Studio Magazine
(thanks to theonering.net)
Brad Dourif, the
Machiavellian Grima, tells us about the shoot.
    To see him so cheerful, a dashing fifty-something, it is hard to
believe that this actor could transform himself into the pale, stooped
and servile being that is Grima, the king of Rohan’s counsellor.
This was at first the opinion of PJ, who to start with rejected
Brad Dourif. "I auditioned for the role and didn’t get
it," remembers the actor. "But the other actor finally
refused it." When he set foot on set, Brad Dourif was seized
by the size of the project. "There was a guy who assembled
the rings of a mail coat one by one. I’ve rarely seen such
attention to detail." Then he discovered PJ who, behind his
many screens, directed up to four sets at once. "He looked
like Professor Nimbus. [Translator’s note: no idea who this
is!] Difficult to sit down and chat to him. I’m a little sorry,
because I never had a relationship with Peter, who I admire a great
deal, as enriching as those I had with Milos Forman or Ken Loach."
It was with Fran Walsh, partner and co-screenwriter of Jackson,
that he created the outlines of Wormtongue. "We tried to give
some humanity to this Machiavellian man. He acts from a lack of
love. It is difficult to create such a strong character without
falling into the grotesque." Modest, the actor proves he has
an unbelievable talent for understanding characters who are a little
twisted. It must be said that since he was discovered in ‘One
Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest’, he has made playing serial
killers, mad scientists, and other public dangers a speciality.
"Everyone has a little bit of the monster inside them. At my
age – 52 – you don’t change your image any more.
I’m just happy people are offering me work. My heart doesn’t
beat in the same way when I’m not working."