Daniel Day-Lewis: 5 Awesome Performances With 5 Insane Preparations

5. My Left Foot

In the role which truly cemented him in the public eye as an acting tour-de-force, Day-Lewis portrayed Irish artist Christy Brown. Brown (who is a real person) suffered from such severe cerebal palsy he could only really move his left foot with any sort of control. As such, he was confined to a wheelchair. Naturally, when one is to play a character who is confined to a wheelchair, it€™s taken as par for the course that you would spend a lot of time sitting in aforementioned wheelchair. Patrick Stewart did this rather well in the X-Men trilogy. However, the crucial thing about acting is that once the camera stops rolling, and you are off-shot, you could break the illusion and get out of the chair. This thought didn€™t occur to Daniel Day-Lewis. For the time-span of shooting, he didn€™t just play Christy Brown, he was Christy Brown, and if Christy Brown couldn€™t get out of a wheelchair, well, Daniel Day-Lewis couldn€™t get out of it either. And so it was that Day-Lewis sat in the chair all the time, constantly affecting Brown€™s condition. The crew had to carry him everywhere, and the cast took turns spoon-feeding him. It pissed them off, but this was all part of the plan; Day-Lewis wanted to experience what it meant to be Christy, including the embarrassment of certain situations. He simply would not get out of the chair €“ he couldn€™t break character, because that€™s just not how Day-Lewis works, even to the extent of physical injury. But how exactly could he injure himself? After all, he was only sitting €“ everyone sits, and it€™s not something to write home about. But it€™s at this point where I remind you that Christy Brown didn€™t just sit in a wheelchair. Because of his condition, he was constantly hunched over in it. And if Christy€™s going to hunch, then by crikey, Daniel will too. His commitment to posture meant he broke two of his ribs while filming. He simply sat down too hard, for too long, to the extent that he caused himself a painful physical injury. He could've quite easily stopped himself, gotten out of the chair and stretched for a bit €“ I€™m sure nobody would€™ve begrudged him that €“ yet he just wouldn€™t do it. It€™s a good job he didn€™t €“ his portrayal of Brown was nothing short of mesmerising, melding the extreme physical demands of the role with an unflinching depiction of a man who, behind the physical mask, was just as flawed as the rest of us. The performance netted Day-Lewis the Best Actor Oscar in 1989, an award I€™m pretty sure is worth a few broken ribs.
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Contributor

Durham University graduate and qualified sports journalist. Very good at sitting down and watching things. Can multi-task this with playing computer games. Football Manager addict who has taken Shrewsbury Town to the summit of the Premier League. You can follow me at @Ed_OwenUK, if you like ramblings about Newcastle United and A Place in the Sun. If you don't, I don't know what I can do for you.