
How Alan Rickman Got A Child Fighting Cancer Cast In 'Harry Potter'
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Where else would you go other than Alan Rickman?
Thats how Harry Potter casting director Janet Hirshenson put it when asked about the actors considered forthe role of Severus Snape in the Harry Potter film franchise. Hirshenson joined the production after another casting director had worked on the movies for a year and said Rickman was already locked in at the time. She had no argument.
I dont know if that was the first initial one they reached out to or not but ... it was Alan Rickman, she said.
Today, were more than a year removed from losing our favorite Potions Master. Rickman died in January 2016 at the age of 69 after a battle with cancer.The actor has an assortment of iconic roles under his belt, but Harry Potter fans know him best as the complicated and polarizing Professor Snape. His co-workers on the films, however, simply remember him as a remarkable person, a man who even once made an extremely sick childs dream come true.

Its been 20 years since the Harry Potter book series debuted, and debate over its characters still rages on particularly over Rickmans character, Snape. Is he a Half-Blood hero? Is he The Jerk Who Lived? Even J.K. Rowling has struggled with how to bring him up without causing a brouhaha (or in honor of witches, a brew-haha?).
As Daniel Radcliffe, Emma Watson and Rupert Grint grew and changed during the films, Rickmans controversial character remained an unwavering staple, even down to his wardrobe.
Costume designer Jany Temime instituted major wardrobe changes when she joined the franchise in the third film, Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban. For proof, just check out Professor Filius Flitwicks changing looks. However,Snapes outfit remained largely the same.
Temime told HuffPost, When I arrived on
The costumer did admit there was one small alteration.
The only thing we did is that every time Alan Rickman was going to holidays in Tuscany and coming back with two or three extra kilos, we made it bigger without telling him. Thats the only thing we did, but it was the same costume, she said.
Snapes signature black robes had an ominous presence that the actor himself noticed.
As soon as I put that costume on something happens. You cant be someone else inside that outline. It has an effect on me, Rickman once said of the outfit.

It had an effect on the other actors, too.
Oliver Phelps, who played George Weasley in the films, told HuffPost,I was intimidated by him, I think, just because youre looking at this guy in a big cloak and everything.
Snapes formidable presence on set is a testament to Rickmans talent for embodying a role as if hed taken Polyjuice Potion for it. Once you got past that frightening facade, youd find a person who was really funny, and self-deprecating and kind of wonderful company, as Daniel Radcliffeput it during a past conversation with Rowling.
Besides being a delightful person, Rickman staunchly supported his co-stars on and off the set. Radcliffe told Rowling that Rickman cut a vacation short to see the Boy Wizard perform in the play Equus, and Phelps told us he once received acting advice from Rickman after giving him a lesson on MP3 players.
I remember hed just come back from an award ceremony, and they had given him an iPod,and he wanted to know how to work it. I was showing him how to do that,

Perhaps the most memorable Rickman story comes from producer Paula DuPr Pesmen.
The producer worked on the first three Harry Potter films, and also took it upon herself to be the point person for organizing set visits for terminally sick children. This would later lead her to leave movie producing and start There With Care, an organization that helps provide fundamental services to families with children facing serious illnesses.
DuPr Pesmen told us the entire cast wasso gracious during the childrens visits.
Dan, Rupert and Emma, and Tom Felton and Devon Murray, especially those kids, when I would have sick children with me on the set they would come straight up to me and start engaging with these kids and take photos with them and ask, Whatve they seen so far? What was their favorite part of the film? What was their favorite part of the day?
She reminisced about a number of touching memories from the set visits, including a time a young boy got to help direct a scene with Radcliffe in Chamber of Secrets. After the scene, the boy ran up to Radcliffe, threw his arms around him and said, I love you, Harry.
All of us were in tears, the director
One of the most memorable visits comes from a boy named Jay.
Jay, a child diagnosed with Stage 4 neuroblastoma, was excited to visit the set, But what he really wanted was to be in the film, not just visiting, DuPr Pesmen added.
I said, Well,we cant really do that, and youre already here. Alan
Then, something magical happened.
Alan looked at me, and he kind of went into his Snape-mode in costume, and said, Why isnt this child in the film? recalled DuPr Pesman. Everyone had a good laugh, and Alan took him by the hand and put him into the crowd of kids as they were panning across. The back of him is actually in a shot.
The producer told us the moment happened in Remus Lupins Boggart class during Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban.
Alan put him in, and it was from the back of the classroom looking over the backs of the kids, she said.
Though Jays shot apparently wasnt included in the final cut of the film, DuPr Pesmen said he was thrilled.
Sadly, like Rickman, Jay succumbed to cancer. He died in 2005. DuPr Pesmen credits Jay as one of the founders of There With Care, and if youre wondering, he did actually end up in another movie.
was there. He had a moment. Paula DuPre' Pesmen
The producer said she and Chris Columbus pulled Jay out of the hospital for a few hours one day and put him in a scene fromRent, which Columbus directed.
Jay may have not been in the final cut of Prisoner of Azkaban, but the producer said,
Whatever you think of Snape, theres no denying the character of the man behind the black cape.
So do we miss Alan Rickman? Even after all this time?.
From June 1 to 30, HuffPost is celebrating the 20th anniversary of the very first Harry Potter book by reminiscing about all things Hogwarts. Accio childhood memories.
Additional reporting by Katherine Brooks.
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