Well-trod archetypes like the “sensitive jock” may appear in the rearview mirror as cultural wish fulfillment rather than naturally occurring. But London native Nicholas Galitzine is a modern-day example of the real deal. Galitzine, a former professional-track rugby star who hadn’t seriously acted until the tail end of high school, is predisposed to embody “bro” onscreen, as seen on Netflix’s Chambers, in which he plays a privileged son uprooted by loss, or in HBO’s Share, as a possible perpetrator of sexual assault.

As far short of decency as his characters may fall, Galitzine sees real-life white-male pathology as the incentive to tackle difficult roles. “I think as a young man, it’s important to educate other young men about what is appropriate behavior,” he says. “[When you portray] stuff like sexual assault and abortion [in film], it makes [those issues] more clear to people, and hopefully breaks that horrible cycle.”

Galitzine cites empathy, the ability “live through a person,” as his greatest tool—and occasionally a job hazard. “I definitely felt a suffocating sense of guilt, just playing a character like that,” he says of Share’s AJ, whose unsavory posturing may or may not belie a misunderstood humanity—a delicate mix that’s central to the film’s whodunit plot. “Before getting the part, I had this long hair, and wasn’t very intimidating at all,” he says. “So I shaved my head, grew this pubey mustache, and wore a diamond earring. When I started pitching tattoo ideas, [director Pippa Bianco] was like, ‘You know, I think we’ve covered all the bases’ [laughs].”Galitzine’s try-anything enthusiasm may explain his belated high-dive into acting—a part in Spring Awakening at Festival Fringe. “I had severe stage fright, but I’d gone with a group of friends, including a girl I fancied,” he says of the experience, which was not the romance plot he might’ve envisioned. “After I got the part, [I realized] I would be playing the gay lover of my best friend in real life. [laughs] We had to have a conversation, like, ‘Hey, this is totally fine!’ Definitely a shock to what acting could be!”

COAT RAF SIMONS SWEATSHIRT BOSS EARRING HIS OWN

This story appears in the pages of VMAN 42!

PHOTOGRAPHY DOUG INGLISH

FASHION CHRISTIAN STROBLE

GROOMER MIRA HYDE (THE WALL GROUP)

DIGITAL TECHNICIAN MAXFIELD HEGEDUS

PRODUCER JULIAN DAKDOUK

PHOTO ASSISTANT RYAN MORGA

STYLIST ASSISTANT ARYEH LAPPIN

LOCATION CACTUS CUBE STUDIO

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