He graduated from RADA with a BA in Acting in 2012.
It was not about your career outside of [the Studio], because not a great deal of people expected to have a career in acting.But it’s really much deeper than that, than just “not having a woman”. That is one of the greatest things about RADA. In Episode 3, he exposes himself and says, “I don’t want to do this anymore, can somebody help me?”. The cast, the crew, and everybody involved with it… they’re family now. He changes. And that’s mainly how it’s different.I spend most of my time at the Curzon; I don’t tend to spend 18 quid to go and watch a Hollywood blockbuster … I live around the corner from the Curzon in Soho, so every couple of days I go there and see what’s on. Still Alice is fantastic as well. So we were learning to train for the sake of learning to train; it was acting for the love of it. But the sense is that when he arrived eight weeks ago, it was a lottery as to who’d get the woman and who wouldn’t, and he wasn’t lucky enough to get one. It’s much more interesting to play people who do things you might find difficult to swallow, things you might not do yourself.I mean, the audience don’t know what happened onboard the ship during the nine-month journey before [the arrival in Australia], so they don’t know what happened to make people despise him. In New York, it’s a very different environment: very few agents come in your third year to pick you up and get you to work.
He was surrounded by dog kennels.
You can’t really know whether he’s sympathetic or empathetic by watching him. Life and studies. Quick Facts of Adam Nagaitis. I’m not South African. I was staying in Sydney, which is a very upbeat, wealthy place, and everybody’s fine – it’s a “holiday place”. I’d love to go back.I think Banished was the most difficult thing to find information on. Everybody was lovely, but I was really just there for the job. Popular Videos - Adam Nagaitis & The Inbetweeners 2 Adam Nagaitis - Topic; 1 video; No views; Updated yesterday; Play all Share. And I don’t mean your horrible balls.” It’s not without its culture, but it’s pretty westernised. A play can sometimes [make you dedicate yourself] for at least a couple of months, and it just hasn’t happened yet. Following this, he studied at the Royal Academy of Dramatic Art in London. When it comes to things like Banished, when you’re talking about the colonisation of a country and the displacement of an indigenous race, you want to make sure that you know what’s what. And that was challenging and interesting to do.But I don’t really want to get into talking about the economics and politics of South Africa – anybody could pick up a book and read about it, they don’t need my opinion on it! What has happened to this person that has sparked this behaviour? I’m looking to do some theatre this year, but we’ll see. But I know so many brilliant, wonderful people who disagree with me, and I enjoy reading about it, and getting some of the nitty-gritty detail that people don’t tend to give you.“American training” is a bit of a generalisation. So I had to decide: do I want to close off, or do I want to open up to anything and everything that’s different?But generally, [the research is] just reading. As a complete outsider who knew nothing about it, with no expectations [before I went there], I had the most wonderful time I’ve ever had anywhere.One of the better books about it is called The Man Who Was Never Shakespeare, by AJ Pointon. It’s just about finding the right time.I find difficult, given the evidence, that “the man from Stratford” wrote all those plays.