News | Entertainment
25 Nov 2024 8:41
NZCity News
NZCity CalculatorReturn to NZCity

  • Start Page
  • Personalise
  • Sport
  • Weather
  • Finance
  • Shopping
  • Jobs
  • Horoscopes
  • Lotto Results
  • Photo Gallery
  • Site Gallery
  • TVNow
  • Dating
  • SearchNZ
  • NZSearch
  • Crime.co.nz
  • RugbyLeague
  • Make Home
  • About NZCity
  • Contact NZCity
  • Your Privacy
  • Advertising
  • Login
  • Join for Free

  •   Home > News > Entertainment

    Eddie Redmayne's attempts to hone his spying skills were thwarted by a group of tourists

    The 42-year-old actor can currently be seen as an undercover assassin in the TV remake of 'The Day of the Jackal' and he enjoyed trying to track people using the techniques he was taught during his preparation - but one mission he thought he was "doing really well" in was halted when he was recognised in a busy area of London


    He told Britain's HELLO! Magazine: "I worked with Paul Biddiss, our brilliant military espionage advisor.

    "He taught me all of these techniques, like how to walk down the street and see people in car window reflections and car mirrors.

    "I had to walk through Covent Garden in disguise and he would send me photos of people I was meant to track.

    "I was tracking this one person, thinking I was doing really well and staying completely undetected, until a group of tourists stopped me and asked for a selfie. That was a little bit embarrassing."

    Though Eddie is unsure if he'd make a convincing spy in real life, he did pick up some useful tips.

    Asked if he thinks he'd be a good spy, he laughed: "I'm not sure about that.

    "I've learned some really handy tips though. One is that if you're being chased, have your hand in your pocket so you can use the butt of your phone as a weapon if you need it. Or use change as some sort of shrapnel to throw in your attacker's face.

    "The other thing I learned was how some soldiers carry tampons to stem the bleeding if they are shot."

    The series saw the Oscar-winning actor spend hours getting into character as prosthetics experts crafted his various disguises.

    He said: "It was a lot of time spent in make-up, working with the most brilliant prosthetic artists.

    "The prosthetics take about four hours to put on and two hours to take off, so it was a lot.

    "Seeing the process he goes through to stay undetected and then having that moment when he peels off the mask for the big reveal is something I really love about the role."

    © 2024 Bang Showbiz, NZCity

     Other Entertainment News
     24 Nov: Wicked tries to harness Barbie's marketing magic in the hopes of defying gravity at the box office
     23 Nov: Keke Palmer is living her life "on [her] own terms"
     23 Nov: Billie Eilish has been named as Apple Music's Artist of the Year
     23 Nov: Kristin Cavallari won't waste her time dating the wrong person
     23 Nov: Boy George regrets being critical of Liam Payne before he passed away
     23 Nov: Nicholas Hoult has insisted it is "fairly clear" he is married
     23 Nov: Pamela Hayden has retired from 'The Simpsons' after 35 years
     Top Stories

    RUGBY RUGBY
    All Blacks coach Scott Robertson is lamenting the stop-start nature of his side's 29-11 win over Italy in Turin More...


    BUSINESS BUSINESS
    From a US$300 billion climate finance deal to global carbon trading, here’s what was – and wasn’t – achieved at the COP29 climate talks More...



     Today's News

    Golf:
    Staggering accuracy from golfer Lydia Ko in the final round of the Group Tour Championship in Florida 8:36

    International:
    RFK Jr's critics say his candidacy as top US health official is 'poke in the eye of science' 8:06

    Politics:
    The Helen Clark Foundation wants widespread change to address New Zealand's high obesity rate 7:56

    Education:
    More students are leaving school without Level 3 or University Entrance now, than before the Covid-19 pandemic 7:56

    Motoring:
    Summer maintenance work across two major State Highways -- in a bid to get roads up to scratch before the Christmas rush 7:46

    Law and Order:
    Police are asking people to check their properties for a man, and his black lab, both missing in Otaki, north of Wellington 7:36

    Law and Order:
    The sounds of a bird saying "Hello Darling" are coming back to Upper Hutt 7:36

    Cricket:
    A setback for England three days from the first cricket test against New Zealand in Christchurch 7:26

    Environment:
    Dozens of marine medics and hundreds of members of the public are being credited, with helping save a pod of whales at Northland's Ruakaka Beach 6:56

    Law and Order:
    The Police Minister says an officer photographed wearing a gang patch is "feeling terrible", "taking responsibility", and going through an internal process 6:46


     News Search






    Power Search


    © 2024 New Zealand City Ltd