After sitting through writer-director Robert Eggers‘ 132-minute remake of Nosferatu, which transforms the 1922 silent vampire film into a modern gothic epic, I was shocked to see the name Bill Skarsgård flash on the credits. I had no recollection of the Swedish actor, known for his work in It, Barbarian and John Wick: Chapter 4, ever appearing on screen. 

Apparently, I’m not the only one who failed to clock that the titular “Nosferatu” (Romanian for “vampire”) was none other than Skarsgård. “It was probably more difficult than anything I’ve done,” he exclusively tells Parade, comparing Nosferatu‘s Count Orlok with his other roles. “In terms of a transformative performance, I think this is miles and miles further away from me than even [It‘s] Pennywise. I’ve been saying this is as transformative as I will go. This is my limit, and that’s also the reason people don’t believe I’m in the movie.” 

Skarsgård’s vampiric transformation does make him virtually unrecognizable. Combining full-body prosthetics and elaborate costumes, the actor built the character with Eggers over a 10-year period, even working with an operatic vocal coach on a completely new voice. If you’re able to spot Skarsgård in the film, hats off to you. 

Of course crafting a new version of Dracula/Orlok was certainly a momentous task. Skarsgård’s been told there were already over “170 different adaptations” of the character prior to his own. He’s humbly giving much of the credit for his own transformation to Eggers’ screenplay, though. 

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Bill Skarsgård as Count Orlok standing in the shadows in ‘Nosferatu’

Focus Features

“I read Robert’s Nosferatu script almost 10 years ago, and it hasn’t changed all that much in those 10 years,” he says. “So the version of Dracula was already different on the page.” 

Step one in the transformation was the voice. “I was really enamored by Orlok’s language,” Skarsgård says of Eggers’ script. “He’s technically speaking German in the movie, but it’s English. I think he’s learned German just from reading all of these texts and old books. It’s this awkwardly constructed English that came out of that.” 

Orlok’s voice was especially important in this film as the character spends much of the film hiding in the shadows to keep his true form hidden from Thomas Hutter (Nicholas Hoult). “The movie monster tends to not have much dialogue, but in this case he has a lot,” Skarsgård reflects. “So the voice became my way of expressing the character.”

The deep gravely voice in the film was the product of acclaimed Icelandic opera singer Ásgerður Júníusdóttir. “We explored the voice together, but also the technicality of using your entire body when you speak and placing the voice as low as you can in your body,” Skarsgård says. “It’s a new world for me, and I love voice work. I was just absorbing all of these tools that I’m going to use as my career progresses.”

Layered on top of the vocal work were Linda Muir‘s costumes, what Skarsgård describes as “historically accurate costumes that a 16th-century Hungarian nobleman would have worn. They’re the clothes he would have worn when he was a man.”

While Focus Features is keeping Orlok’s appearance under wraps for as long as possible, you can see the massive fur coat Skarsgård donned in the shadowy poster. 

‘Nosferatu’ poster

Focus Features

“I knew the shadow was going to be an ally for Orlok, especially in the scenes with Thomas, where he’s hiding his appearance,” he says. “So he lives in the shadow, and he uses his big fur cape and the hat to not give away what he is. The shadow became a friend.”

Perhaps the most impressive element of Skarsgård’s transformation, however, was David White‘s prosthetic makeup, which took hours to apply each day, was difficult to act through and painful to wear. When I ask if he was able to cheat on days he was in the shadows, Skarsgård says no with one exception: “Every single shadow in this movie is also me puppeteering behind camera. That was the only time where I didn’t need to have the full regalia on.”

The full prosthetics would take six hours to apply. “It’s just uncomfortable,” Skarsgård says of having to sit in the chair that long. “And any sense of privacy goes out the window. You become very close with the team that’s applying this makeup. They’re really getting up in there with a brush in your ass crack. They become your little safe space.” 

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‘Nosferatu’ 

Focus Features

And the six-hour application process was just the beginning of what could be long, physical days on set. The film’s final moments involve a sex scene between Orlok and Lily-Rose Depp‘s Ellen Hutter, which Skarsgård performed in head-to-toe prosthetics. 

“I don’t know her perspective on, ‘I’m going to kiss this monster,'” Skarsgård says about his (fully clothed? skinned? suited?) sex scene, “But for me, when we shot, I was Orlok, and I really, really, really wanted to devour her.” 

If performing a sex scene in a hot latex bodysuit sounds miserable, that’s because it was. “The actual final moment of Orlok was incredibly physically exhausting because there was a lot of technical camera work,” Skarsgård says. “What’s in the movie, I had to do that 30 times.” If you’ve seen the film, you’ll know how truly arduous that experience must have been. 

The most difficult day on set for Skarsgård, however, involved a sequence filmed on a boat during Orlok’s transfer from his castle in Transylvania to the German harbor he plans to terrorize next. In one scene that involved “pretty tricky advanced camera work,” a seaman descends into the hull of the ship to “rid the boat of this demon.” As the camera follows the sailor, Skarsgård’s Orlok is initially seen behind the man in the shadows. 

“Then I have to exit frame, run around and enter my position for when the jump scare pans down to the rats and then pans up and I’m standing there,” Skarsgård remembers. “So it’s very physical, but I was covered head to toe, except for my eyeballs and the soles of my feet. Even my palms and my hands are covered. That was a 12-hour day.” 

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Bill Skarsgård’s hands in ‘Nosferatu’

Focus Features

With that many prosthetics on, there’s nowhere for all that sweat to go. “It doesn’t breathe, and I don’t think it’s healthy,” Skarsgård confides. “Your body’s probably absorbing all those f–king toxins and glue and sh–, plastic and latex and whatever.” 

During the 12 hours running around the hull of a ship, Skarsgård remembers thinking, “I don’t know what’s happening, but my body is not doing well.” 

“You know the skin is your biggest organ right,” he says. “So it needs to breathe. I got flashbacks from that urban legend about the woman in Goldfinger being covered in gold and actually dying. I’m like, ‘Okay, this is how I go.'”

Obviously, Skarsgård did not die of heat exhaustion in a latex Dracula suit like that one cameraman in the 2022 film Babylon

“At that point I told them—because it was a long day and I was waiting around—’We need to open it up so my body can breathe,’ and then they found the pockets where I could open up and my body started to breathe.” 

Skarsgård compares the agony of the shoot with what he thinks childbirth would feel like. “They’re not on the same level, of course. I’ve seen childbirth, but it’s as close as I can get to giving birth as a man, as these f–king monsters I’m portraying,” he says. 

When I ask him if there were any other iconic monsters on his bucket list, he says he’s done for now. “To play Orlok in Robert Eggers’ Nosferatu is the holy grail,” he says. “It’s kind of the peak and, in a way, the nail in the coffin.” 

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