Polyglot Actor Daniel Brühl Speaks of His Love for Language | Metaglossia: The Translation World | Scoop.it
When asked which language he prefers acting in, Spanish-German actor Daniel Brühl jokingly paraphrases a quote from Holy Roman Emperor Charles V:  “He spoke German with his horse, Spanish to God and French to his mistress.”

Born in Barcelona, the son of a Brazilian-German filmmaker and a Spanish mother, the Berlin-based actor grew up speaking Spanish, German, Catalan and French (two of his aunts are French).  In two upcoming roles – “The Face of an Angel” (out in the U.S. in June) and “Woman in Gold” (out  in the U.S. in April) – he acts in English, while in “Me and Kaminski,” which comes out later this year, he speaks in German.

“I love doing it because you can express certain things – better or worse – in one or the other language,” says the 36-year-old, who was nominated for a Golden Globe last year for his role as Austrian Formula One champ Niki Lauda in Ron Howard’s “Rush.” “Each language has its strengths and qualities, and that is what I love about Europe – you have so many different languages and cultures right next to each other.”

Growing up in Cologne, Germany, Brühl made his acting debut in 1995 in the German soap opera “Verbotene Liebe” (Forbidden Love) and was in several German-language art house films including “The Edukators” (2004) and “Good bye, Lenin” (2003), for which he won several accolades including Best Actor at the European Film Awards. He made his English-language acting debut in 2004’s “Ladies in Lavender,” alongside Maggie Smith and Judi Dench, while in the 2005 film “Joyeux Noel,” Brühl switched effortlessly between French, German and English. “German is a very technical language, a very precise language, which I love, so you can describe things in a very efficient and clear way,” he says, and then switching into a thick French accent, “then you have French which is very passionate blah-blah-blah.”


From left, Chris Hemsworth, Daniel Bruhl, in “Rush” Universal/Courtesy Everett Collection
Spanish, he says, is also passionate, and he admits that unconsciously he changes his tone and the way he acts when speaking his mother’s language. “My friends say when I speak Spanish, first my voice is lower and then I make many more gestures,” says Brühl, who also starred in Quentin Tarantino‘s “Inglourious Basterds.” “I move my hands all the time, which I don’t do when I am speaking German. We don’t move our hands.” He says that though he understands Portuguese, he could not – yet – feel comfortable taking on a role where he would have to speak it.

“I love Italian as well, and they move their hands big-time,” he says with a laugh.

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