Bill Skarsgård

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Out Magazine
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An article "It Boy Bill Skarsgård Is Determined to Scare the Hell Out of You as the New Pennywise" here: https://www.out.com/entertainment/2017/9/08/it-boy-bill-skarsgard-determined-scare-hell-out-you
 
Bill Skarsgård's twisted story of bringing Stephen King's Pennywise to life
Bill Skarsgård found himself in the bizarre position of chasing down a psychotic killer clown. Or was it creeping up on him?

The search for Pennywise in Stephen King’s It was a harrowing, haunting and sometimes humiliating experience. From the audition to the performance on set, Skarsgård constantly pushed himself not just to the limit, but far beyond his comfort zone.

The result was one of 2017’s most horrifying monsters, and Entertainment Weekly has named Skarsgård one of the entertainers of the year.

Here’s the actor’s first-hand account of going in search of the shapeshifting evil presence, and how he finally captured it:

“Pennywise was so extreme, and so far away from anything I’ve ever done. For the callback, director Andy Muschietti asked for people to wear simple whiteface. Not a clown nose, but a red-painted nose and a clown smile. I thought this was a great idea – up until the point where I realize I don’t know how to put on makeup. That’s a skill I don’t have.

“I ended up asking my girlfriend to put some makeup on that morning, and then I get into the car and had to drive across L.A. in this clown makeup. There was something kind of humiliated and absurd about the whole thing. I’m an actor auditioning in Hollywood, and I’m driving with a clownface on. It’s kind of a metaphor for what the profession of acting feels like.

“Andy had also asked to explore clown laughter, so I’m sitting in the car and I feel ridiculous, but I thought I might as well absorb it and use it. So I just started to laugh like crazy in the car, as I’m just bearing down on pedestrians.

“The audition was not on a studio lot, so I had to park and walk for a few blocks with my clownface on. I pretty much just stayed in character through the whole thing. It was one of the most bizarre things I’ve ever done. It sums up my approach to this character.

“Something I found disturbing was that I wanted Pennywise to feel entirely unpredictable at every moment, and also his voice doesn’t have a predictable way of sounding. It can go kind of up and down and crackle, you can go really high pitch and low pitch, even in the same sentence.

“I wanted it to be sort of colorful in that way. It can be soft and it can be whispery and it can be alluring, then it crackles and breaks a lot of times. He’s not entirely there, you know? It’s sort of this entity performing as a clown but it’s also something so much more sinister, just beneath the surface at all times. Even with the eyes pointing in different directions and the crackling of the voice, you find something that’s not, entirely … right.

“For me, I’ve discovered that almost every character that you play tends to have a note, almost like a tone, or a hum. I almost discovered it with this character, but with Pennywise it was always sort of a scream. Or his hysterical laugh. I would do that before takes or right before going into a scene and then, ‘Action!’ That energy carries into the scene and also the energy of the character.

“It was such a physically demanding performance that I wasn’t as chit-chatty and mingling with the crew as I normally am. I had to sort of stay very focused and somewhat isolated on set in order to do justice to the character.

“I just needed to allow myself to go very crazy and be silly and really embrace the weirdness and scariness of it all.”
source: http://ew.com/movies/2017/12/21/bill-skarsgard-stephen-king-it-audition-story/
 
‘Assassination Nation’ Teaser: The Revolution Will Not Be Televised, But It Might Be On Instagram

Sam Levinson returns to Sundance for his second feature film Assassination Nation, a wild ride that tells the story of how one town lost its mind when a provocateur starts posting details from the private digital lives of everyone in the small town of Salem. The pic is set for its world premiere tomorrow night in the Midnight section of the Sundance Film Festival.

Levinson, whose debut feature Another Happy Day won the Waldo Salt Award in Park City in 2011 and who more recently co-wrote HBO’s Wizard of Lies, has plotted a wild cautionary tale that centers on high school senior Lily and her crew of besties who live in a haze of texts, posts, selfies, and chats—just like everyone else. So when it all comes out, the ugly parts of human nature are quickly revealed.

Odessa Young, Suki Waterhouse, Hari Nef, Abra, Bill Skarsgard and Bella Thorne star. Producers are David S. Goyer, Kevin Turen, Anita Gou, Matthew J. Malek, Manu Gargi and Aaron L. Gilbert. Jason Cloth, Steven Thibault, Andy Pollack, Mike Novogratz, David Gendron, Ali Jazayeri, J.E. Moore and Will Greenfield are executive producers. Endeavor Content is handling sales.
source: http://deadline.com/2018/01/assassi...sundance-movie-sam-levinson-video-1202264118/
 
That's a lot of people waiting for him! Didn't realize just how much he's getting bigger. Good for him!
It's not rather for him specifically. These people are mainly collectors and autograph hunters. These days they can meet a lot of famous people at the Salt Lake City airport and they know well whose films and when have a premiere at Sundance.
 
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