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			 Though not a household name in the U.S. 
			-- yet -- his face is increasingly 
	familiar from his role as the sadistic villain Le Chiffre in the 2006 James 
	Bond film, "Casino Royale," and performances alongside Clive Owen in "King 
	Arthur" and Liam Neeson in "Clash of the Titans." It was through a circuitous path that he found his way to acting. From childhood he was a serious gymnast and then, as a young man, joined 
	a contemporary dance troupe. "But I was interested in the drama of the dance more than the technique," 
	he says. "I felt that if that was what I was loving, why don't I do that 
	full-on?" Meanwhile, he was vexed by what he saw as actors' hollow conventions: "We 
	do this because that's how they have always done it, but it doesn't have 
	anything to do with life. It becomes a convention they only BELIEVE is 
	reality." An inspiring alternative for him was the film "Taxi Driver," which he saw 
	as an antidote to stiffness and artifice in drama. "It made me want to be true to what I believed was right," he says. One thing he clearly believes in: not putting on airs. Striking a 
	contrast to the three-piece-suit polish of Hannibal, Mikkelsen has arrived 
	for his interview bundled up and in transit. He had wrapped the first season 
	of "Hannibal" in Toronto only hours earlier, and in a few more hours would 
	be taking off from New York. He looks the part: Toting a duffel bag, he's 
	dressed in jeans, running shoes, peacoat and knit cap. He looks like he 
	might be shipping out on the next freighter. Sleep-deprived, he sips a can of soda for a burst of caffeine and 
	continues making his case for authenticity. He points to a dining scene where Hannibal tells Jack, "Next time, bring 
	your wife. I'd love to have you BOTH for dinner." Viewers all too familiar with Hannibal's dietary fetish may be tickled by 
	that line and its secondary meaning. But Mikkelsen delivers it as if nothing 
	more than a gracious invitation. "I can never wink at the audience," he says, noting that Jack and Will 
	aren't dummies: "Will is the best profiler in the world." So his performance 
	must always accommodate their brilliance. "I can't be having fun with a line 
	like this, without them seeing it! "If you're doing it for the audience," Mikkelsen sums up, "you're killing 
	the reality." That's one thing even a killer like Hannibal Lecter won't do. ___ Online:
[Associated 
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