Acting Is the Ultimate Freedom

Straight out of acting school he landed a starring role in the major Danish feature Itsi Bitsi and a place of honour as Shooting Star in Berlin. Things are moving quickly for Joachim Fjelstrup. Indeed, the 27-year-old rising star is an actor who knows what he can do and what he wants with his craft.

"So far, just taking what I've been offered and doing my best with it has worked out pretty well for me," Joachim Fjelstrup says. It's hard to argue with that. The 27-year-old Copenhagen native has appeared in two features and two shorts and has been chosen as the Danish Shooting Star at this year's Berlin Film Festival, arguably the film industry's greatest recognition for a young actor.

"I hope I can keep that fear of messing up. That fear makes me diligent. If I went into a project feeling like I knew I could do it, I risk preparing insufficiently."

"I hope I can keep that fear of messing up. That fear makes me diligent. If I went into a project feeling like I knew I could do it, I risk preparing insufficiently."

What opened the Shooting Star jury's eyes to the Danish actor was the dramatic feature Itsi Bitsi. In the film, which world premiered at last year's Toronto Film Festival, Fjelstrup reincarnates the Danish rock singer Eik Skaløe of Steppeulvene. The band's single album, Hip, was released in 1967 and since became a classic, largely thanks to Skaløe's freewheeling lyrics and grating, Bob Dylan-inspired delivery. Shortly after Hip was released, Skaløe left for Nepal and in October 1968 he was found dead, 25 years old, on the border between India and Pakistan. A note found on his body read, "For the officials: As I guess you know – this suicide is decided & carried out by myself. No one is to blame, except the cruel person inside me. Forgive me, Eik Skaløe." The dramatic circumstances surrounding his death made Skaløe the beatnik an instant icon of Danish rock.

"I feel very lucky," Joachim Fjelstrup says. "The film was 10 years in the making but happened to be shooting two months after I graduated from acting school – and I look like Skaløe and the role fits me."

Shooting Stars Jury motivates its choice of Fjelstrup:

"Joachim couldn't have made a better feature film debut than Itsi Bitsi – as real-life beatnik rocker Eik Skaløe he is simply captivating, bringing out all the elements of a man whose tragically short, tormented life was nevertheless brightened by love, laughter and head-on rock'n'roll excitement."

Steppeulven01"Itsi Bitsi" Photo: Nikola Predovic

Call it luck. But the young star of Itsi Bitsi is more than just lucky. From scene one, Fjelstrup has the presence and scope of the young poet who dreams of changing the world and setting himself free but also has a very hard time tearing himself away from his unhappy love affair with his soul mate, Iben Nagel Rasmussen, the Itsi Bitsi of the title. Skaløe was at once a searching young man and a mature thinker, and Fjelstrup nails this balance between vulnerability and strength with surprising authority in his first screen role.

Actually, saying Fjelstrup looks like Skaløe is a bit of a stretch. As Itsi Bitsi director Ole Christian Madsen points out, Skaløe was 163 centimetres short, while Fjelstrup towers at 193. Madsen only picked Fjelstrup after extended periods of working with three to four other potential Eiks.

"We always knew that Joachim was a qualified candidate, but it was only when Joachim underwent a physical transformation along the way that we knew he was the one. I have never worked withan actor who prepared so thoroughly for a role," says Madsen, who has directed great Danish stars like Mads Mikkelsen, Paprika Steen and Anders W. Berthelsen. Madsen mentions that the already slim Fjelstrup lost 7 kilos to play the emaciated Skaløe at the end of the film. Still, Fjelstrup wasn't sure that he had lost enough weight.

"I hope I can keep that fear of messing up," Fjelstrup says. "That fear makes me diligent. If I went into a project feeling like I knew I could do it, I risk preparing insufficiently. When my acting works out, it's one of the coolest things there is."

steppeulven"Itsi Bitsi" Photo: Per Arnesen

As for why acting is one of the coolest things, Fjelstrup says:

"It's the ultimate freedom. There are no rules. You can be as aggressive as you want without being afraid that the other person is going to hit you back. It's incredibly mean to tease someone who stutters, like I do in Itsi Bitsi. You just don't do that. There's a freedom in letting go of yourself and your inhibitions, and afterwards we actors are friends again."

Roni Ezra's April 9th, about the day in 1940 when Nazi Germany invaded Denmark, has Fjelstrup in a supporting role as a Danish soldier who fights back. A blessed smile spreads across Fjelstrup's face.

"I'm the kind of person who easily turns ironic and indirect, but there's something very neat about saying ‘This is the most important day of my life' the way my character does in the film."

Joachim Fjelstrup is one of ten European actors and actresses to catch the spotlight at the Berlinale as Shooting Stars 2015, an initiative launched by European Film Promotion offering young acting talents a unique platform to meet the industry and a dedicated audience.