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Are You Right There, Michael?

He’s best known for his role in Quentin Tarantino’s seminal Reservoir Dogs, but 54-year-old cult actor Michael Madsen is a complicated and controversial character. In the news last week following an incident which saw him being charged with child cruelty, the actor, writer and poet talks about his chequered past, movies, doing that infamous scene in Reservoir Dogs – but most of all about the importance of family.

Olaf Tyaransen, 04 Apr 2012

Having said that, you did just appear on Celebrity Big Brother...

I did Big Brother because I saw it as an opportunity to redefine whatever it is that are people’s pre-conceived ideas of Michael Madsen. I knew for a fact that they brought me in there because they thought that I was gonna go berserk, that they thought I was going to have some sort of breakdown or psychological explosion or that I was going to do something insane. And it was just the opposite. I went in there, ‘Okay guys, you’re gonna lock me up in this house for 27 days with these people? Okay. Alright, let’s see what’s gonna happen’. I’m not sorry that I did it. It turned out to be good in the end and I learned a lot about myself. I think the whole thing, let’s face it, is a joke. In the end there is no winner of Big Brother, there are only survivors of Big Brother. It’s a psychological human experiment and it’s a highly-rated show. I had fun with them. In the end I walked away and I felt good about it. It could have been a catastrophe, as it was for some of the others who were in there, but I’m done with it.

There seemed to be some sort of sexual tension between yourself and the actress Denise Welch. What was the story there?

Oh, it was a preposterous attempt at trying to create a storyline, trying to create a theme. All those cameras are behind the windows and behind the mirrors, and when they’re watching everybody all day they have to try and develop a storyline. And so they look for little incidents to blow up to create a storyline. And the thing with Denise and I didn’t exist. It existed in Denise’s mind, but not in my mind, and the more she realised that the more she started to have her issues. I didn’t find out until I was out that it had been developed as a storyline or as a theme. In reality, what actually went on in there was a lot different from the edited versions that was shown to the public. There was really nothing to it at all. I minded my own business while I was in there.



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