Les Miserables -2012 -
They completed the take. Hooper got his shot. Jackman walked away and didn't sing a single note for three months.
And that, in the end, is the most Les Misérables story of all: an actor destroying himself to give a performance about a man who destroys himself—all to bring a moment of grace to a darkened screen.
But there was no stopping. Hooper was shooting chronologically (unusual for films), meaning Jackman started with young, vigorous Valjean and aged into the broken, dying father. Each day demanded more vocal anguish, more emotional collapse. les miserables -2012
When the film premiered, a critic wrote that Jackman’s performance sounded like a man "singing on the edge of his own destruction." They meant it as praise. They had no idea how literal it was.
For most of the cast, this was grueling but manageable. For Hugh Jackman, playing Jean Valjean, it became a waking nightmare. They completed the take
Halfway through the grueling 10-week shoot, Jackman noticed something was wrong. His voice, famously robust from years of musical theater and The Boy from Oz , began to crack. Then came the nodes—growths on his vocal cords. Doctors warned him: keep singing like this, and you could lose your voice permanently.
Between takes, he would walk off set, lean against a wall, and silently cry—not from the emotion of the scene, but from the physical agony. He couldn't speak above a whisper. He drank honey and warm lemon water by the gallon. A vocal coach massaged his throat. Then, when Hooper called action, Jackman would open his mouth and, against all medical logic, produce that fragile, aching, beautiful rendition of "Bring Him Home." And that, in the end, is the most
Here’s an interesting behind-the-scenes story about Les Misérables (2012). During the filming of Les Misérables (2012), director Tom Hooper made a bold, almost reckless decision: all singing would be done live on set. No pre-recorded tracks. No lip-syncing. Actors wore tiny earpieces called "the judas" feeding them piano accompaniment from a off-camera pianist, and they had to act and sing simultaneously, raw and unfiltered.