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Orlando Bloom
- by Daniel Davis
originally published in Moveline magazine December 2001 issue.

With his warm, somnolent Canterbury accent, tranquil self-assuredness and a face that looks like it was carved from Italian marble, it's a wonder Orlando Bloom didn't am for movie stardom straight after his first few acting jobs. Instead, the 24-year-olrd followed up roles in the UK soap "Casualty" and the 1998 biopic Whilde (starring fellow Briton Jude Law) with a three year stint at the Guildhall School of Music and Drama. "I had an agent before I went in," he says, "but I wanted to train."

The experience apparently paid off because shortly after graduation, Bloom landed the pivotal role of the Elf warrior Legolas in the hotly anticipated Lord of the Rings trilogy, the first instalment of which, The Fellowship of the Ring, opens in December. In addition to learning horseback riding, sword fighting and archery, Bloom also had to master Elvish, a dialect created specifically for the movie.

"It's very a difficult language to get your mouth around," says Bloom. "My first scene on the first day was delivering a line of Elvish to a group of Elves which wasn't the easiest sort of thing to open with. We were in the studio in New Zealand, and it was very hot, and I just remember thinking, God, man, the Elves look really strange. But it was fun."

Bloom went directly from Rings' 18-month shoot onto another mammoth production, Ridley Scott's upcoming war epic Black Hawk Down - but not before grabbing some much-needed R&R a long way away from Middle-Earth. "After we finished, I went surfing in Florida with two of he Hobbits, Billy Boyd and Dominic Monaghan. The cast was always trying to find something cool to do during filming, and surfing is definitely the way to go