Movies

James Faulkner plays St. Paul in new movie

Mark Pattison | Catholic News Service

Actors Jim Caviezel (left) as Luke and James Faulkner as Paul star in the film “Paul, Apostle of Christ.” SONY PICTURES | CNS

CROP_paul-faulkner.jpg

 

WASHINGTON — James Faulkner, the British actor in the title role of St. Paul in the upcoming movie “Paul, Apostle of Christ,” isn’t taking a lot of credit for his portrayal.

 

“I didn’t play Paul, it played me,” Faulkner said during a recent telephone interview from London. “I was imbued with the spirit of Paul and I found it transforming.”

 

Faulkner, a lifelong Anglican, attributed this, at least in part, to writer-director Andrew Hyatt: “I felt I had been transformed by Andrew’s script and his direction. And an entire page of notes on how to play Paul — nothing precise but overall notes on how I should approach it. I’ve never had a director do something so tellingly about a character.”

 

It’s not as if Faulkner had a lot of time to prepare for the part. “My manager called me and told me, ‘This is a fabulous script. I’ve had you in mind for months. Read it and come straight back to me.’ I read it and got back to him.”

 

Faulkner said he recalled saying to his manager, “It’s wonderful.” His manager replied, “You’re on a plane to Malta in three days’ time. Good luck.”

 

His preparation had to be quick. “I had a really good grounding in the religion as a schoolboy. I was relatively familiar with the New Testament. One thing I was able to do was read the letters before I started ‘Paul,’ not the stories, but from his hand. That was very useful.”

 

When he arrived in Malta, “I had three days’ rehearsal with Jim (Caviezel, who plays St. Luke) and Olivier Martinez (who plays Roman prison warden Mauritius). I insisted on a table read. I wanted us to sit down and read it together. I’m the last person to be cast. I don’t know anybody on the film. I want to meet absolutely everybody. There’s a company of players on the film and we should get to know each other as much as possible given the schedule.”

 

The film was shot in 23 days. Faulkner’s parts were shot in just nine days, he said. “Once I started shooting, I was in it. Long days, and we fortunately, in a sense, had split days — midday to midnight or 2 a.m. — so I had a couple of hours every morning to review the text to the rest of the day, because I was certainly too tired to read it” at night. Learning lines, he added, is “the great trial of the actor.”

 

Faulkner also read each of Paul’s letters for a companion audiobook to be released by the American Bible Society.

 

Asked if that was part of the original package, Faulkner replied, “No, they spring that on you in a weak moment. … ‘Oh, just read this for me, will you? And this and this and this and this and this — and this and this and this and this.’ And off I went.” A veteran of audiobooks, he added, “Reading is always a joy to me, because you don’t have to learn it.”

 

Television viewers may be familiar with the actor’s sonorous voice from cable. “For seven years I was the voice of the History Channel,” Faulkner said. He also did voiceovers for the National Geographic Channel and for ITV News in his native England.

 

He credits his deep voice to singing in church and school choirs from age 7. “My voice didn’t break until I was near 16,” Faulkner said. His choirmaster at the time recommended he rest it for two or three years, but the strong-willed Faulkner ignored the advice and became what he calls a “foghorn baritone.”

 

Faulkner’s recent screen credits include “Game of Thrones,” “Da Vinci’s Demons” and one season of “Downton Abbey.”

 

 

 

Related Articles