Harry Potter stunt performer David Holmes has spoken candidly about living “vicariously” through his former co-star Daniel Radcliffe after an on-set accident left him paralysed from the chest down. A talented gymnast, Essex-born Holmes was just 17 when he was cast as Radcliffe’s stunt double in the 2001 adaptation of Harry Potter and the Philosopher’s Stone. He would reprise the role in the following five films in the hit fantasy franchise, until a stunt rehearsal during pre-production on Deathly Hallows Part One in 2009 went horrifically wrong. While practicing a jerk-back stunt, Holmes was launched into a wall, and immediately broke his neck.
Now, Holmes, who uses a wheelchair and has limited movement in his arms and fingers, is telling his story in the documentary David Holmes: The Boy Who Lived. It explores the accident, but also celebrates his life before and since, as well as the experiences of the stunt performer and disabled communities. Speaking to The Independent, Holmes explains how Radcliffe — who serves as an executive producer on the film — and his “amazing” career has been a source of great pride for him.
“Every time I see his physicality in films, I can vicariously live through those successes just because I know that those early days it was me that was whipping him into shape and laying the foundation for him,” he says. Holmes made The Boy Who Lived with director Dan Hartley, the pair having first met on the set of the first Harry Potter film where Hartley was a trainee in the camera department. Holmes’s height meant he often doubled for children throughout his career. He was on the brink of adulthood filming the Philosopher’s Stone, yet a friendship quickly formed between the 17-year-old and Radcliffe, who was only 11.
“I would shut the stunt store’s door and we would play; whether that’s jumping off of portacabins or bouncing on trampolines, doing all the things that an insurance company would have a heart attack over,” Holmes recounts. “It was important that I create an environment where he could just be a kid.” In the documentary, Radcliffe speaks of his total awe of the stunt department, and admits he even considered pursuing a career in it himself. “He grew from my little brother to become one of my best friends,” Holmes says. He saw something of himself in Radcliffe; after all, the stunt performer was only a kid himself when he started out in the industry, nabbing his first role on 1998’s Lost in Space at the age of 14. He was instantly hooked.
Harry Potter was a life-changing gig for Holmes, who also doubled for Ron, Neville, Malfoy, and even Hermione in the early films (“the first time I appear on the film… I had a wig and a skirt on,” he tells me). The kids were young, but so were the crew members, Hartley recalls. It really did feel like a family growing up together throughout the franchise. Holmes performed stunts on the first six films, and is credited as a Slytherin quidditch player in the Philosopher’s Stone. Then one day in 2009, weeks before Deathly Hallows Part One would start filming, tragedy struck. The team were testing a scene where Harry is fighting Voldemort’s snake Nagini, and is pushed through a wall. During the previous day’s practice, Holmes had voiced concern that the weight bag being used to jerk him back was too heavy. Still, he insisted he be the one to do the stunt again.
The accident is described in the documentary as a “blur”, his fellow stunt artist Marc Mailley, who ended up replacing Holmes on Harry Potter at his request, saying that he’d “never seen a human being move that first, even to this day”. “I remember hitting the wall, my chest folding into my nose. I was fully conscious throughout the whole thing,” Holmes recalls. He hung in the air, attached to his wires “like a puppet”, and immediately knew that he’d broken his neck. Watching footage from Holmes’s time in hospital, any viewer would be amazed by his ability to laugh through it all. Radcliffe chokes up as he recalls on camera: “He was already able to have the perspective to look at other people with more serious injuries and go, ‘I’m actually better off than them, I have to look out for them now.’ Which is just the most ridiculous good quality in a person.”
I ask Holmes about his ability to stay positive in hospital. “You choose to be either a victim or a survivor in all things in life, right?” he says. “I went into hospital and I met real victims, people that were living with their spinal cord injury because they were either victim of a hate crime or terrorist attack. It soon made me own my life choices very, very quickly.”
The Independent