Queen rotated around the stadiums of the world after Live Aid 1985. After their jaded years, they enjoyed an Indian summer of a career, having cemented their place as one of history's true great rock'n'roll bands.
The Queen biopic - starring Rami Malek as the band's late frontman Freddie Mercury - is out in cinemas now
Members of the cast of the new Queen biopic Bohemian Rhapsody have shed light on how they managed to recreate the band’s legendary Live Aid show for the film.
The movie is bookended by Queen’s performance at the July 13, 1985 benefit concert, which took place at the old Wembley Stadium in London. The four-piece played a six-song set on that day: ‘Bohemian Rhapsody’, Radio Ga Ga’, ‘Hammer to Fall’, ‘Crazy Little Thing Called Love’, ‘We Will Rock You’ and closer ‘We Are the Champions’.
Gwilym Lee and Joe Mazzello – who play Brian May and John Deacon in the film respectively – have spoken more about the filming process, specifically focusing on their dedication to faithfully recreating the Live Aid gig.
“We would be playing properly along with [a backing track] because you can smell that a mile off if someone is really badly miming,” Lee told Digital Spy. “Or the other alternative is you have a wide shot of us just generically [playing] and then you cut into someone’s big hairy hands that clearly aren’t yours.
“It was the very first thing we shot, that Live Aid sequence,” he added. “Day one on set was us running out onto the stage, fear, adrenaline and it was very real. You either sink or swim in that situation, it’s a real baptism of fire, but it forged us together as a unit.”
Mazzello added: “So much of that was timing [to the backing track] because they really wanted us to be exact. The footage of that is so famous that they wanted to make sure that no matter what you saw, what the actual people in that video were doing, we had to be doing that.”
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Lee remarked that it was “a blessing” to play along to the original recording of Queen’s show as “you couldn’t get too lost in the prospect”.
“You couldn’t get too overwhelmed because when it came to it and you got a bit intimidated, all you had to do was look at the footage and go, ‘Right, what’s Brian doing in that moment?’,” he recalled.
Lucy Boynton – who plays Mercury’s friend and former fiancée Mary Austin – also said that the cast had a movement coach to help on set.
“They had [movement coach] Polly Bennett, who is just absolutely brilliant because every beat from that Live Aid performance is matched in their performance in this film and it is shocking to see,” she recalled. “And at the very end seeing that with all the weight and the emotional attachment that we had developed with the music was a lot. The tears were real.”
Earlier this week, Bohemian Rhapsody star Rami Malek revealed which “weird” item he kept from the film set after filming had wrapped for good.
New Queen biopic Bohemian Rhapsody has been generating plenty of media buzz since its release. It’s well on its way to breaking long-held box office records and shows no signs of slowing down after premiering on November 2nd to a more-than-$50M opening weekend.
While Bohemian Rhapsody continues to virtually print cash at movie theaters around the world, plenty of critics have decried the film for its often chronologically-inaccurate depiction of Freddie Mercury‘s defining moments as well as the troublesome manner in which it depicts Mercury’s exploration of his sexuality. One of the biggest timeline misses in the film is its portrayal of the events surrounding Queen’s legendary performance at Live Aid in 1985. In Bohemian Rhapsody, Freddie Mercury learns of his HIV status just before Live Aid, adding a layer of subtext and emotion to the climactic performance in the film. In real life, Mercury wasn’t aware he was HIV positive until two years later. And that just cracks the surface of the problems of misrepresentation in the film.
However, despite the narrative license taken with the events surrounding Live Aid, their depiction of the concert itself and, in particular, Rami Malek‘s recreation of Mercury’s performance are uncannily accurate. In a clip shared on Twitter, you can see the original footage of Mercury performing “Radio Ga Ga” at Live Aid (the real life) side-by-side with Malek’s portrayal of the performance in Bohemian Rhapsody (just fantasy). It’s movie fun at its best, however you might feel about the film as a whole.
I DIDNT REALIZE THEY DID IT THIS PRECISELY pic.twitter.com/05f6ZW1TMn
— BEST OF FREDDIE MERCURY (@MOMENTOFMERCURY) November 11, 2018
Bohemian Rhapsody Trailer
[Video: 20th Century Fox]
…and since we know you’re thinking about it now, and there’s truly never a bad time to watch it, here’s a high-quality video of Queen’s full Live Aid 1985 performance. Enjoy!
Queen – Live Aid 1985 – Wembley Stadium – London, U.K
[Video: Simon Christensen]
[H/T Billboard]