a stupid little thing, that's what I kept saying I was going to do."

The star of such films as "Gosford Park," "Croupier" and now "King Arthur" did it all right, but not the usual way.

"I flunked all my exams, just didn't want to know," he said. "I was completely uninterested, I was just interested in acting."

He joined a youth theater, but when those plays dried up, he found himself "hanging out and signing on." Signing on, in England, means signing up for welfare and choosing a trade. For Owen it was carpentry, which absorbed his interest about as much as astrophysics.

Always stubborn, he clung to his dream. Now, as the legendary sovereign in "King Arthur," which opened in theaters Wednesday, Owen, 38, seems to personify that man of mythic ambitions — both on screen and in real life.

When a teacher first suggested that he try studying acting, he rejected the idea. "I was an arrogant little so-and-so. I said, 'You can't teach people to act, I'm not going to acting school.' She said, 'Clive, that's the way in, that's what you have to do.' "

Owen eventually did apply to the Royal Academy of Dramatic Arts. Two years later, he was accepted. After training, he started landing work.

"I did a small film that nobody saw and never got released. I did a BBC drama and had quite a nice part, with little gaps in between. ... Then suddenly I landed a very big TV series called 'Chancer,' and it was very much based around me and my character. And the whole campaign was pushing me to the front, and I never looked back."
 
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Even so, sudden fame was unnerving to the reticent actor.

"I hated it. ... I was suddenly thrown into all the tabloid newspapers. I was made into the heartthrob, sex symbol. And I found the attention very unsettling. To go from where I had come from was very disorientating, and it would have been easy to lose my way."

Fortunately he married former actress Sarah Jane Fenton, who helped him get a grip.

"I basically pulled out, stopped doing press for a year, didn't talk to anyone and got a very bad reputation, but I just thought, 'I need my time with this,' " he said.

"From then on, I consciously tried to stay elusive. I was very tempted — I could have become the guy with all the cash. I got off, I wanted to be in for the long haul. I didn't want them to chew me up and spit me out."

The TV series "Second Sight" elevated him to the top of the game and the small film "Croupier" earned him an enviable reputation in the U.S. American roles followed, such as the assassin in "The Bourne Identity," the relief worker in "Beyond Borders" and the ex-con in "I'll Sleep When I'm Dead" (opening here next Friday).

But he didn't come to conquer America, said Owen.

"I was perfectly content in England doing the work I was doing. I didn't feel I was missing out on anything. I love making movies. They've never made that many in the U.K., but I was still very fulfilled and very determined to do theater, and suddenly 'Croupier' introduced me to an American audience and my life hasn't been quite the same since."

Copyright © 2004 The Seattle Times Company

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