The
Independent - 1998
What's The Boy Playing At? By Liese Spencer
Drew Barrymore,
River Phoenix, Macaulay Culkin: everyone knows what happens to child
actors. Moppets grow up into monsters, with acne and weight
problems. They drink and take drugs. They go through a painful,
public puberty, then wind up on the video shelf. Or lying dead
outside the Viper Room. So what happened to the archetypal
"Brit-packer", Christian Bale?
By rights, the
precociously talented 13-year-old star of Spielberg' s Empire of the
Sun should have slipped into obscurity years ago. Instead, with
leading roles in a forthcoming adaptation of Julian Barnes's novel 'Metroland',
and Todd Hanes's sumptuous glam rock extravaganza 'Velvet Goldmine',
the actor - now 23 - shows no sign of burning out.
"Don't ask
me about selling out," he grins. "The first thing I did, I
sold out. It was a Lenor advert, when I was eight years old. I was
one of those annoying kids who peek around the washing-machine with
their dirty football boots." Young Bale pocketed pounds 80,
bought "a pair of DMs and a Rubic Snake", and never looked
back.
Of course, there
have been a few flops along the way (the musicals 'Newsies' and
'Swing Kids' are best forgotten) but Bale's cinematic coming of age
has been surprisingly smooth. Judicious supporting roles in 'Henry
V', 'Little Women' and 'Portrait of a Lady' built his reputation as
a serious actor while establishing him as the thinking girl's
pin-up. He is inundated by "Baleheads"; the actor's
website is one of the most popular on the Internet, rivaled only by
that of Leonardo DiCaprio's.
Cyber-rivalry
between the two ex-child stars recently erupted into the real world,
when Bale found his lead role in a forthcoming adaptation of Bret
Easton Ellis's American Psycho threatened by the Titanic star. Still
waiting to discover which will get to shred their poster-boy image
by playing the Wall Street serial killer Patrick Bateman, Bale must
content himself with the more proscribed rebellions essayed in his
upcoming releases.
In 'Metroland',
Bale plays Chris, a sixth-form rebel who teams up with his best
friend to bait bowler-hatted members of the bourgeoisie before
settling back into suburban comfort with wife Emily Watson. 'Velvet
Goldmine', meanwhile, sees his newspaper journalist Arthur
researching a retrospective feature on glam rock and unearthing
memories of his own teen flirtation with Seventies glitterball
androgyny. Be-flared, and with some of the worst sideburns this side
of Slade, Bale teeters precariously through the flashbacks on
stacked soles, before enjoying a climactic post-concert night of
passion with Ewan McGregor's American rock god.
Bale has never
had much need to rail against conformity. As the son of an
ex-airline pilot and a circus dancer, he says, the most rebellious
thing could have done was to "stick on a shirt and tie and go
to work in a bank". Perhaps that is why he is "perversely
drawn" to suburbanites such as Chris and Arthur. "I'm
attracted to characters who appear to be passive observers, who
aren't obviously interesting."
Less
boy-next-door than budding Bohemian-on-the-move, the teenage Bale
may never have languished in suburban ennui but, he says,
"there were times as a family when we ended up in very small
places and there would be that fear of where the hell are you going
to next, and what's going to happen? I suppose the difference was
that it was never boredom. It was never a fear of nothing's going to
happen."
Bale's relaxed
upbringing has proved to be a good preparation for the vicissitudes
of the acting profession, but it sometimes got him into trouble at
school. "Basically, I'd turn up late every day. I remember the
teacher saying, 'One day, Christian,you're going to an interview and
they're going to ask to see your school registration, and when they
see all your "lates" on it, they're going to think you're
unreliable and you're not going to get the job'." Bale smirks
at the memory, as well he might. It is certain that Spielberg did
not ask to see his registration card before choosing him from 4,000
other boys to play the lead in Empire of the Sun.
For his part,
Bale was singularly unawed by his director and co-star. "At
that age you really don't give a shit. 'John Malkovich. Who?
Spielberg, so what?' You're fearless, you know? So it was incredibly
simple. There was no sense of competition, things which, as you get
older, start creeping into your mind and making your performances
worse."
Only after he
returned home did Bale begin to feel the pressures of his new-found
celebrity. "I was living in Bournemouth and suddenly everybody
knew who I was. I remember sitting in this cafe with some friends
and this girl came up, who obviously didn't recognise me, and
started going on about how she was going out with Christian Bale.
I'd go down the public toilets and see things written about me on
the wall. Guys would start fights with me. The local paper took
pictures of me getting back from school [he laughs, and mimes
flinching from the paparazzi], then wrote features about how I
wouldn't open a girls' school fete. I just felt a dick, you know? I
was 14; I didn't want to stand there next to the mayor with a big
pair of scissors, but they started saying I was big-headed, that I'd
forgotten where I'd come from." He snorts. "I didn't come
from there, anyway."
A decade later,
Bale puts his survival down to the fact that he never traded on a
cuddly persona. These days he lives in Los Angeles, where he avoids
glitzy Hollywood parties and premieres, preferring to surf, or see
friends. "You do meet some interesting people at those things,
but if you go to too many you start losing sight of what you came
here for."
In his personal
life, Bale is currently enjoying being single. "I find it
impossible to conceive of spending a whole day with somebody, let
alone getting married" he says. "Between 15 and 21, I was
with one girl. All my friends were running around, and then when we
split up, some of my friends were getting married or moving in with
each other, and I was like, 'yeah, but I've never done any of that
other stuff'. So I need to get some of that out of my system."
Professionally,
Bale has things to get out of his system too. "Getting
shagged" by Ewan McGregor in 'Velvet Goldmine' is certainly a
step away from that boy-next-door image ("What can I say? He
never writes, he never calls. It's quite upsetting.") but
whether Bale will get the chance to make the definitive break with
his schoolboy persona by playing an American Psycho remains to be
seen.
'Velvet Goldmine'
previews at the Edinburgh International Film Festival on 16 August;
'Metroland' is released on 18 August.