Viewing entries tagged
Antonio Eugenio

BEN RADCLIFFE *The Refusal to Stay in One Role

BEN RADCLIFFE *The Refusal to Stay in One Role

BEN RADCLIFFE

—
Rebellion, Reflection, and the Roles in Between

 

interview + written ALBAN E. SMAJLI

 

Ben Radcliffe drifts through interviews with the ease of someone leafing through a second-hand bookstore, picking up fragments and letting them fall. He talks about coffee as a cosmic mistake, acting as weather gone wrong, rebellion as simply switching the screen off.

 
 
BEN RADCLIFFE LE MILE Magazine Digital Cover photo by Antonio Eugenio cover wearing Valentino FW25

Ben Radcliffe wears VALENTINO

 
 

His filmography holds soldiers, pickpockets, scandal shadows, lovers of revolutions — a drawer of misplaced identities. He remembers costumes that ignored the climate, cooling vests that worked like secret armor, rehearsed lines stripped of theatrics. What follows is Ben in his own rhythm — fragments, reflections, and the kind of unfinished lines that linger.

 
BEN RADCLIFFE LE MILE Magazine Digital Cover photo by Antonio Eugenio cover wearing Ben Radcliffe wears a shirt and coat by SANDRO, a suit by THE FRANKIE SHOP, sunglasses by PALOCERAS, a ring by TOM WOOD, and a necklace from his own collection

Ben Radcliffe wears a shirt and coat by SANDRO, a suit by THE FRANKIE SHOP, and a ring by TOM WOOD

 
BEN RADCLIFFE LE MILE Magazine Digital Cover photo by Antonio Eugenio cover wearing Ben Radcliffe wears a shirt and coat by SANDRO, a suit by THE FRANKIE SHOP, sunglasses by PALOCERAS, a ring by TOM WOOD, and a necklace from his own collection

Ben Radcliffe wears a shirt and coat by SANDRO, a suit by THE FRANKIE SHOP, sunglasses by PALOCERAS, and a ring by TOM WOOD

 
 


Alban E. Smajli
When was the last time you went missing on purpose, switched everything off, and didn’t tell anyone where you were going? And what waited for you on the other side?

Ben Radcliffe
I do this a lot. I think sport and exercise are a great reason to switch off and escape..

There’s something almost illegal about being offline today, especially in your world. What’s your version of rebellion?

I don’t see it that way. I think it’s very easy to switch off, especially social media. If I catch myself in a long scroll session, I will usually make up for it by doing something productive.
And my favourite rebellion? Les Misérables. Or Hamilton. Big fan of revolutions you can sing along to

You’re sitting at a café and there´s no script, no screen, or role to play. Just you and a black coffee. Where does your mind wander?

Wondering, “Why did I order a black coffee?”


What part of fashion feels like acting and what part of acting feels like dressing up?

If I wear something a bit out there, then it feels a bit like acting. Which is good because it’s fun to try something new. But if you feel inauthentic, then it’s probably not the vibe.

Acting on set mostly means wearing clothes wildly inappropriate for the weather. Five layers of sheepskin in the middle of summer, or just a thin shirt and trousers when it’s -2°C and raining (like one particular scene in Fackham Hall). On Masters of the Air we actually wore cooling vests inside the planes. The costumes were very accurate, designed for -40°C at 30,000 feet, but of course we were inside a sound stage. Without the vest pumping cold water around your body, you’d basically cook. 

 
BEN RADCLIFFE LE MILE Magazine Digital Cover photo by Antonio Eugenio cover wearing Ben Radcliffe wears a full look by TOD’S, shoes and a bag by TOD’S, sunglasses by PALOCERAS, and a ring by TOM WOOD

Ben Radcliffe wears a full look by TOD’S, shoes and a bag by TOD’S, and a ring by TOM WOOD

behind the scene

BEN RADCLIFFE LE MILE Magazine Digital Cover photo by Antonio Eugenio cover wearing Ben wears a full look by TOD’S, shoes and a bag by TOD’S, sunglasses by PALOCERAS, and a ring by TOM WOOD

Ben wears a full look by TOD’S, and sunglasses by PALOCERAS

 
 

You’ve played a pickpocket, a soldier, a scandal shadow, who are you when the cameras stop rolling and there’s just your reflection in a train window?

All of the above.

You lead in Fackham Hall. Let’s say they also let you rewrite the ending, everyone waiting for you to decide what happens next. How does it all fall apart or come together?

It all comes together very nicely. I think you should watch and find out. If I was in the writers’ room, I would sit in the corner and let the geniuses continue their good work. 

 Which three films do you always come back to, without knowing exactly why?

I’m really drawn to coming-of-age movies. Billy Elliot and The Way Way Back are some favourites that I can watch over and over.

When social media gets overwhelming and the silence starts to feel sharp, do you ever retreat into something paper — a book, a magazine, anything that just lets you disappear for a while?

I’ve always been a very outdoorsy type, so I never used to be a big reader. Although I’ve definitely been getting into it more in my 20s. I listen to a lot of audiobooks and podcasts, that way I can enjoy them on the move.

What’s your weirdest ritual on set?

I don’t really have any strange rituals, but I’ve witnessed many. I’ve listened to some outrageous warm-ups from nearby trailers and many actors doing interesting things to get into character. I’m pretty basic. I make sure I know all my lines and then I say them.

Are there parts of your career so far that feel like dreams you haven’t quite woken up from?

Working alongside John Travolta. He is a personal hero of mine and someone I grew up admiring. Performing alongside him felt very surreal.

 What’s something you’ve never said in an interview but kind of hope someone would ask you one day?

“Ben, would you like me to introduce you to Sabrina Carpenter? Here is her number…

 
BEN RADCLIFFE LE MILE Magazine Digital Cover photo by Antonio Eugenio cover wearing Ben wears a vest by GEORDIE CAMPBELL, trousers by DANIEL W. FLETCHER, a jacket by DSQUARED2, shoes by ADIDAS, and a necklace from his own collection

Ben wears a vest by GEORDIE CAMPBELL, trousers by DANIEL W. FLETCHER, a jacket by DSQUARED2, and shoes by ADIDAS

 
BEN RADCLIFFE LE MILE Magazine Digital Cover photo by Antonio Eugenio cover wearing Ben Radcliffe wears a full look by DOLCE & GABBANA and shoes by G.H. BASS

Ben Radcliffe wears a full look by DOLCE & GABBANA and shoes by G.H. BASS

 
 

art direction + seen   ANTONIO EUGENIO
photo assistant   FENN REEVES
styled   KATIE DULIEU
assisted   MARTHA RALPH-HARDING & CECILIA COLLINS
grooming   CHARLIE CULLEN at Forward Artists using 111SKIN
film   SOFIA IVANOVA
talent   BEN RADCLIFFE
thanks   Caroline Fergusson and Grace Yeoman at Pinnacle PR

copyright LE MILE Magazine / Antonio Eugenio 2025

GUY REMMERS *The Duke Goes Off-Script

GUY REMMERS *The Duke Goes Off-Script

GUY REMMERS
*The Duke Goes Off-Script


written + interview Alban E. Smajli

 

There’s something about Guy Remmers. Maybe it’s the voice — precise but unbothered. Maybe it’s the posture — somewhere between centuries-old nobility and Gen Z’s nonchalance. Or maybe it’s the fact that he’s straddling about five different lives at once and making it all look impossibly casual.

 

You’ve seen him as Theo, the Duke of Tintagel, in The Buccaneers — Apple TV’s velvet-clad, chaos-laced, post-bridgerton fever dream of a period drama. He plays it with just the right amount of restraint and emotional slippage, like someone holding a glass of brandy they’re about to smash. Now, with Season 2 freshly dropped last week, and the one and only Leighton Meester joining the cast, Theo’s world is about to get flipped on its finely groomed head. No spoilers, but let’s just say Remmers is riding the heartbreak horse hard this time around.

 
 
 
LE MILE Magazine Guy Remmers by Antonio Eugenio production lemilestudios SS 2025 Cover

total look ANN DEMEULEMEESTER

 
 


But The Buccaneers is just one thread in the tapestry. Before screen, there was stage — and before that, Bristol. Guy trained at the Bristol Old Vic and made his debut at The National Theatre in The Grandfathers, a moment he still talks about like a first kiss. “Being a Bristol boy at that age in London… that was the moment I knew,” he says, and you believe him. His presence off-camera feels less rehearsed. You might’ve seen him walk for Burberry, pose for Jimmy Choo, or drift across a moody editorial like he woke up in a 1970s issue of The Face. But fashion, he insists, is its own thing — something he enjoys, but doesn’t conflate with his work as an actor. Still, there’s a symmetry: both spaces let him play with image, identity, and what he calls “the evolving shape of masculinity.” You get the sense he’s aware of how he’s looked at, but not defined by it.

Ask him what he wants next, and he lights up. A detective role (“Life on Mars” energy), a comedy-drama à la The Thick of It, something American-accented. What you’re reading is a man who wants to stretch — not because he’s bored, but because he knows how good the view is from the edge. In an industry obsessed with immediate heat and viral cool, Guy Remmers is moving differently. He’s not here to be loud. He’s here to last.

 
 
Guy Remmers wears full look ANN DEMEULEMEESTER LE MILE Magazine Guy Remmers by Antonio Eugenio production lemilestudios SS 2025
 
Guy Remmers wears full look ANN DEMEULEMEESTER LE MILE Magazine Guy Remmers by Antonio Eugenio production lemilestudios SS 2025

total look ANN DEMEULEMEESTER

 


Alban E. Smajli
So you’re the Duke of Tintagel—old money, stiff collars, and then boom: American chaos. What made you say yes to Theo, and how did you find your way into all that aristocratic angst?

Guy Remmers
Thank you! Theo's constant battle with the benefits and disadvantages of his title has always fascinated me. I did a lot of work on what his upbringing would have been like and how he physically carries himself and speaks. A lot of suppressing his emotions but the really exciting part was then allowing him to be swept off his feet by this new unique ball of energy from overseas. 


Season 2’s loading, Leighton Meester’s crashing the party, and Theo’s still stuck between duty and desire. Where’s he heading this time—and what happens when fresh blood hits old money?

New faces and characters are super exciting as it means you get to meet and work with incredible new actors. I loved seeing how they all seamlessly intertwined into the story. Theo's journey in this season is an absolute rollercoaster and his world flips upside down when he has to decide if love is more important than the institution he has been born into.  



You started on stage, Bristol Old Vic, National Theatre, all that velvet and sweat. Now you’re in streaming land. What do theatre and screen give you that the other can’t?

They are both magical in slightly different ways. I haven't done theatre in a few years now and the thing I miss most is the feeling of being part of an ensemble where you all rehearse together and feel like one organism. The Buccaneers is an ensemble cast but it is rare for us to all be on set at the same time. But I have now done two seasons of seeing the world through Theo's eyes and growing with him and that is equally as special.  



You’ve done Burberry, Jimmy Choo, the whole fashion orbit. What itch does that scratch that acting doesn’t or is it all just dress-up in different lighting?

I feel very lucky to have done those things, especially as I have a love for fashion. To me they are completely separate, neither offers me something that I would need from the other.  




You move between film sets and fashion shoots, all soft tailoring and sharp stares. Do you see yourself as part of a generation that's reshaping what masculinity looks like, or does all that talk just feel like another box to be put in?

I definitely feel like 'masculinity' is evolving into more open and expressive ways and I think one strong representation of that is in fashion. I hope it keeps moving in that direction. 


You’ve done corsets, campaigns, a bit of everything in between. Is there a role or genre still lurking on your wishlist, just waiting to be cracked open?

I've always wanted to play a detective, that would be super cool. I loved watching police dramas like 'Life on Mars' and 'Ashes to Ashes' when I was younger, I think that's where my love for them started. My favourite TV series is 'The Thick of It' so I'd love to do a comedy drama in that tone too.  Also a big goal is to do a role in an American accent.  




Was there a moment where it all just clicked and you thought, yep, this is it, this is the thing I’m meant to do?

When I was 18 I did a play called The Grandfathers at The National Theatre - it was an extremely special experience. Being a Bristol boy at that age in London doing a play at that theatre was the best feeling in the world and a moment that I knew I was doing what I wanted to do for the rest of my life. 

 
LE MILE Magazine Guy Remmers by Antonio Eugenio production lemilestudios SS 2025 Guy Remmers wears total look  PAUL SMITH  shoes  JIMMY CHOO  for LE MILE Magazine Coverstory SS25
 
Guy Remmers wears total look  PAUL SMITH  shoes  JIMMY CHOO  for LE MILE Magazine Coverstory SS25

total look PAUL SMITH
shoes JIMMY CHOO

 
 


“I definitely feel like 'masculinity' is evolving into more open and expressive ways, and I think one strong representation of that is in fashion.”

Guy Remmers speaks with Alban E. Smajli
for LE MILE Digital SS25


 
 
 
Guy Remmers wears blazer + beret  EMPORIO ARMANI  trousers  ANN DEMEULEMEESTER  vest  SUNSPEL  LE MILE Magazine Guy Remmers by Antonio Eugenio production lemilestudios SS 2025
 
Guy Remmers wears blazer + beret  EMPORIO ARMANI  trousers  ANN DEMEULEMEESTER  vest  SUNSPEL  LE MILE Magazine Guy Remmers by Antonio Eugenio production lemilestudios SS 2025

blazer + beret EMPORIO ARMANI
trousers ANN DEMEULEMEESTER
vest SUNSPEL

 
Guy Remmers wears coat + trousers  ISSEY MIYAKEshirt  DAVID KOMAtrainers  ADIDAS X WALES BONNER LE MILE Magazine Guy Remmers by Antonio Eugenio production lemilestudios SS 2025

coat + trousers ISSEY MIYAKE
shirt DAVID KOMA
trainers ADIDAS X WALES BONNER

 
Guy Remmers wears jacket + trousers  Y-3shirt  BRUNELLO CUCINELLIboots  DAVID KOMAgloves  HANDSOME STOCKHOLMtie  TURNBULL & ASSER LE MILE Magazine Guy Remmers by Antonio Eugenio production lemilestudios SS 2025

jacket + trousers Y-3
shirt BRUNELLO CUCINELLI
boots DAVID KOMA
gloves HANDSOME STOCKHOLM
tie TURNBULL & ASSER

 
 


“Theo's journey this season is an absolute rollercoaster. His world flips upside down when he has to decide if love is more important than the institution he was born into.”

Guy Remmers speaks with Alban E. Smajli
for LE MILE Digital SS25

 
 
LE MILE Magazine Guy Remmers by Antonio Eugenio production lemilestudios SS 2025 wearing VERSACE SS25

total look VERSACE

portrait actor LE MILE Magazine Guy Remmers by Antonio Eugenio production lemilestudios SS 2025
 
Guy wears total look  DANIEL W FLETCHERtrainers  ADIDAS x WALES BONNER  LE MILE Magazine Guy Remmers by Antonio Eugenio production lemilestudios SS 2025

total look DANIEL W FLETCHER
trainers ADIDAS x WALES BONNER

 
 

photographer ANTONIO EUGENIO
stylist JUSTIN HAMILTON
grooming TRAVIS NUNES
photo assistant GEORGE TAYLOR
styling assistants KATIE SOMAVIA, LORNA LANE
videography VALENTINA VILLA
talent GUY REMMERS

Special thanks to Caroline Fergusson + Grace Yeoman, PR Pinnacle

DYLAN LLEWELLYN *Brewing Moments

DYLAN LLEWELLYN *Brewing Moments

DYLAN LLEWELLYN
*Brewing Moments


written + interview Sarah Arendts

 

Dylan Llewellyn moves through stories like an architect of feeling. Captured mid-conversation, coffee in hand, the setting mirrors the essence of his work—unfiltered, natural, alive in the moment.

 

Every role expands the space it occupies, stretching humor into unexpected depths and carving out moments that stay long after the scene ends. His presence on screen is charged—words, expressions, silences all calibrated for maximum impact.

 
 
 
LE MILE Magazine Dylan Llewellyn Actor Interview in a cafe Jacket and shirt by NANUSHKA

jacket + shirt NANUSHKA

 
 

Comedy fuels his process. A living language of timing, movement, and instinct. The humor lands, not as an escape, but as an excavation of something real. Derry Girls, Big Boys, Beyond Paradise—each project a new rhythm, built with precision, delivered with an effortless pulse. Llewellyn works with momentum. The industry shifts, names rise and fall, but the resonance of his performances embeds itself deeper. Not tied to nostalgia, not chasing permanence. Just sharp storytelling, lived-in characters, and the kind of presence that doesn’t ask for space—it takes it.

 
 
LE MILE Magazine Dylan Llewellyn Actor Interview All Day Cafe knitwear SANDRO blazer THE FRANKIE SHOP jeans O.FILES loafers DR MARTENS socks FALKE rings MAYA MAGAL

knitwear SANDRO
blazer THE FRANKIE SHOP
jeans O.FILES
loafers DR MARTENS
socks FALKE
rings MAYA MAGAL

 
LE MILE Magazine Dylan Llewellyn Actor Interview cover knitwear SANDRO blazer THE FRANKIE SHOP jeans O.FILES loafers DR MARTENS socks FALKE rings MAYA MAGAL
 

Sarah Arendts
What does comedy allow you to express that drama doesn’t?

Dylan Llewellyn
I think comedy lets you have more freedom with your performance. You can go from being extremely serious and deadpan, but still leaning into the humour, to being super silly and over the top. There’s a whole variety of comedic styles to explore and I think that’s the main difference.

You’ve inhabited roles that capture the awkwardness, rawness, and humor of coming of age. Can you think of a moment in your life that felt like it could be part of one of your shows?

I think we’ve all experienced that classic moment of getting ID'd when you're in your teens. I remember going to see a 15-rated movie in the cinema when I was around 17 years old. They wouldn’t let me in because I didn’t have my passport or ID on me, so I had to call my parents to come down with it. My older brother came in and asked the staff where I was… They said “Oh, he’s just waiting in the bar.” My brother goes, “Oh what, so you let him hang in the bar but not let him watch the 15-rated movie?” That was quite a funny classic story of growing up and being ID’d.



Fame doesn’t last forever. What’s the one thing you hope to leave behind in the industry?

What I hope to leave behind in the industry and my acting career is just a sense of joy in the roles I’ve played – from Derry Girls to Big Boys. Those comedic roles have been such a joy and so much fun to perform. I’ve also loved working with so many talented actors along the way. I hope it inspiresyounger generations to get into comedic acting and to carry on that torch. For me, The Inbetweeners inspired me growing up, especially during school days. I grew up watching them and thought I’d love to do something like that. Then Derry Girls came along, followed by Big Boys, so yeah, I hope I can do the same for another young actor or actress.


Jack’s journey in Big Boys is deeply personal yet universal. What’s the most surprising reaction you’ve received from fans?

I think what surprised me most about the response to Big Boys is just how many people relate to it. But at the same time, it’s not that surprising because all those subjects – grief, mental health struggles, friendship, family, and sexuality – are so relatable. A lot of people can connect with those topics. What really stands out to me is how much it’s hit home for so many, with people speaking out about how much those themes mean to them, especially the dynamic of friendships – specifically the dynamic of the gay and straight friendship between Jack and Danny.




You played Wally Nightingale in Pistol, a musician lost in punk history. Do you think he would be remembered differently if he were around today?

When it comes to Wally Nightingale, the character I played in Pistol, it’s a really sad story. He lived the rock and roll lifestyle but without the fame or the money that came with it. I think, and I hope, he’ll be remembered fondly as one of the roots for the Sex Pistols – someone who helped lay the foundation for what they became. I really want him to be credited and recognized as such.

 


Your characters are often outsiders finding their place. Do you see yourself in them?

Yeah, I think I bring a little of myself into all my characters. I lean into their characteristics more and just make them themselves – their own personalities, their own people. I’ve played a lot of vulnerable, awkward, coming-of-age characters who are finding themselves. But I’ve also played characters who are more confident, like Kelby Hartford [from Beyond Paradise]. I think Kelby is very confident in himself, and even Wally Nightingale from Pistol was pretty confident in his abilities.

Some roles stay with actors forever. Have any of your characters changed the way you see the world?

I think the character of James in Derry Girls has made me learn about Irish history and developed my appreciation for Irish people and how amazing they are. The character of Jack in Big Boys shows the incredible bravery of people discovering themselves, both with their sexuality and with grief, as well as their mental health. I think Wally Nightingale in Pistol made me see the world with more appreciation for music, for being kind of weird, and not caring about being normal. I think that was the whole message of Pistol, the show, and the Sex Pistols in general – it was all about letting your freak flag fly and being okay with not being normal. The whole punk revolution shows that, so yeah, I think I’ve learned a lot from these characters, their stories, and the show’s stories.


Both storytelling and life are temporary. Do you try to make things last, or do you embrace their short-lived nature?

I think I do try to make things last whenever I can but I also embrace the short-lived nature of things as well. I think you can enjoy both sides of it. That’s kind of me to a T – I’m definitely someone who’s glass half full but also half empty at the same time. I think you can see both sides of it and I feel likeit’s a healthy way to look at things – considering every perspective and mentality. Yeah, it’s a tough one, I think.



What’s a role you’d never take—and why?

Actually, there are lot of roles I am open to and really want to take a crack at. I mean, I'd love to play villain or a darker role, or just a role that’s completely different from what I’m usually cast in. I'm always up for the challenge and I’d love to explore those kinds of roles more and really get my acting teeth into them

 
 
 

“Comedy lands, not as an escape, but as an excavation of something real.”

Dylan Llewellyn speaks with Sarah Arendts
for LE MILE Nr. 38 - Spring/Summer 2025 Edition

 
 
 
LE MILE Magazine Dylan Llewellyn Actor with coffee mug in a cafe wearing Coat NANUSHKA Shirt DOLCE & GABBANA Jeans O.FILES Ring MAYA MAGAL

coat NANUSHKA
shirt DOLCE & GABBANA
jeans O.FILES
ring MAYA MAGAL

 
 

credits
talent DYLAN LLEWELLYN
photographer ANTONIO EUGENIO
stylist MILLIE CULLUM
grooming CHARLIE CULLEN using @babylissprouk & @shakeupcosmetics
photographer assistant DANIEL EYNON
fashion assistant AMY HARFOOT
location Special thanks to Mae + Harvey, East London