Co-written by Ferrell, the campy musical is an outrageous love letter to the Eurovision Song Contest, an inescapable UK phenom. Alexander is certainly worlds apart from Stevens’s star-making turn in Downton Abbey and his breadth of chameleonic work, which includes the live-action remake of Beauty and the Beast, as the beast; the thriller The Guest; as a mutant with mind powers in the trippy FX series Legion, and, recently, in the Dave Franco-directed horror film The Rental.
As for Lemtov, this isn’t Stevens’s first time taking on a queer role. One of Stevens’s earliest roles, as Nick Guest in the The Line of Beauty, featured the actor as a gay man living in 1980s Britain during the height of the AIDS epidemic in the 2006 BBC miniseries adaptation of the Alan Hollinghurst novel of the same name.
For our recent interview, Stevens lost the Lemtov wig to reflect on portraying Nick Guest, and also talked about the safe place Eurovision provides contestants from anti-LGBTQ countries and, just for good measure, his favorite Cher songs.
GayCalgary: During what might be the gayest scene in Eurovision, you, along with the cast and former Eurovision contestant and drag queen Conchita Wurst, sing an epic medley of Madonna, Cher and ABBA. Can you name anything gayer that you’ve done in your life?
Dan Stevens: (Laughs.) It’s certainly up there! I don’t know if we can start ranking those, but most of those people coming out of the crowd...
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