Current:Home > ScamsGary Oldman talks 'Slow Horses' Season 4 and how he chooses roles 'by just saying no' -Visionary Growth Labs
Gary Oldman talks 'Slow Horses' Season 4 and how he chooses roles 'by just saying no'
Poinbank View
Date:2025-04-11 07:26:55
The list of characters played by Gary Oldman over the past four decades seems like a clerical error.
Surely the same actor could not play Dracula, Winston Churchill, Sid Vicious and Lee Harvey Oswald. And let’s add to that motley crew Jackson Lamb, the impossibly disheveled supersleuth in Apple TV+'s “Slow Horses,” which just returned for its fourth season (new episodes streaming Wednesdays).
Far from self-important, Oldman can’t resist a delicious joke at the expense of his latest character, who seems like he could be James Bond’s cagey boss M ... if he was big on flatulence, alcohol and never showering.
“Some wit somewhere said, ‘Oldman played (spy) George Smiley (in the 2011 movie “Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy”), and now he’s playing George Smelly,” Oldman tells USA TODAY. “I wish I’d thought of that one.”
But ol’ George Smelly hasn’t lost his touch. In the new season, Lamb, who leads a group of talented rejects from Britain’s spy agency MI5, has to use his instincts, contacts and sometimes a large taxi to battle a new foe that is endangering one of his agents.
Need a break? Play the USA TODAY Daily Crossword Puzzle.
As Season 3 unfolded, the Slow Horses team discovered that a secret group of killer operatives was working for the head of MI5. The new season finds Lamb’s young operative River Cartwright (Jack Lowden) in France, and in the clutches of a mercenary group with ties to both the Horses and his familial past.
“It’s a season that becomes more personal (for Lamb), it’s now very close to home,” Oldman, 66, says from his Palm Springs, California, home, after recently wrapping production of Season 5 in England.
“We’ve now got a villain who is directly connected to influencing the Slow Horses,” he says. “But overall, I’d say we’ve got the same chefs on the show, we’re just switching up the menu.”
After four seasons, the ‘Slow Horses’ gang are ‘all a family,’ says Gary Oldman
Oldman says he’s enamored not only of the show, which is based on novels by Mick Herron, but also his cast, which includes Kristin Scott Thomas as Diana Taverner, his MI5 sparring partner, and Jonathan Pryce as his former boss David Cartwright. (The show is a nine-time Emmy nominee this year, competing for best drama.)
“At this point, we’re all a family, the cast, the crew, and we see each other often,” says Oldman.
Asked how he chooses the characters he'll play, Oldman says it is usually the rest of “just saying ‘No’ to almost everything, truly. I’ll think, I can’t play Churchill, that’s ridiculous. And then if it keeps coming back, I know maybe it’s something that is meant to be.”
Oldman’s attachment to "Horses" resulted from a comical list of demands he made to his producing partner, Douglas Urbanski.
“I said to Doug, and I swear this is true, ‘Please find me something where I can use my own accent, I don’t have costume changes and I’m not rolling around in blood and mud,” he says. “Oh, and it should be a longform TV series, and the writing needs to be fantastic.”
Fast forward a few weeks, and the two men were sitting side by side on a plane, and Urbanski just started to laugh while reading a script.
“I said ‘What’s so funny?’ and Doug said, ‘I’m reading a character who’s about to become your best friend,’” recalls Oldman. “It just fell from the sky.”
For Gary Oldman, Jackson Lamb is a joy to play because he 'cuts through all the crap'
Oldman says what he loves most about playing Lamb is his unfiltered directness. “He cuts through all the crap, which is wonderful,” he says.
For now, Oldman is content to inhabit Lamb’s rumpled clothes for “as long as Apple will let us do the show,” and has no big movie parts on the horizon.
That’s not to say he doesn’t have fond memories of some of those. He took on the title role in Francis Ford Coppola’s “Bram Stoker’s Dracula” (1992) both to work with the legendary director and for one singular line reading. “I read, ‘I’ve crossed oceans of time to find you,’ and I thought wow, it’s worth making a movie just to say that line.”
He has similar high praise for Oliver Stone, his notoriously demanding director on “JFK,” and David Fincher, a longtime friend whom he finally teamed up with to play blacklisted screenwriter Herman Mankiewicz in “Mank” (2020).
One of his most enduring memories is playing opposite Anthony Hopkins, a mentor and friend, in Ridley Scott’s “Silence of the Lambs” sequel “Hannibal” (2001), one of the few movies he accepted on the spot to play Hannibal Lecter’s surviving victim, Mason Verger.
“Tony (Hopkins) is an inspiration, and while he may come off as someone who says (here Oldman leaps into a Hopkins impression), ‘Oh, acting is easy, you just learn the lines and try not to bump into furniture,’ he’s not being truthful; it’s all about hard work."
Oldman says he brings that same work ethic to “Horses” to set a standard for younger cast members. “You get there early having done your work, you know your lines, you’re ready, and then within that, you try and have some fun,” he says.
Although there is plenty of death and destruction in “Horses,” it's clear Oldman is having a ball, whether it’s skewering underlings with wicked barbs or insisting that his office remain a garbage dump.
“I’m always being mistaken for a delivery man or a tramp or a homeless person,” he says with a cackle. “But then again, it’s all part of the spycraft, isn’t it, the whole judging a book by its cover thing. People will underestimate you, and Lamb uses that to his advantage.”
All very true. But, honestly, can’t the guy take at least one shower?
Oldman laughs. “Well, in Season 3, I did wash my armpits,” he says. “Good enough for you?”
veryGood! (34)
Related
- Charges tied to China weigh on GM in Q4, but profit and revenue top expectations
- Why Jury Duty's Ronald Gladden Could Be Returning to Your Television Screen
- Biden says he's not big on abortion because of Catholic faith, but Roe got it right
- DoorDash says it will give drivers the option to earn a minimum hourly wage
- Angelina Jolie nearly fainted making Maria Callas movie: 'My body wasn’t strong enough'
- Newsom’s Top Five Candidates for Kamala Harris’s Senate Seat All Have Climate in Their Bios
- Man faces felony charges for unprovoked attack on dog in North Carolina park, police say
- American Climate Video: He Lost Almost Everything in the Camp Fire, Except a Chance Start Over.
- Average rate on 30
- Going, Going … Gone: Greenland’s Melting Ice Sheet Passed a Point of No Return in the Early 2000s
Ranking
- Senate begins final push to expand Social Security benefits for millions of people
- Beanie Feldstein Marries Bonnie-Chance Roberts in Dream New York Wedding
- A Proud California Dairy Farmer Battles for Survival in Wildly Uncertain Times
- Why Elizabeth Holmes Still Fascinates: That Voice, the $1 Billion Dollar Lie & an 11-Year Prison Sentence
- The FBI should have done more to collect intelligence before the Capitol riot, watchdog finds
- 2 more Connecticut officers fired after man became paralyzed in police van
- The 26 Best Deals From the Nordstrom Half Yearly Sale: 60% Off Coach, Good American, SKIMS, and More
- Trump heard in audio clip describing highly confidential, secret documents
Recommendation
House passes bill to add 66 new federal judgeships, but prospects murky after Biden veto threat
Newsom’s Top Five Candidates for Kamala Harris’s Senate Seat All Have Climate in Their Bios
Extend Your Time Between Haircuts, Treat Split Ends and Get Long Locks With a Top-Rated $5 Hair Product
Senate 2020: In the Perdue-Ossoff Senate Runoff, Support for Fossil Fuels Is the Dividing Line
Israel lets Palestinians go back to northern Gaza for first time in over a year as cease
Accepting Responsibility for a Role in Climate Change
Can Car-Sharing Culture Help Fuel an Electric Vehicle Revolution?
Jesse Tyler Ferguson’s Father’s Day Gift Ideas Are Perfect for the Modern Family