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One moment you're a martial
arts expert pining for the movies. The next you're the living embodiment of pure evil with
a head like a voodoo tomato. Overnight, Ray Park has
become a movie icon.
Words: Adam Smith. Photograph: Mark
Seliger.
"I CAN SMELL CHIPS IN HERE," murmurs Darth maul
ongingly, eyeing the trolley piled high with quality scran that has just
been wheeled into the swank London hotel room. Since the Sith warrior has
turned up as alter ego Ray Park, sans gangrenous tomato head, it's not
difficult to see why food might be high on the agenda - for Park
is built like a buffed brick shithouse; 20-odd
years of martial arts training having left him with
a physique that has already reduced the usually strong-willed female PR staff of
20th Century Fox to a fit of the
vapours.
Restraining himself foodwise for the moment, he chats
excitedly about the experience of being plucked from relative obscurity
and planted firmly on a pedestal marked "icon".
"I hadn't really thought of it like that but people keep telling me
about it," he enthuses. "Occasionally you sit back and think, I'm a part
of history now. It's very exciting - and what I always wanted, to be a
part of Star Wars. It's a great honour."
There's a palpable air of boyish excitement around Park that suggests
he can't quite believe his luck. Almost breathlessly, he'll recount his
experiences of meeting the cast and |
crew ( "At first I was, "George.. he's a god... and Ewan and Liam... I'm working with big
stars here!") in a soft cockney accent which is impossible not to warm to
but unfortunately was one of the reasons Lucas redubbed his lines with
another actor.
"I knew from the start that they'd most probably dub it, " he says,
slightly disappointed. I was miked up and I went to a voice coach. But I
don't think cockney coming in here and there would have suited it. I was
curious to see what they did, I was hoping that maybe they'd synthesise my
voice. But then it's not a big speaking part. There are only five lines.
It's more about look and presence."
Ask him about the experience of becoming famous and you'll get non of
the bad-tempred star rants about loss of privacy and irritating fans
baying for autographs. This guy just can't get enough of it.
"I've done a few conventions and I've met a few fans," he says of his
first experiences of the Star Wars circuit that'll no doubt keep him in
high energy protein drinks for the rest of his natural. "It's amazing how
extreme they take it. They're like, 'I'm so honoured.' I think, 'Why? I'm
just me...' But it's nice, they're really warm, they're not poking
me."
Poking, prodding, tweaking or in any other way manhandling Ray Park is
probably not advisable. The multi-discipline championship winner has been
a member of the British martial arts team for seven years, is a second
level black belt and counts kick-boxing as one of his hobbies. But
oriental rucking was, and still is, just a means to a more glamorous
end.
"I wanted to be an actor when I was a kid. That's why I did the martial
arts, " he says. "I watched Bruce Lee and Jackie Chan. I wanted to fly
about and do all the flashy movies that these guys were doing, to be
recognised and sort of famous. I wanted people going, "Oh yeah... you're
in the movies.
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Until George put in the call, Parl's only experience of the world of
celluloid was working as a stunt double on Mortal Kombat II. It wasn't
nearly enough.
"It was hard on Mortal Kombat, " he remembers, "because you had to
cover up and I didn't want that. I wanted to be in front of the camera. On
Star Wars I said to them, 'Well, you hae to make the character do this,'
and they said, 'You are the character. You can do it."
Well, most of the character anyway. But even if Park's gentle tones
didn't quite cut the mustard for Darth Maul's voice, it's pretty clear
that the months he spent leaping around in Tunisia are among the happiest
of Park's life. And the wrapping of the movie left him with an almost
terminal comedown; the vestiges of which seem to still cling to him.
"The down side was finishing the movie and being bored, " he remembers.
"I really enjoyed doing something every day for six months and to finish
that was really sad. You say goodbye to everyone and that's it. And the
following week, I didn't have t get up at five o'clock in the morning but
I still did. It was, 'What am I going to do now? ' For a week or so, I
didn't even want to go training because what was the point? Then I started
to get back into my routine. But I didn't do anything for a year
afterwards, which was frustrating and boring."
All that was left to do was to look forward to the release of the movie
which, with its attendant press calls and media hoopla, is another
exciting chapter in Park's much enjoyed trip to Celebrityville. But the
future is a little less certain.
"I've been to LA a few time to meet directors and casting directors, "
he says of his plans post-Maul. "And they're saying, 'Well, there's this
and there's that...' But you never know. I'm not going to say, 'Yeah, I'm
going to get this because I've just done Star Wars'.
"
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