“Hopefully this film will restore the faith in Christmas I maybe stripped in 2012. You know, dying in a car crash in Downton Abbey.”
After his on-screen death cast a shadow over celebrations five years ago, Dan Stevens is back to reclaim his position as a man who honours Christmas and keeps it in his heart. The 35-year-old plays Charles Dickens in The Man Who Invented Christmas, an irreverent take on the writer’s struggle to conjure up his festive masterpiece, A Christmas Carol.
Fresh from the success of Beauty And The Beast, Stevens brings real verve and vivacity to the role. During a whistle-stop, 41-hour trip to London, he made time to talk to The Big Issue about the film.
“It wasn’t on my bucket list to play Dickens, but there was something about the conceit of the film, watching his creative process, which by all accounts is pretty accurate,” he says. “His daughter really did find him in his study making weird faces, screaming in the mirror and yelling at himself until he could come up with names for his characters.
Dickens put himself under a tremendous pressure to deliver a book that was just mental in concept
“You see this guy putting himself under a tremendous amount of pressure to deliver a book that was such an unusual concept and an absolutely unheard-of premise for any work of art. It’s a sort of time-travelling, moralistic adventure, a journey of self-discovery set at Christmas with supernatural elements. I mean, it just was mental.