Berliner Boersenzeitung - Cillian Murphy: Ireland's self-effacing 'analogue' award magnet

EUR -
AED 4.208869
AFN 72.772181
ALL 93.574933
AMD 421.986946
ANG 2.051891
AOA 1051.504407
ARS 1646.572787
AUD 1.633422
AWG 2.06289
AZN 1.947306
BAM 1.931298
BBD 2.309401
BDT 140.755456
BGN 1.937834
BHD 0.43218
BIF 3427.83555
BMD 1.14605
BND 1.468963
BOB 7.952111
BRL 5.834312
BSD 1.146652
BTN 108.37109
BWP 15.364075
BYN 3.174525
BYR 22462.58
BZD 2.306142
CAD 1.619575
CDF 2658.836139
CHF 0.921699
CLF 0.025793
CLP 1015.125101
CNY 7.744376
CNH 7.767445
COP 3936.68175
CRC 522.273882
CUC 1.14605
CUP 30.370325
CVE 109.275957
CZK 23.840189
DJF 203.675853
DKK 7.376139
DOP 67.158465
DZD 152.285947
EGP 57.197289
ERN 17.19075
ETB 181.505693
FJD 2.559932
FKP 0.855486
GBP 0.867845
GEL 3.031301
GGP 0.855486
GHS 12.947729
GIP 0.855486
GMD 83.661288
GNF 10059.452747
GTQ 8.740189
GYD 239.856922
HKD 8.982178
HNL 30.596323
HRK 7.534016
HTG 149.750112
HUF 344.559522
IDR 20340.78303
ILS 3.371777
IMP 0.855486
INR 108.0834
IQD 1501.3255
IRR 1575818.749934
ISK 142.488432
JEP 0.855486
JMD 181.349212
JOD 0.812571
JPY 183.66941
KES 148.4366
KGS 100.221799
KHR 4598.517677
KMF 487.071034
KPW 1031.445401
KRW 1732.67288
KWD 0.353096
KYD 0.955577
KZT 559.180763
LAK 25247.481275
LBP 102628.777562
LKR 384.13975
LRD 208.752813
LSL 18.560117
LTL 3.383988
LVL 0.693234
LYD 7.306091
MAD 10.595252
MDL 20.009143
MGA 4813.409941
MKD 60.839941
MMK 2406.642874
MNT 4102.150917
MOP 9.251427
MRU 45.933736
MUR 54.013612
MVR 17.718213
MWK 1989.543095
MXN 19.886592
MYR 4.658469
MZN 73.235007
NAD 18.568207
NGN 1557.619076
NIO 41.957005
NOK 11.154769
NPR 173.392645
NZD 1.990655
OMR 0.440654
PAB 1.146652
PEN 3.910908
PGK 5.028581
PHP 69.190487
PKR 318.943637
PLN 4.180412
PYG 6997.225808
QAR 4.172198
RON 5.165289
RSD 115.832482
RUB 83.629041
RWF 1705.3224
SAR 4.299858
SBD 9.238795
SCR 16.176637
SDG 688.20225
SEK 10.983898
SGD 1.46927
SHP 0.855642
SLE 28.365071
SLL 24032.099675
SOS 654.976201
SRD 42.784369
STD 23720.921134
STN 24.52547
SVC 10.032801
SYP 126.675311
SZL 18.562435
THB 37.286165
TJS 10.629345
TMT 4.022636
TND 3.337012
TOP 2.759414
TRY 53.226231
TTD 7.789178
TWD 36.167621
TZS 3008.384654
UAH 51.353227
UGX 4242.179236
USD 1.14605
UYU 46.293081
UZS 13758.330087
VES 683.087513
VND 30170.9123
VUV 136.36723
WST 3.139892
XAF 647.739098
XAG 0.017417
XAU 0.000272
XCD 3.097258
XCG 2.066563
XDR 0.806472
XOF 647.518455
XPF 119.331742
YER 273.47621
ZAR 18.837016
ZMK 10315.825787
ZMW 20.266873
ZWL 369.027632
  • RBGPF

    -1.7300

    61.14

    -2.83%

  • CMSD

    0.0000

    22.29

    0%

  • RIO

    -2.5900

    100.08

    -2.59%

  • CMSC

    0.0500

    22.37

    +0.22%

  • BCE

    0.0000

    23.28

    0%

  • BCC

    3.8500

    74.66

    +5.16%

  • GSK

    -1.4800

    50.67

    -2.92%

  • NGG

    -1.2400

    79.44

    -1.56%

  • BTI

    -0.5800

    58.91

    -0.98%

  • RELX

    -0.8300

    31.18

    -2.66%

  • BP

    -1.0400

    39.1

    -2.66%

  • JRI

    0.0500

    12.67

    +0.39%

  • RYCEF

    -0.1600

    18.43

    -0.87%

  • VOD

    -0.2300

    14.3

    -1.61%

  • AZN

    -2.9600

    174.93

    -1.69%

Cillian Murphy: Ireland's self-effacing 'analogue' award magnet
Cillian Murphy: Ireland's self-effacing 'analogue' award magnet / Photo: Patrick T. Fallon - AFP

Cillian Murphy: Ireland's self-effacing 'analogue' award magnet

Self-effacing Irish actor Cillian Murphy is having to get used to red carpet glitz and acceptance speeches.

Text size:

The 47-year-old Cork native won his first Oscar on Sunday -- on his first nomination -- for his leading role in Christopher Nolan's "Oppenheimer", capping a glittering awards season that saw him snare a Golden Globe, a BAFTA and other prizes.

He bested a stacked field that included four American rivals -- Paul Giamatti ("The Holdovers"), Jeffrey Wright ("American Fiction"), Bradley Cooper ("Maestro") and Colman Domingo ("Rustin").

"We made a film about the man who created the atomic bomb. And for better or for worse, we're all living in Oppenheimer's world", Murphy said as he received an ovation from the audience at the Dolby Theatre in Hollywood.

"So I would really like to dedicate this to the peacemakers, everywhere."

Murphy 's portrayal of J. Robert Oppenheimer, the US physicist who masterminded the atomic bomb, has been widely lauded, and is the culmination of years of fruitful collaboration with Nolan, which has included six films together.

"I knew the character was so much in his head and that the performance was so much interior, how you could transmit thought process through the face, the eyes," Murphy told the BBC.

After all the accolades for "Oppenheimer", the Irishman's thin face, trademark sculpted cheekbones and piercing blue eyes are likely to become even more globally recognisable.

The veteran performer's film career has already included standout roles in acclaimed epics like Nolan's "Dunkirk" and Ken Loach's Irish historical drama "The Wind That Shakes the Barley".

But for many fans, he is Birmingham gangland boss Tommy Shelby, from the wildly popular television drama "Peaky Blinders".

Murphy has not shied away from conflicted roles, playing the villainous Scarecrow in Nolan's "Batman" trilogy and a transgender woman in the 1970s-set "Breakfast on Pluto".

"I've always been interested in the melancholic, or the ambiguous, or the more transgressive -- that, to me, is drama, getting into those knotty places. I find it really stimulating," he told Esquire magazine for a 2022 profile.

- 'Analogue' -

Despite his burgeoning fame, Murphy is often described as humble -- a profile helped by an aversion to technology and social media that translates into maintaining an internet and telephone-free home.

"He's the most analogue individual you could possibly encounter," said "Oppenheimer" producer Emma Thomas, who is Nolan's wife.

Murphy is also known for trying to avoid excessive media attention.

"If you behave like a celebrity, then people will treat you like a celebrity, and if you don't, they won't," the actor told the Irish Times.

"There's not much to write about me in the tabloids."

Born to language teacher parents in Cork, Murphy played guitar as a teenager and formed an avant-garde rock band with school pals called "Son of Mr. Green Genes" after a Frank Zappa track.

"Music was what I wanted to do, and for a while, it looked like it would work out," Murphy told the BBC.

However, bowing to parental pressure, the band members turned down a record company deal.

With the door closed on one passion, another door opened in 1996 when, aged 20, he quit a law degree and set out on an acting career.

"I'd probably have been wealthier if I had stayed with law, but pretty miserable doing it," he confided in one interview.

- 'Chameleon' -

Murphy had dipped his toe into acting at both school and university in Cork, where an English teacher and early mentor William Wall described him as a "chameleon of an actor".

In 1996, after pestering a local director, Murphy landed a lead part in the frenetic "Disco Pigs", a play written by fellow Corkonian Enda Walsh.

The stage show was a critical success, going on an 18-month world tour, and Murphy never looked back.

His big cinema break came in 2002 when Scottish director Danny Boyle gave him the lead in post-apocalyptic London horror flick "28 Days Later".

Then in 2005, Nolan cast Murphy in "Batman Begins", the first chapter of the "Dark Knight" trilogy starring Christian Bale as the Caped Crusader.

Regular film appearances followed, but his work on "Peaky Blinders" from 2013 to 2022 -- which is set largely in the period between the two world wars.

Married to Irish artist Yvonne McGuinness for the past 20 years, the couple and their two sons moved back to Ireland in 2014 after more than a decade in London to reconnect with their homeland.

His latest film "Small Things Like These" about the country's mother and baby homes scandal -- which he produced as well as stars in -- opened last month at the Berlin film festival to stellar reviews.

Murphy still finds time to host the occasional late night BBC radio show, serving up an eclectic mix of his favourite tunes alongside commentary in a soothing Cork accent.

(K.Müller--BBZ)