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Cillian Murphy: ‘I’d happily appear in Peaky Blinders again’ | Cillian Murphy

Cillian Murphy, who played Robert Oppenheimer in Christopher Nolan’s film about the creator of the atomic bomb, was nominated for an Oscar and a BAFTA, and is a leading candidate for Best Actor. He revealed that he plans to return to this role. peaky blindersThomas Shelby, on the big screen and on the big screen when he gets the chance.

“If there’s more of a story to tell and Steven Knight offers a script like I know, I’ll go for it,” Murphy said. “I mean, if I want to see 50-year-old Tommy Shelby, I’ll go there. Let’s do it.”

She talks to Lauren Laverne on BBC Radio 4 about the impact success has had on her life. desert island disc This weekend, the charismatic Cork performer also explained his approach to playing Oppenheimer. He realized that the portrayal “was going to end up being a script, an integration of everything I was absorbing from him and elements of your own into it,” he said. Ta. And when you put it all into the mix, that’s Chris’ version and my version of Oppenheimer. ”

Murphy also confessed that she was reluctant to appear on the red carpet at public events before playing a major role in awards season. “I’ve had struggles in the past, too,” he said. “But you can choose to enjoy it. You can make those changes in your brain. Really, you’d be a total idiot not to enjoy it. Just go with it.”

Professionally, Murphy told Laverne that he gets more nervous on film sets than on the stage where he started. I know I can fix it tomorrow. But movies can’t fix that. He added that he also finds the silence before saying his lines on set terrifying.

Murphy, 47, also talked about his early hopes for a career in music, which almost came true when his band was offered a five-record deal.

However, the parents of some of the band members objected, so Murphy turned to acting and secured a role in an Enda Walsh play. disco pigsbefore landing a career-changing role in Ken Loach’s 2006 Cannes Palme d’Or winning film. Wind That Shakes the Barley. “The way I approach my work has changed a lot,” he said of Loach’s improvisational techniques.

But Murphy confessed that the role of Shelby, who made him famous in Knight’s epic television series about Birmingham gangsters, just didn’t sit right with him. I don’t know if I convinced Stephen at the meeting, but I think I sent him a text afterward that said, “Remember, I’m an actor.” And I believe that. I think it is our duty as actors to transform according to the demands of the role. ”

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