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Jock's Away! (The Face, 2001)


the face cover On his first day in Morocco shooting the Ridley Scott war movie Black Hawk Down, Ewan McGregor steps from the airport terminal into one of the battered Mercedes Grands that pass for taxis in the ancient port city of Rabat. He strikes up a conversation.

"I was here before," the 29-yr old actor says in his soft burr. "But I can't remember the name of the hotel." Trying to get his bearings, he describes the place to the driver. "Ah. The Tour Hassan?" the cabbie suggests, citing Rabat's most famous landmark, an elaborately carved twelfth-century minaret. "Yeah, yeah, yeah," McGregor says enthusiastically. "That was it." "It's now called the Meridien," the driver says proudly. McGregor laughs. "So," he says. "There you go." A lot has changed since 1993. Last time around, McGregor was shooting his first movie, Being Human, and obscure nonentity in which his character was referred to as English Acting extra. "Which pissed me off, " he says. "on two counts." One: He is not English- he is Scottish. Two: He was not an extra-he had one line of dialogue, thank you very much. It didn't take long for McGregor's career to shed the English Extra stigma. He won a starring part in Shallow Grave, the exceedingly dark 1994 breakthrough by the then equally unknown director Danny Boyle. Then came Boyle's charismatic junkie classic Trainspotting; driven by McGregor's widly adolescent vivacity-a quality that makrs him offscreen as well-and it made him a star.

the face BW pic 1 Along the way, there have been artful indies like Brassed Off and Little Voice, and a few turkeys, notably the ludicrous horror movie Nightwatch and the British surf movie-as if- Blue Juice. And then there was that other obscure nonentity, Star Wars: Episode I-The Phantom Menace, with its piddling $922.6 million in international receipts. Now, eight years and eighteen movies later, McGregor is back where he started. The city looks cleaner, he notes. There are fewer beggars on the streets. Last time he was out this way, they kept him here a whole month to deliver one line. "Those were the days," he says, rubbing the sunburn on the back of his neck. They're getting more out of you this time, then? "Just a bit," he says.

These days, McGregor upgrades to a palatial suite in the Rabat Hilton. On the bookshelves, he's built a small shrine with toy soldiers and brass bullet casings. Behind it sits a small framed document that reads: "A Certification of Appreciation for you dedicated commitement to Ranger orientation…?" McGregor picks it off the shelf. "I'm proud of that." He says. Down is based on the true story of a humanitarian 1993 U.S. Ranger mission to capture a Somali warlord. The plan was to airlift a hundred elite soldiers into battle and bring them back within an hour. Instead, a rocket-propelled grenade downed a helicopter, and a regiment was stranded overnight. Eighteen soldiers were killed and more than 500 Somalis lost their lives. For authenticity's sake, the cast ( which also includes Josh Hartnett and McGregor's Trainspotting co-star Ewen Bremmer) had to complete a grueling week of genuine boot camp in Georgia that included shaved heads and a rigorous schedule of wind sprints, assault courses, and weapons and combat training. "I was," says McGregor with a smidgen of pride, "fitter than I had imagined I would be." He also discovered he was a pretty fair shot. "Lying down, from 50 feet, I was perfect. So I could really kill someone," he grins. "Which is always good to know."

McGregor has become obsessed with warfare. On the coffee table in his suite lies a copy of Frederic Manning's The Middle Parts of Fortune, an excruciating eye-witness account of World War I trench conflict. At night he has crazy dreams, always about the military, full of weaponry and camouflage and people giving orders. He takes out a Zippo lighter inscribe Anaconda and lights one of his ever-present Marlboros. "I'd always wanted to do a war film," he confesses. "Just purely for the wee boy in me who used to play soldiers. And it's a lot like that, you know?" Last night his agent phoned. He was singing. The agent had just seen a preview of Moulin Rouge, McGregor's latest film. The actor takes this as a good omen, as he hasn't seen the thing himself. Moulin Rouge, a love story set in a turn-of-the-century Paris nightclub, comes from Baz Luhrmann, director of Strictly Ballroom and Romeo + Juliet. It's a movie that couldn't be less like the high testosterone shoot-out he's working on in Morocco. Moulin Rouge is an extravagant wildly colourful musical in which McGregor plays a lovelorn poet. Maybe suprisingly for a man who's enjoying handling heavy armaments right now. It was McGregor's dream part. "I didn't have to convince Ewan to take the role," Luhrmann says. "He ran toward it. He gets to sing and dance…and he gets to kiss Nicole Kidman." Moulin Rouge was originally scheduled for release in America last Christmas. Then it was bumped ahead to Apirl. This is standard operating procedure in the world of film releases, but this was not a standard movie cast. Halfway through filming, McGregor's comely co-star separated from her husband. Rumors began to flow that the movie was delayed because Kdman didn't want to do interviews while her split with Tom Cruise was breaking news. McGregor shakes his head and makes a face.

"The delays were purely due to the huge task of putting all the music together, "he says. Were you aware of the situation between them? "No, absolutely not. I had no idea. No idea. And I haven't spoken to her since so I don't know anything about it. It wasn't anything to do with me though." That was my next question. "I didn't have an affair with Nicole Kidman. No." He starts laughing. "It was nothing to do with me." Kidman, says McGregor, was 'a real poppet.' "And I think we got a really nice relationship, we really did." adding hurriedly, "On film, you know?" "Ewan," Luhrmann expounds, "is genetically built to be a romantic hero. But we've never seen him this way. I don't guarantee anyone's experience of something I've made, but I can guarantee that he'll be a revelation to the audience.

the face BW pic 2 McGregor, plays a young bourgeios poet who's dying to throw himself into bohemia. In doing so, he falls in love with the most beautiful and unattainable woman, a rich man's courtesan at the Moulin Rouge nightclub. Just as it's hard to imagine the war-obsessed McGregor as a bourgeios poet, Nicole Kidman isn't everyone's first choice as a bourgeois courtesan. "I used to say she was a skanky whore, which really pissed her off," McGregor says of Kidman. "But, yes. She plays a courtesan. A high-class whore. A high-class skanky whore," he adds, relishing the phrase. "There was" he says. " A great book written that just described all the whores in the Moulin Rouge," says McGregor. "It's bizarre: really detailed descriptions of each whore. 'Good teeth.' Or, 'Cracking tits.' Great arse but terrible breath." Any of them fitting Nicole? "No, She was divine. There was no problem with her teeth or her tits."

McGregor and Kidman sing throughout Moulin Rouge. Not 19th century classics, but rather modern pop songs: "Like a Virgin" and Elton John's "Your Song" and T-Rex's 'Children of the Revolution'. The soundtrack also includes Number One single "Lady Marmalade" by Lil' Kim, Christina Aguilera, Mya, Pink, and produced by Missy Elliot, as well as contributions from Fatboy Slim, Beck, and that showboat of fin de siecle Paris, Ozzy Osbourne. McGregor had a ball recording his songs. "I have a bit of pash for the old musicals," he says. In fact, he set his heart on acting at the age of 14, partly inspired by this nascent love. As a boy, he studied French horn and drummed in a local rock band. He plays guitar. Propped up on his bookshelf is a copy of Instant Five-String Banjo. "It's a nightmare," he complains of the instrument he taught himself while filming Black Hawk Down. "Really hard work." Despite the banjo, some say McGregor's voice is so good that there has been talk of a record deal with American label Interscope. McGregor is cagey about the idea. Baz Luhrmann, on the other hand, says the actor is up there with Bono.

"My God!" McGregor says, genuinely shocked "That's quite a quote!"

Next to the banjo there are about twenty books, he's brought to pass the time on the shoot, including a novel by A.S Byatt and several Chekhov's. As a teenager, McGregor never used to like reading: It's a passion he developed in his twenties. Did you immerse yourself in Rimbaud and Verlaine to study for your part in Moulin Rouge?

Blank look, "Who?"

Long, deadpan pause. Then He laughs. You're not a secret poetry writer yourself, then?

the face BW pic 3 "> "No." Then he adds: "I do write a wee bit of poetry now and then. I had a typewriter to practice for the movie in my trailer. So I wrote a lot of nonsense. They're in a book in my house in London. And there they will remain." You're not going to prodcue a slim volume? Thoughts from Moulin Rouge by Ewan McGregor? "A book of shite. No." Wait and see how well the film does before you rule it out. "Yeah, it would probably sell like hotcakes if it did [do well]. But it might be too embarrassing for me." Stick to the Phantom Menace dolls. "Exactly. Yeah."

McGregor spent a lot of last year in Australia. He bought a Harley-Davidson and a tent. When he had down time, he camped in the outback, falling asleep by his fire and waking up at five in the morning, gazing up at the stars. In Sydney, McGregor completed work on Episode II. Being part of George Lucas' money-spinner means your also custodian of the master's secrets. You're not allowed to discuss anything. About the movie before it's release. "It's kind of flavored everything I do," McGregor says uncomfortably. "When I do interviews, I always worry now." You're in quite al ot of Episode II aren't you? "You sound like my Dad now. He always gets worried about how many lines I've got. 'Are you in it a lot, son?' Are you on every page?' I'm in a lot of it, yeah."

And we can expect new toy's that look vaguely like you? "I would assume so. But I know nothing about that side of it. I really don't. You go in there, do your bit, and see the toys later. You know you get scanned now? So maybe by the third one, I won't need to be there…Hope I still get the check though." It's nine in the evening at McGregor's Hilton suite. A chambermaid arrives with an espresso. Later we'll head to the bar, where McGregor will stick to soft drinks. The heady days when he'd out-drink journalists are over. He's decided to calm down. There was one recent evening that involved dangerously large quantities of absinthe, but that was principally in the name of research.

"It's wicked stuff, I assure you," he says. "I couldn't see properly the next day. My vision was like…" he waves his hands in front of his face. "It's madness." "Et voila," says the rather more sober McGregor to the Moroccan maid. "I'd like a Coke as well. He's learning to play more and work less, too. Before Black Hawk Down, McGregor put his career on hold for six months to spend time with his wife of six years, Eve Mavrakis, a French production designer he met working on a TV shoot, and their daughter, Clara.They spent the time doing ordinary things, moving into their new house in north London, taking Clara to school. He recently set himself the task of improving his French. He says he became tired of their bilingual daughter running rings around him. Along with his newly tame family life, McGregor's learning how to deal with spendint time on his own for the first time.

"Since I've been here, I haven't been going mad. I haven't at all. And I've enjoyed it a lot. Reading and watching movies on my DVD player and dotting about on my own." "I didn't stop ever for far too long and it was really hard. It was hard on me. It's only in retrospect that I realise how hard it was. It wasn't good for me. You know? It takes it's tool. I didn't see very much of my daughter growing up, and you don't get a lot of that back. You're going to be 30 two weeks from today. "I am, yeah." How's that going to strike when it hits? "I think it's good," he says after a pause. "There's a huge relief in turning 30. I think there's a craziness that I've got out of my system, you know? I feel quite good about being 30." He lights another Malboro.

the face BW pic 4 Down in the hotel lobby, he spots a 19-yr-old member of the crew wearing new Black Hawk Down dog tags. He yanks the boy's chain up and examines it eagerly. "Do I get one of those?" he begs. It turns out he does. McGregor looks almost ridiculously happy at the prospect.