RULE OF LAWTEY
Rolling Stone UK|October/November 2024
Stepping up to play a comic-book icon in the big-budget sequel Joker: Folie à Deux could prove a life-changing moment for Industry star Harry Lawtey. But he's trying not to think about it...
PAUL KIRKLEY
RULE OF LAWTEY

FIVE YEARS AGO, Harry Lawtey was sitting in a Cardiff cinema, the sole patron in a 10am screening of Todd Phillips' twisted psychological thriller, Joker. "That's kind of my preference: an empty theatre, and always a morning screening," says the actor, who only a year out of drama school had just begun shooting a new BBC/ HBO drama about young investment bankers at the city's Wolf Studios. "And it completely floored me, that film, as a piece of work. The way it was just so unapologetically dark, and challenged people's expectations of what you are able to do with those [comic-book] stories."

Fast-forward four years, and Lawtey - back in the Welsh capital to film the third series of what the world now knows as Industry returned to the same deserted cinema, on another morning off, to watch his friend and co-star Marisa Abela appear in Greta Gerwig's Barbie. By which time, he'd already wrapped filming on a Hollywood blockbuster of his own playing Gotham City's legendary district attorney Harvey Dent in the highly anticipated sequel, Joker: Folie à Deux.

"I didn't go back there as any kind of fullcircle moment," stresses Lawtey, when I meet the 27-year-old at a hotel close to his home in Shepherd's Bush. "But I did definitely have a flashback to that moment a few years earlier in the same theatre. It's a bit of a cliché, I know, but if you'd said to that kid back then, 'This is what's going to happen...' he wouldn't have been able to fathom it."

Landing the part was so simple (he made a self-tape, Phillips liked it, and hired him pretty much on the spot), he feels "almost embarrassed about it". But arriving in LA for the shoot, he knew he had to meet the moment. "The expectation of the profile of the film, and the company I was keeping on set - was irrefutable, really, and hard to ignore," he says. "But then I feel that in anything I do. Which can often be a burden to my enjoyment of the work."

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FLERE HISTORIER FRA ROLLING STONE UKSe alt
BACK TO THE GRIND
Rolling Stone UK

BACK TO THE GRIND

The Clipse broke up when a spiritual path called to one of the brothers from Virginia. Now, one of the greatest duos in rap returns

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October/November 2024
THE SCREAM QUEEN NEXT DOOR
Rolling Stone UK

THE SCREAM QUEEN NEXT DOOR

In just a few short years, Hunter Schafer has gone from small-town North Carolina to global runways, Euphoria stardom, and her first lead role, in the horror flick Cuckoo

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10 mins  |
October/November 2024
Together in Electronic Dreams
Rolling Stone UK

Together in Electronic Dreams

Raphaella Lima of video game publisher Electronic Arts brings music to her childhood love of gaming to spotlight many of the most exciting emerging acts of the past two decades in the hit football game EA SPORTS FC

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8 mins  |
October/November 2024
JAMIE XX WAVE AFTER WAVE
Rolling Stone UK

JAMIE XX WAVE AFTER WAVE

Nine years after his decade-defining debut album In Colour, Jamie xx returns with In Waves, a darker and broodier follow-up that saw him fall back in love with making music

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10 mins  |
October/November 2024
"You can feel trapped when people perceive you as one thing"
Rolling Stone UK

"You can feel trapped when people perceive you as one thing"

On their career-best fourth album, Fontaines D.C. have shed their skin of old to deliver something more fantastical. Grian Chatten tells us the story behind their evolution

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5 mins  |
October/November 2024
IN COMPLETE CONFIDENCE
Rolling Stone UK

IN COMPLETE CONFIDENCE

Confidence Man's Janet Planet and Sugar Bones go bigger and wilder than ever before on 3AM (LA LA LA), an album made about partying, while partying, and perfect for partying to

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8 mins  |
October/November 2024
Collective consciousness
Rolling Stone UK

Collective consciousness

Ezra Collective return with Dance, No One's Watching, the roaring follow-up album to last year's boundary-moving Mercury Prize win

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9 mins  |
October/November 2024
DAYDREAM BELIEVER
Rolling Stone UK

DAYDREAM BELIEVER

Welsh techno-pop artist Kelly Lee Owens is the first signing to Dirty Hit's new dance label, dh2. She talks \"transcending my bullshit\" on the euphoric, thumping club tunes of fourth album, Dreamstate

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5 mins  |
October/November 2024
A BUNCH OF (PRI)MATES
Rolling Stone UK

A BUNCH OF (PRI)MATES

From the story of 'Gary', the title track of Stockport band Blossoms' fifth album inspired by a fibreglass gorilla, to breaking new ground with their own record label and staying friends after 10 years, the tightknit band tell Rolling Stone UK all about it

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6 mins  |
October/November 2024
RULE OF LAWTEY
Rolling Stone UK

RULE OF LAWTEY

Stepping up to play a comic-book icon in the big-budget sequel Joker: Folie à Deux could prove a life-changing moment for Industry star Harry Lawtey. But he's trying not to think about it...

time-read
8 mins  |
October/November 2024