Thomas Brodie-Sangster: What The Kid From Love Actually Did Next
It’s hard to forget your childhood when it’s captured on film. Even more so when that film is Richard Curtis classic ‘Love Actually’.
“It’s on every Christmas at least three times,” says Thomas Brodie-Sangster, who you’ll remember as Liam Neeson’s lovesick son in the 2003 Britcom. “I haven’t seen the film in its entirety for a long time. I don’t need to. I went to see it at premieres and screenings. The first time it came on TV I watched it, I got the DVD and watched it. It was exciting for me!”
The now-24-year-old actor is undoubtedly proud of his cinematic debut, even if – despite a slew of successful roles since including a stint in ‘Game Of Thrones’ – it’s still the thing he’s most recognized for.
“Even if they go, ‘oh my God ‘Game Of Thrones’, it’ll be ‘Love Actually’ straight away,” he admits. “’Game Of Thrones’ is huge in the States, but so is ‘Love Actually’.”
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He’s now starring in young adult book adaptation ‘The Maze Runner’ as one of the teens stranded inside a huge labyrinth by a sinister organization. Sangster plays Newt, the sensible one of the group.
But it’s hard not to see the 13-year-old who played the drums and pined for the cute girl at school in the star-studded festive comedy.
“I’ve got a bit of a baby face,” he admits, pointing out that all that’s really changed is that he’s stretched out a bit and his voice has got deeper.
Luckily, in the intervening years, the Londoner – the son of two actors – has managed to avoid the pitfalls of many child stars who get caught up in drink, drugs and bad behaviour.
“I don’t think I’ve ever been afraid that fame or money, or free drugs would mess me up,” he says. “I remember school friends or associates going off and having a warm bottle of vodka by the park and that was never me.”
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Instead, Sangster’s tastes were more refined.
“I remember being a kid and my granddad would come down from Scotland with a bottle of Scotch and he and my father would sit and have one or two Scotches an evening, in a lovely glass and I remember being fascinated with that, thinking that’s cool. I wanted to do that. I would say, ‘no I’m not sitting on a park bench drinking a warm bottle of vodka, I’m having a nice single malt.’
He laughs and worries about sounding pretentious. “That’s how I became ‘Posh Kid’ at school, even though I’m not,” he sighs. “I’m from Elephant and Castle.”
“It’s never appealed to me to go out and get absolutely p****d. I really like drink,” he continues. “I make my cocktails at home and I really enjoy Old Fashioneds and whisky sours and Manhattans…But I like the whole process of it and the way that is sociable. Making them for other people and then sitting round listening to music and then slowly you end up slightly drunk. As opposed to just going and getting wasted.”
With a ‘Maze Runner’ sequel a future possibility, Sangster has got plenty on his plate, including voicing Ferb in the kids’ show ‘Phineas and Ferb’.
Then there’s ‘Game Of Thrones’. His character Jojen Reed – a seer who helps Bran Stark see the future – joined the show in season three and is still alive and kicking in the books.
(*SPOILER ALERT*)
Not so in the show. Jojen was killed good and proper in the television series and Sangster didn’t even know about it until he was on the plane to Belfast to start filming the fourth season.
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“I’d finally got round to reading the last episode because there’s quite a lot to get through – ten episodes, an hour long,” he remembers.
“Towards the very end, it said Jojen gets stabbed repeatedly. And I was like, ‘what?!’ Oh, but I’ll be alright, nobody’s told me I’m dying. It says my sister comes over and slits my throat and I’m like, ‘WHAT?! What are you talking about?’ And then it says someone throws a molotov cocktail and Jojen bursts into flames and I was like, ‘okay, I’m DEAD, dead, dead. Not coming back from that.’ No-one called me, I just read it on my way over to film it.”
While he may not be revisiting Westeros any time soon, he will be sitting down with his eggnog to watch Hugh Grant boogie through the halls of Downing Street the next time ‘Love Actually’ pops up on telly.
“I’ll sit down and catch a couple of scenes and reminisce a bit,” he says. “ As the years go by, you can look at it a bit more as a film. At the beginning, that’s impossible. You can’t help but reminisce about what was happening on that day, what you did, what you had for lunch. I look and I see a little kid.”
You can see that young romantic back in his ‘Love Actually’ heyday when the film is shown on Sky Movies over Christmas.
Photos: PA/Moviestore/Rex/HBO/Everett