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WE VALUE YOUR PRIVACY We and our partners store and/or access information on a device, such as cookies and process personal data, such as unique identifiers and standard information sent by a device for personalised advertising and content, advertising and content measurement, audience research and services development. With your permission we and our partners may use precise geolocation data and identification through device scanning. You may click to consent to our and our 1045 partners’ processing as described above. Alternatively you may click to refuse to consent or access more detailed information and change your preferences before consenting. Please note that some processing of your personal data may not require your consent, but you have a right to object to such processing. Your preferences will apply to this website only. You can change your preferences or withdraw your consent at any time by returning to this site and clicking the "Privacy" button at the bottom of the webpage. MORE OPTIONSI Do Not AcceptI Accept Skip to content SITE NAVIGATION * The Atlantic * PopularLatestNewsletters SECTIONS * Politics * Ideas * Fiction * Technology * Science * Photo * Business * Culture * Planet * Global * Books * Audio * Health * Education * Projects * Features * Family * Events * Washington Week * Progress * Newsletters * Explore The Atlantic Archive * Play The Atlantic crossword * Listen to Podcasts and Articles THE PRINT EDITION Latest IssuePast Issues -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Give a Gift * Search The Atlantic Quick Links * Dear Therapist * Crossword Puzzle * Magazine Archive * Your Subscription * Popular * Latest * Newsletters * Sign In * Subscribe June 2024 Issue Explore This story appears in the June 2024 print edition. While some stories from this issue are not yet available to read online, you can explore more from the magazine. The Atlantic Daily Get our editors’ guide to what matters in the world, delivered to your inbox every weekday. Email Address Sign Up Culture HOW DANIEL RADCLIFFE OUTRAN HARRY POTTER He was the world’s most famous child star. Then he had to figure out what came next. By Chris Heath Photographs by Lila Barth April 30, 2024 Share Save Subscribe to Listen to this Article 00:00 37:12 Listen to more stories on curio This article was featured in the One Story to Read Today newsletter. Sign up for it here. On August 23, 2000, after an extensive search and a months-long rumble of media speculation, a press conference was held in London. There, the actor who’d been chosen to play Harry Potter in the first movie adaptation of J. K. Rowling’s best-selling novels was unveiled, alongside the film’s other two child leads. According to the on-screen caption in the BBC’s coverage of the event, this 11-year-old’s name was “Daniel Radford.” EXPLORE THE JUNE 2024 ISSUE Check out more from this issue and find your next story to read. View More Until the previous year, Daniel Radcliffe, as he was actually known, hadn’t had any acting experience whatsoever, aside from briefly playing a monkey in a school play when he was about 6. When he’d auditioned for a British TV adaptation of David Copperfield, it was less out of great hope or ambition than because he’d been having a rough time at school and his parents (his father was a literary agent; his mother, a casting agent) thought that the experience of auditioning might boost his confidence. For an hour or two, the idea went, he’d get to see a world that none of his classmates had seen. Instead, he found himself cast as the young Copperfield, acting opposite Maggie Smith and Bob Hoskins. And now this. At the press conference, wearing the round glasses that his character needed but he did not, Radcliffe explained with evident nerves how he had cried when he’d heard the news. (He had been in the bath at the time.) The answer that seemed to charm everyone was when he allowed, hesitantly, “I think I’m a tiny, tiny bit like Harry because I’d like to have an owl.” Asked how he felt about becoming famous, he replied, “It’ll be cool.” To read this story, Sign in or start a free trial. Close Never miss a story. Start your free trial. Uncompromising quality. Enduring impact. Your support ensures a bright future for independent journalism. Get Started Already have an account? Sign in Chris Heath is a contributing writer for The Atlantic.