Toby Kebbell, the reluctant star finally shining
LOS ANGELES 鈥 He has worked for Oliver Stone and Steven Spielberg, playing lead roles in some of the biggest blockbusters of recent years, but you might not recognize Toby Kebbell in the street.
Many of the British actor鈥檚 most high profile characters 鈥 a vengeful ape, a Marvel supervillain or an eight-foot Orc chieftain 鈥 are camouflaged by heavy makeup or computer wizardry.
The 34-year-old has been Agenor in Wrath of the Titans, Koba in Dawn of the Planet of the Apes, Dr. Doom in The Fantastic Four and Durotan in Warcraft, massing big pay days and approving reviews when the films often haven鈥檛.
With his lead role in the hotly-anticipated remake of the 1959 epic Ben-Hur 鈥 a milestone in movie history 鈥 Kebbell鈥檚 career is tipped to go stratospheric, but he鈥檚 keeping his feet on the ground.
鈥淚鈥檒l see you on the down side of things,鈥 he says at the end of an interview with AFP at a Beverly Hills hotel to discuss his latest role as Roman soldier Messala, the movie鈥檚 antagonist.
He may have swapped his rented council flat in London for somewhere rather more palatial in Los Angeles, but Kebbell doesn鈥檛 feel like a film star, and hopes he never will.
鈥淚 don鈥檛 do social media for that exact reason, because that鈥檚 a thing that really promotes you as a star. I鈥檝e no interest in being important to anyone,鈥 he says.
鈥淚 have no interest in getting the best table at a restaurant. If I like the food, I鈥檒l have the take-out. It doesn鈥檛 matter to me.鈥
鈥業T HAS TO STOP鈥
He is not trying to be 鈥渙verly humble,鈥 he says, but doesn鈥檛 want to build a pedestal from which he could one day fall.
鈥淚 know it鈥檚 going to stop. It has to stop, it always does 鈥 all those good things come to an end,鈥 he insists.
鈥淪o I鈥檓 just trying to get to a point where I鈥檝e afforded a house and I can figure out something else.鈥
Kebbell鈥檚 childhood 鈥 crammed with three older brothers and a half-sister into a small three-bedroom house England鈥檚 East Midlands 鈥 was the archetype of humble beginnings.
Born to landscape gardener Michelle and engineer Robert, his parents divorced when he was 18 months old and the family was raised in a Catholic household by his single mother.
鈥淚 was an altar boy because I had a fantastic priest, Father O鈥橲ullivan, and Father O鈥橲ullivan said 鈥榊ou know, if you come to church and be an altar boy there might be a pound coin in it for a funeral or a wedding,鈥欌 he recalls.
Kebbell dropped out of school as a rebellious 15-year-old, finishing his exams at a sixth form college in Nottingham, and began attending weekly acting workshops.
His portrayal of the autistic Anthony in his first film, Shane Meadows鈥 2004 melodrama Dead Man鈥檚 Shoes, earned him a nomination for most promising newcomer at the British Independent Film Awards (BIFA).
He was soon working for Stone in Alexander and Woody Allen in Match Point before winning a BIFA for playing Joy Division鈥檚 manager in the 2007 Ian Curtis biopic Control.
鈥業 SOLD OUT鈥
His big Hollywood breakthrough, playing the antagonist Garsiv in Mike Newell鈥檚 Prince of Persia: Sands of Time in 2010, was a formative, 鈥渉eartbreaking鈥 experience.
鈥淚 was given a bad guy and he was nuanced and he was interesting and I thought 鈥榳ow 鈥 how fantastic that you get this!鈥欌 he recalls.
鈥淎nd that got diluted and diluted to nothing. So my ambition from then on was that if I get a bad guy again I want him to have what I know to be true, which is that people make terrible mistakes, but they鈥檙e still people.鈥
Kebbell evidently drew from this lesson for his interpretation of Messala in Ben-Hur, portraying the Jewish prince鈥檚 adoptive brother turned deadly nemesis, a man who made some poor choices but isn鈥檛 evil personified.
The actor uses colorful, toilet-themed language to describe how terrified he was filming the movie鈥檚 45 mile-per-hour (72 kilometer-per-hour) chariot racing scenes, but is clearly every bit the action star.
鈥淚鈥檓 a very physically active person. I grew up playing rugby through injuries of various types,鈥 he says, noting that the knockabout scenes in any film often come the most naturally to him.
鈥淭he thing is, 鈥榓ction star鈥 is a bad label… The belief is that you鈥檙e a sell-out but I don鈥檛 know anyone from my class who wouldn鈥檛 be doing what I was doing if they had the chance,鈥 he says.
鈥淪o yeah, for sure I sold out, but I literally grew up with zero. I grew up with no telly, no phone, no car and of course I鈥檓 doing it for money, of course I am.鈥 鈥 AFP
MTRCB Rating: PG



