Friday, March 6, 2015

Interview: Everyone Wants Noah Mills!!


The Exclusive Interview of World's Most Wanted Man!
Noah Mills (born April 26, 1983) is a Canadian model and actor.

After beginning his career in 2003 at the age of twenty, Mills progressed into working with a number of fashion companies, most notably Wilhelmina Models, from which he started his model life. In 2004, Mills made his debut as a runway model for the fall Gucci and Yves Saint Laurent collections in Milan and Paris.. In early 2005, he signed a contract with Dolce & Gabbana.



He has been a fixture at the Dolce & Gabbana, Versace and Michael Kors (for which he has opened since spring 2008, alongside Carmen Kass) shows for many seasons now.





In 2009, Mills appeared in the naked Dolce & Gabbana Anthology Fragrance campaign with a number of other, established models including Claudia Schiffer, Naomi Campbell and Tyson Ballou.
In 2010, he appeared in Sex and the City 2 opposite Kim Cattrall's character, Samantha Jones.





Mills became one of the models to star in Lacoste's "new look" campaign in January, a different advertising concept for 2011 under the new tagline, "Unconventional Chic". The ads were shot by Mert and Marcus showing models wearing the iconic white Lacoste polo shirts worn over fancy black eveningwear.



In 2011 and 2012, Mills appeared in the CBS sitcom 2 Broke Girls, playing the role of Robbie, Max's boyfriend. He also made a cameo in Taylor Swift's 2012 video for "We Are Never Ever Getting Back Together" as her love interest.




For 2012, Mills was ranked number three of "The Money Guys" by Models.com In the 2013 ranking, he was ranked number five.
Currently, he is promoting WRACKED, a short film he directed by Victoria Mahoney, which he wrote, co-produced, and stars in. He won the best actor prize for his role in the short film from the 2013 Golden Egg Film Festival.




Mills was born in Toronto, Canada. He was raised in Baltimore, Maryland before he went to boarding school in Canada and Australia. He started modelling in 2003 while he was stud.







For those who have been lucky enough to look straight into Noah Mill’s eyes, you immediately know that he has a future beyond modelling. While his gaze and intensity are admirable on a print advertisement campaign and captivating on the catwalk, there’s that certain glint in his eye that you can only preceive when in his presence or seeing him on film.




  His natural talent and looks have been fundamental in starting a career as an actor, yet Noah’s choice of projects and level of involvement goes a step further than the usual model/actor agenda.




 Much more than a pretty face, Noah debuted on screen playing a love interest of man-eater Samantha Jones in the Sex and the City 2 film, but his career choices and projects since then could not be more different.



Noah’s second short film, which he also co produced, presented by RAD productions and directed by Jouri Smit is a visually impacting project which tackles socially significant subjects, ones which could not be further removed form the image of the embarrassingly handsome Dolce&Gabbana model we all know him to be.



On Saturday 5th October 2015, Candyland will go live on Youtube, and exclusive interview with its protagonist.
Model-Noah-Mills-exclusive-interview-on-being-actor-in-Candyland-short-movie

The Interview of Noah Mills!




You’re not only the star of the film, but you also joined in with the production. What is it about this project that moved you to get so involved? I liked the approach to the story, the style and pace. I hadn’t been involved in many film projects and saw an opportunity to get experience in the production side of things. 








What was the most challenging scene you had to shoot? That’s oddly a tough question, cause without sounding to “actorly”, a scene is a complex spontaneous experience. I would do it disservice by saying one part was the “toughest”.




You self-destruct in front of the audience during the film, which is a very intimate journey – how did you approach it? By acting. That’s the art, imagining a circumstance or pulling from past experience or a mixture of both and living it out in front of your audience. I guess I approach it with trust and courage. Haha sounds so intense!



This is not the first time that you are cast as a troubled man. What is it about these roles that attract you?
People are troubled. To various degrees but usually in conflict to an idealized or bettered self. So it’s really about finding THAT person and trying to fight against the obstacles the writer has put in. With these overtly troubled characters, the obstacles are pretty clear, which actually makes my job easier. 






Going forward, what are your future projects?
Pitching a TV show, producing another short in October and staying busy. My short Wracked, which I also did with RAD Production and which got into several festivals will be coming online soon. 


No comments:

Post a Comment