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Stormzy felt 'challenged' by Big Man role

Stormzy felt 'challenged' by Big Man role

Perth Now20-06-2025
Stormzy found it difficult to "totally separate" himself from his Big Man character.
The 31-year-old star plays a rapper in his first lead role, and Stormzy admits that he struggled to distance himself from his movie character.
The award-wining star - who plays Tenzman in the new film - told BBC Newsbeat: "It was really tough if I'm honest.
"It felt like I'm playing a rapper but I am a rapper, it's tough to totally separate."
Big Man is the first release from Stormzy's #MerkyFilm production company, and the rapper has revealed his long-term ambition for the enterprise.
He shared: "What we've tried to do at Merky, whether it's music, sports, whatever, we do we just want to stand in our truth, tell our stories, but also not from the same perspective that it's always been told from.
"Even being black British, it's such a nuanced experience – you've got the black experience, you've got the British experience, and then you've got the black British experience.
"We want to tell it from our perspective which is nuanced, it's brilliant, it's different, it's not always the same, it's not a monolith."
Stormzy felt "challenged" while making the movie, but he still enjoyed the creative process.
The Vossi Bop hitmaker said: "It was really tough but it was a challenge I was so honoured to be a part of.
"I like to be challenged, I like to be a bit uncomfortable so I love it."
Stormzy previously explained that his acting debut was "all about the joy, spirit and fearless energy of youth".
The rapper also hopes that the 24-minute short film will serve as a source of inspiration for aspiring stars.
He said: "I hope you love our first project, Big Man, as much as we loved making it.
'For me, it's all about the joy, spirit and fearless energy of youth – that feeling like life is one big adventure and the world's your playground.
"I hope it inspires you to dream bigger, live louder, and hold on to that unapologetic energy that comes with being young."
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Donnelly was lucky to escape with his life and both of his legs, and although he was subsequently able to resume his motor racing career, he never returned to Formula One as a driver. At least, not in real life. Over three decades later, seven-time world champion Lewis Hamilton and the other producers of the movie perused F1 archives to find the crash upon which to base Hayes' narrative arc, a decision that was quickly made once they viewed Donnelly's dramatic incident in Jerez. Hamilton made the call to seek permission, blindsiding Donnelly one Saturday night at home. 'I thought it was going to be one of those cold calls for central heating or double-glazed windows,' he recalled. 'I was quite aggressive ... it's not every day you receive a call from a seven-time world champion!' When asked what had made him so good as a young racing driver, Donnelly joked with CNN Sports: 'Well it wasn't my good looks, that's for sure.' 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Senna was close to Donnelly and clearly affected by his friend's clash in 1990. Credit: Getty/CNN They were close, and Senna offered anything he could do to help with his recovery. Four years later, Senna himself was involved in a devastating crash at the San Marino Grand Prix, and he was not so lucky. 'I do believe that I could easily have become a world champion but then I come back to reality. I'm still talking to you,' he said. 'My friend Senna is dead. He had all the millions in his back pocket, three-time world champion, but who's he going to share it with? 'His death on May 1st, 1994, was the final nail in the coffin for me to say, 'Hey Martin, look around you, you're in the paddock, you're still involved with the sport that you love. You've got no right to complain'.'

Sad truth behind Martin Donnelly's haunting real-life crash depicted in F1 Movie: ‘Is this what I'm known for?'
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