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Daniel Day-Lewis spotted filming with Sean Bean seven years after retirement

The acting great was photographed on a film set in Manchester, England

Kevin E G Perry
Los Angeles
Tuesday 01 October 2024 14:52 EDT
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Daniel Day-Lewis Globes speech

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Louise Thomas

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Daniel Day-Lewis is rumored to be making a return to acting after being spotted on a British film set, seven years after announcing his retirement.

The 67-year-old three-time Oscar winner was photographed shooting a movie in Manchester on Sunday, September 29.

The Daily Mail reports that the film is called Avelyn and stars Sean Bean as a former soldier.

Day-Lewis was seen riding a motorcycle with Bean riding pillion.

The Independent has approached representatives for Day-Lewis for comment.

Day-Lewis, one of the most widely respected actors of his generation, announced his retirement in 2017.

Daniel Day-Lewis and Sean Bean
Daniel Day-Lewis and Sean Bean (Getty)

“Daniel Day-Lewis will no longer be working as an actor,” his representative Leslee Dart said in a short statement at the time. “He is immensely grateful to all of his collaborators and audiences over the many years. This is a private decision and neither he nor his representatives will make any further comment on this subject.”

It was not the first time Day-Lewis expressed a desire to step away from acting.

After starring in 1997’s The Boxer, he disappeared from the big screen for five years until Martin Scorsese convinced him to return for Gangs of New York. During that time, he reportedly took up shoemaking in Italy, explaining to the Guardian: “I didn’t really want to be involved with films. I just wanted some time away from it all. I need that quite often.”

The announcement of his retirement came as a surprise and sent shockwaves through Hollywood, with Day-Lewis being revered as perhaps the finest actor of his time.

Day-Lewis has long been an exceptionally deliberate performer who often spends years preparing for a role, crafting his characters with an uncommon, methodical completeness.

“I don’t dismember a character into its component parts and then kind of bolt it all together, and off you go,” Day-Lewis said in 2012, discussing Steven Spielberg’s Lincoln. “I tend to try and allow things to happen slowly, over a long period of time. As I feel I’m growing into a sense of that life, if I’m lucky, I begin to hear a voice.”

His method approach has perhaps been overstated and simplified however, with the actor joking about his reputation for extreme preparation during a BAFTA acceptance speech in 2013 that he had stayed “in character as myself for the past 55 years.”

A five-time Academy Award nominee, Day-Lewis is the only one to ever win Best Actor three times, earning Oscars for My Left Foot, Lincoln and There Will Be Blood.

Married to writer-director Rebecca Miller with three children, he broke through with 1985’s My Beautiful Laundrette by Stephen Frears. His films also include The Last of the Mohicans, The Age of Innocence and In the Name of the Father.

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