Firth’s speech woes

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Hollywood actor Colin Firth has revealed playing stammering monarch King George VI in “The King`s Speech” made him so tense he suffered headaches and trapped nerves. The 50-year-old actor stars in the new movie as the royal and found enacting his part so tense he felt as if he was in a “semi-paralysis”. “Some part of you goes there. I try to play it as the character would be experiencing it, which is to try not to do it. The sheer physical effort that requires had an effect on my whole body, and while shooting `The King’s Speech` I suffered from headaches,” he said. “Playing the role would put my left arm to sleep.
I must have been tensing, particularly if I had long speeches. I must have been locking someone, pinching a nerve, because I couldn’t use it properly. It was a semi-paralysis that would last for three or four days. So I found myself in a physical battle,” he added. The actor also found after spending so long portraying someone with a stammer, he found the vocal tic surfacing when he spoke away from filming. “Even now I find myself stammering. Every time I talk about it, I am in danger of losing my flow,” he said. AGENCIES