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August 2000
Empire
Magazine
In Person Dougray Scott
by Colin Kennedy
The Scottish actor faces off against Cruise in Mission:
Impossible 2.
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IN BRIEF
Born: November 25,1965, St, Andrews, Fife
Last three films: Gregory's Two Girls,
This Year's Love, Faeries
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Next up: Enigma, Cromwell and Fairfax,
"with something in between, probably."
True but strange: Family man and
father of twins Scott survived the debacle that was Another
9 1/2 Weeks (1997) "relatively unscathed."
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Say, for whatever reason, Tom Cruise broke into the homely
Winnebago currently parked in the stately grounds of Luton Hoo, he
could beat seven shades of shit out of the caravan's solitary
occupant, one Dougray Scott. Easy. Sporting greased hair, brown cords
and a runny nose, said Scott looks every inch a boffin and nothing at
all like the hard-as-nails ubervillain Ambrose, soon to be seen going
the full 15 with Tom in M:12. But, of course, it wasn't always this
way.
Last summer, long before he got deep into his present character of
Tom Jericho, the "maths geek" hero of wartime thriller
Enigma, Scott was 22 pounds heavier, at an "all-time"
fitness peak and making damn sure that as Ambrose he "caught him
(that's Cruise) a good few ones in the ribs." Not that Tom was
ever a pushover: "I remember the first day of filming, he jumps
in the air and he comes down and smacks me. Christ, he caught me in
the jaw. 1 turned round and I was thinking... (mouthing silently),
'You fucking bastard."'
The source of all this conflict was the spectacular climax of John
Woo's Mission: Impossible 2, a bike chase-cum-sand-in-the-face-bitch
fight which Scott calls, "the toughest thing I ever had to do.
"
"It took weeks and weeks and weeks," says the actor,
currently enjoying a lunch break from shooting Enigma. "Must have
taken three months to film. Even more." He pauses, taking a
mouthful of pie and potatoes. "But we had a real laugh doing the
fight." Sure sounds like it.
After being signed up in July '9 8, Scott spent some time working
on his character, the rogue IMF Agent Ambrose, with "big
bear" Robert Towne - "We wanted to show the sympathetic
side, otherwise he just comes off as angry and evil" - before
joining the shoot in March 1999. Nine months of filming - not to
mention pickups in March of this year - including the aforementioned
action sequence, would be enough to test the patience of any actor,
but as a self-confessed perfectionist, Scott obviously proved an ideal
companion/opponent for his producer/co-star: "I guess in that
respect he (Cruise) liked working with me. We would both do it as many
times as it took to get something right." As it turned out, with
a certain Hong Kong maestro calling the shots, the right take was hard
won indeed. "I mean, John Woo shoots from every different angle -
it's almost like he choreographs a ballet," sniffs Scott,
currently fighting no more than a cold. "He covers everything.
And it takes a long time."
"Christ.
He really caught me in the jaw."
ON TRADING BLOWS WITH TOM CRUISE
So long, in fact, that Scott
famously found himself forced to withdraw from the lead role of
Wolverine in Bryan Singer's imminent X-Men. Asked about it now, Scott
is surprisingly sanguine. "Everyone tried their hardest. I mean,
Fox waited three months and kept on pushing because they really,
really wanted me to do it. I mean, we tried everything, Fox tried
everything, Paramount, Tom Cruise, John Woo, but at the end of the
day, the schedule had been fucked up by the rain in Sydney. We lost a
month and it was just impossible to release me by a certain date.
" Still, Scott says he left the project "in good heart"
and is looking forward to seeing what is now a rival summer
blockbuster: "I can't wait to watch it. It was a great script. I
want to see what he (Singer) has done."
Not that Scott has any need to worry about missing out on this
summer's biggest hype. Recently returned from Mission's LA premiere -
"It was mad, the biggest thing I've ever seen in my life" -
he has only just come to terms with the opening numbers. "I mean,
huuuge, incredible," he says of the mind-boggling $90 million
first weekend.
With his first big movie lead as Enigma's unconventional hero to
follow, once the rather more manageable three-month shoot wraps, the
fresh-faced 34 year-old - who decided to be an actor aged 14 after
reading Arthur Miller's Death Of A Salesman ("My father was a
salesman and I just made a huge connection") and got his first
real break aged 31 as Terry Walsh in Twin Town now looks poised for
global recognition.
All of which begs the question: can Scott ever scale the same
heights as Cruise? Well, there are some places even Scott wouldn't
venture. "The climbing sequence is extraordinary," he says
of Cruise's deathdefying mountain leap which opens M:12. "Would I
do that? No, I'm not mad like Tom is. He's crazy." Not as crazy
as Cruise, maybe, but perhaps just mad enough... Colin Kennedy |