âCreativityâs a real balancer for me.â Photograph: Art Streiber
The actor was working as a bouncer when he got a small part in a new show called The Wire. Two decades on, heâs a blockbuster fixture. The Suicide Squad star talks about fighting for his big break, losing his dad, and why acting helped him out of a âdark, weird junctionâ
Sat 24 Jul 2021 03.00 EDT
Last modified on Sat 24 Jul 2021 15.43 EDT
âI appreciate my quiet time, I really do,â Idris Elba tells me, âbut I didnât choose a career in quiet time.â At 48, his life seems relentlessly full of activity, projects, causes, releases. Heâs the star of an imminent summer blockbuster, The Suicide Squad. Heâs a rapper who releases music online at a rate of about a track a month. He hosts a podcast. Heâs just released a new line of T-shirts. Earlier in 2021, Elba signed a deal with HarperCollins to write childrenâs books. He and his wife, the Canadian model Sabrina Dhowre Elba, have recently been petitioning world leaders (Franceâs, Belgiumâs) on behalf of rural farmers in Africa. The couple have also co- designed a Louboutin sandal. When Elba sits down to chat to me over Zoom, itâs during a break between night shoots on a new movie heâs making, and Iâm tempted to tell him to forget about it; shut the laptop; sleep.