Rami Malek: ‘I'll Never Play an Arab Terrorist’

Rami Malek accepts his award at the 76th Golden Globe Awards in Beverly Hills, California. Reuters file photo
Rami Malek accepts his award at the 76th Golden Globe Awards in Beverly Hills, California. Reuters file photo
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Rami Malek: ‘I'll Never Play an Arab Terrorist’

Rami Malek accepts his award at the 76th Golden Globe Awards in Beverly Hills, California. Reuters file photo
Rami Malek accepts his award at the 76th Golden Globe Awards in Beverly Hills, California. Reuters file photo

The US actor of Egyptian ancestry, Rami Malek, has revealed that he needed to be reassured his character would not be linked to an "Arab terrorist" before accepting his role as the villain in the new Bond film.

Malek, who received an Oscar earlier this year for his portrayal of Freddie Mercury in Bohemian Rhapsody, admitted that he had to think twice before agreeing to take on his next role.

The Mirror cited Malek, 38, saying that “he needed a guarantee from the American film director Cary Fukunaga that his character would not be an Arabic-speaking terrorist," stressing that "he will never play an Arab terrorist."

"It's a great character and I'm very excited. But that was one thing that I discussed with Cary. I said that we cannot identify him with any act of terrorism reflecting an ideology or a religion. That's not something I would entertain. But that was clearly not his vision. So he's a very different kind of terrorist," the American-Egyptian actor said.

Rami is playing the primary villain in the latest Bond 007 also starred by Daniel Craig. The new movie is set to be displayed in April 2020.

Rami also admitted that as an actor of Middle Eastern heritage, Hollywood was quick to typecast him into particular stereotypical roles.

However after playing the role of the suicide bomber in the action drama 24, Rami decided that he needed to draw a line with his agents and refuse to play Arab or Middle Eastern characters in a negative light.

He added: '"In the past it was like, 'Oh well, he's an acceptable terrorist! But after I did that I said to myself 'This is not how I want it'."

Rami's role in the TV drama Mr. Robot made him the best candidate for the Freddie Mercury role.



An Alaska Brown Bear Has a New Shiny Smile After Getting a Huge Metal Crown for a Canine Tooth

 This undated image provided by the Lake Superior Zoo, shows Tundra, an Alaskan brown bear, before undergoing a procedure for a new canine tooth, Monday June 23, 2025, at the zoo in Duluth, Minn. (Lake Superior Zoo via AP)
This undated image provided by the Lake Superior Zoo, shows Tundra, an Alaskan brown bear, before undergoing a procedure for a new canine tooth, Monday June 23, 2025, at the zoo in Duluth, Minn. (Lake Superior Zoo via AP)
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An Alaska Brown Bear Has a New Shiny Smile After Getting a Huge Metal Crown for a Canine Tooth

 This undated image provided by the Lake Superior Zoo, shows Tundra, an Alaskan brown bear, before undergoing a procedure for a new canine tooth, Monday June 23, 2025, at the zoo in Duluth, Minn. (Lake Superior Zoo via AP)
This undated image provided by the Lake Superior Zoo, shows Tundra, an Alaskan brown bear, before undergoing a procedure for a new canine tooth, Monday June 23, 2025, at the zoo in Duluth, Minn. (Lake Superior Zoo via AP)

An Alaska brown bear at the Lake Superior Zoo in northeastern Minnesota has a gleaming new silver-colored canine tooth in a first-of-its-kind procedure for a bear.

The 800-pound (360-kilogram) Tundra was put under sedation Monday and fitted with a new crown — the largest dental crown ever created, according to the zoo.

“He's got a little glint in his smile now,” zoo marketing manager Caroline Routley said Wednesday.

The hour-long procedure was done by Dr. Grace Brown, a board-certified veterinary dentist who helped perform a root canal on the same tooth two years ago. When Tundra reinjured the tooth, the decision was made to give him a new, stronger crown. The titanium alloy crown, made by Creature Crowns of Post Falls, Idaho, was created for Tundra from a wax cast of the tooth.

Brown plans to publish a paper on the procedure in the Journal of Veterinary Dentistry later this year.

“This is the largest crown ever created in the world," she said. “It has to be published.”

Tundra and his sibling, Banks, have been at the Duluth zoo since they were 3 months old, after their mother was killed.

Tundra is now 6 years old and, at his full height on his hind legs, stands about 8 feet (2.4 meters) tall. The sheer size of the bear required a member of the zoo's trained armed response team to be present in the room — a gun within arm's reach — in case the animal awoke during the procedure, Routley said. But the procedure went without a hitch, and Tundra is now back in his habitat, behaving and eating normally.

Other veterinary teams have not always been as lucky. In 2009, a zoo veterinarian at Henry Doorly Zoo and Aquarium in Omaha, Nebraska, suffered severe injuries to his arm while performing a routine medical exam on a 200-pound (90 kilogram) Malaysian tiger.

The tiger was coming out of sedation when the vet inadvertently brushed its whiskers, causing the tiger to reflexively bite down on the vet's forearm.