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Meet Mr cool
He's one half of the "coolest couple in Britain" according to
Elle magazine. He's a member of the ultra hip Brit pack mafia,
he's best friends with Ewan McGregor and Jude Law and he's one
of the most sought after young actors around.
But ask Jonny Lee Miller what he makes of all the hype surrounding
him and you'll get an embarrassed grin rather than a satisfied
smile.
"The cool tag is amusing, it really is. It's so ridiculous,"
he says, squirming in his seat, "because it's something that you
see all the time when you read magazines, but it's odd when someone
writes that about you. That's when you realise what a load of
rubbish it is, really."
The 26-year-old actor was already considered hip when he appeared
as Sick Boy in the award-winning film Trainspotting, but his 'cool'
credentials shot up when he started dating Natalie Appleton from
All Saints. The pair have gained as much attention for their relationship
as for their careers, but the Scottish-born star who grew up in
Kingston-upon-Thames, Surrey, and started out as a waiter in the
Hard Rock cafe in London's Piccadilly, takes it all in his stride.
"I don't find it annoying," he shrugs, "as long as there's nothing
malicious or untrue said about me. It's just something that will
be gone tomorrow. It's just one of those things."
His latest film Mansfield Park, which opens this week, is a Hollywood-ised
adaptation of the Jane Austen novel, and has already raised eyebrows
among critics for its contemporary feel and scenes featuring nudity.
Lee Miller, who plays Edmund Bertram, a wealthy young man who
falls in love with his destitute relative Fanny Price, says he
was eager to do the role despite not being a big Austen fan.
"I didn't know anything about Jane Austen and the films that
were being made about her work were not normally the kind of films
I would go and see," he admits. "But it was nice to read a script
that promptly changed my way of thinking about them. I was also
fascinated by my character's many contradictions. Edmund sees
himself as a sort of pillar of goodness, a man with a grave responsibility
for the world. But he takes doing the right thing too seriously
and forgets his heart."
In fact, it's not the first time Lee Miller has buttoned up in
breeches and waistcoat for a Jane Austen adaptation. He was just
eight years old when he stepped out in front of the camera for
the BBC TV version of Mansfield Park, when he played one of the
Price children.
"I had a bigger trailer when I was eight," he quips.
He also had big ambitions to grow up and become James Bond, but
unlike thousands of schoolboys who harboured similar dreams, Lee
Miller had more experience of 007 than most of the world. His
grandfather, Bernard Lee, played M in the first 12 Bond films
and was an enormous influence on the schoolboy actor.
"I watched some of his films and knew that's what I wanted to
do too," he smiles. "I was only disappointed that he died before
he could see me in theatre because that was his major love. This
is why I'm so interested in it myself."
Lee Miller's father Alan Miller was also an actor, and worked
with the BBC for 20 years. As well as his acclaimed theatre work
in Beautiful Thing and Entertaining Mr Sloane, Lee Miller now
has a raft of highly praised films behind him, including Trainspotting,
Afterglow and Regeneration.
He's also had a stint in Hollywood where he met and married the
American actress Angelina Jolie. The pair broke up less than two
years later and Lee Miller says he has no desire to make it big
in the States.
"I've only done two films in North America and one of them was
in Canada, but I'm quite happy here," he says.
His next two movies are British-based. Complicity, a big screen
adaptation of the Iain Banks novel sees him playing a journalist.
And in Love, Honour and Obey, which also stars Sadie Frost and
Denise Van Outen and opens on April 7, he plays a man trying to
infiltrate a family of gangsters.
The role also requires him to do a spot of singing, which has
impressed his pop star girlfriend greatly.
"Actually she's become a bit of a bore at parties because she
keeps going around telling people that I can sing," he smiles.
Meanwhile, he had one or two pieces of advice for her after she
made her acting debut in the film Honest, which is to be released
in May.
"I just told her who to shout at and who to be nice to", he says
with a grin.
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