Ft 2014 05

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Flanders today

january 29, 201 4 current affairs

Pay rises questioned Dexia CEO defends salary increases for executives of bailed-out bank 6

Erkenningsnummer P708816

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politics

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business

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Cartoon kingdom Grid VFX is leading the way in visual effects and animation techniques 7

innovation

w w w. f l a n d e r s t o d ay. e u

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education

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arts

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agenda

Grow your own An urban farm for everyone is sprouting up on industrial ground in Ghent 10

Living for the moment

© Stefaan Achtergael

#315

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n e w s w e e k ly € 0 . 7 5

Sam Louwyck has stopped dancing, but he has plenty of music on his mind Tom Peeters

He’s played pool with Jeff Buckley, looked deep into the eyes of Amy Winehouse and danced with Patti Smith, but he had never been in a rock band – until the guys of Falling Man asked him if he wanted to be their frontman. Actor Sam Louwyck gave up his career as a dancer only last year. Now he feels like starting all over again

M

ost musicians’ rock or punk careers start in their teenage years. But 47-year-old Sam Louwyck had turned grey before he felt there was something

missing. Born in Bruges, Louwyck is now known mostly as an actor, but he travelled the world as a dancer in Alain Platel’s Les Ballets C de la B in the 1990s and only slowly worked his trademark wiry frame and shaggy hair into the movies. An early highlight was his inspiring delivery of “Windman” in Flemish musician Tom Barman’s one and only film Any Way The Wind Blows, in which the movements of his body created wind. It seemed the perfect transition from dance to film. But as the roles continued to come, he was too often cast as the bad guy. Finally, in the last few years, he’s been allowed to break out with a remarkable diversity. You’ve probably seen him in one or more high-profile projects: as an illegal hormone trader in the Oscar-nominated Rundskop (Bullhead), the humble beekeeper in the quietly chilling The Fifth Season, a guilt-ridden security guard in 22 Mei or in the TV comedy series Eigen kweek. But this year could be Louwyck’s biggest, with roles in at least five films, including a leading role next to Italian superstar Monica Bellucci. It was between the Tuscany set of Le Meraviglie (When You Were Born), a German-Italian-Swiss coproduction, and Yellow Tapes Studio in Ghent where the eponymous debut album of his band Falling Man was recorded last summer, that Louwyck’s new path fell into place. “He was a bomb of creativity,” remembers Sven De Potter, Falling Man’s drummer. “When we were recording, he was also in this movie. That was a curse and a blessing for us; he couldn’t be there all the time, but it helped him to focus on his vocals. The two artistic challenges were feeding off each other.” When asked what exactly he brought from Italy to Ghent, De Potter says jokingly “a beard”. `` continued on page 5


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