I鈥檇 been told to meet the Australian 颅actor Travis Fimmel, best known for his role as Norse warrior Ragnar Lothbrok in the 颅History channel鈥檚 series, at his ranch outside Los Angeles. Given the popularity of the show鈥攆our seasons, an Amazon Prime 颅release, and season five in the works鈥擨 had assumed that Fimmel鈥檚 pad would be some secluded midcentury hideout with a well-stocked kitchen and a gym worthy of a broadsword slinger who鈥檇 also recently anchored a Warcraft film adaptation that made nearly half a billion dollars worldwide.聽
But the address led to a dusty outdoor riding arena just off the highway, where Fimmel, barefoot in a pair of camo cargo shorts and a surf tee, greeted me from the back of his 15-year-old chestnut quarter horse, Wanker.
鈥淚鈥檓 just getting him warmed up so he doesn鈥檛 buck you off,鈥 says Fimmel, who is 37 and was raised on a dairy farm in Echuca, Australia. He grew up working in his family鈥檚 cherry orchards, camping and fishing with his two older brothers, and surfing behind dirt bikes in irrigation canals. He came to L.A. when he was 21, after being scouted by a modeling agency and dropping out of architecture school. Almost immediately, he was stopping traffic on billboards modeling Calvin Klein underwear.聽
Among a generation who鈥檝e shunned material possessions, Fimmel has achieved an advanced state of stoic minimalism.
Still mounted, Fimmel led me in my rental car up to his broasis, which, it quickly became clear, was actually a dilapidated 18-foot beige and white Nomad travel trailer parked permanently in the shade of a pepper tree between a water tank and the tack shed.聽
鈥淕ot it real cheap, over in Phelan,鈥 says Fimmel. 鈥淭owing it back, the side panels were flapping, and the back door fell off.鈥 The ranch belongs to longtime stunt coordinator Walter Scott. Fimmel showed up in 2010 looking for riding lessons ahead of a big-screen remake of the 1960s TV show Big Valley. Most of the work around his family鈥檚 farm was performed on ATVs, so he was a novice horseman.
鈥淛ust ask me about when I first met him,鈥 says Scott. 鈥淗e says he knew about horses鈥攅verything he learned right here, on that horse. Roping and everything. Him and another guy came. He never left.鈥
The film went down in flames after the director was convicted of committing tax-credit fraud on a previous project, but Fimmel stuck around the stable and now squats there when he鈥檚 not traveling. 鈥淥ut here it鈥檚 just good people. No industry,鈥 Fimmel explains. 鈥淛ust the stunt boys.鈥
Among a generation who鈥檝e shunned material possessions as barriers to life experience, Fimmel has achieved an advanced state of stoic minimalism. According to him, his only worldly possessions are Wanker, the Craigslist trailer (which now has air-颅conditioning), and a red 1982 GMC stepside pickup with a 鈥73 bed (which does not). 颅Before the trailer, he lived in an old Ford Econoline with a pop-up bed.聽
鈥淚t got taken off me,鈥 he says. 鈥淚t wasn鈥檛 road worthy.鈥 Unlike the cool kids who gussy up Sprinter vans and Westfalias, Fimmel only recently upgraded from a flip phone to an iPhone 4, does no social media, and rarely checks his e-mail. 鈥淚鈥檓 always getting texts asking why I鈥檓 not responding on Instagram or Facebook, and I鈥檓 like, 鈥業t鈥檚 not me. You鈥檙e writing to some stranger.鈥 鈥澛
Fimmel helped me into the saddle, and we headed out for a hack on a trail behind the property, him riding Scott鈥檚 horse Josey. It was hot, and Wanker wanted to stop in the shade. Fimmel鈥檚 ultimate goal is to save as much money as he can and end up back in Australia on a nice spread鈥斺渨ith three or four wives,鈥 he jokes, though at the moment he says of the opposite sex, 鈥淭hey all hate me, although it鈥檚 not for lack of trying. When you do a lot of traveling, it鈥檚 hard.鈥澛
He eats what he wants, works out only when he鈥檚 forced to, and does his drinking at the local VFW hall. But for a guy who regrets his modeling days and says he wasn鈥檛 looking to get into acting鈥斺淪till not looking to, mate鈥濃攈e鈥檚 stripped away everything else. If he could, he鈥檇 spend three months studying for each of his parts. 鈥淵ou get sucked into it, trying to be good at it,鈥 he says. 鈥淚 wish you could make money and people never saw what you did. Then you could relax and not care about how bad you are.鈥
It鈥檚 the proper amount of self-hatred for an action hero who鈥檚 actually good at his craft鈥攎ore Viggo Mortensen than Chris Hemsworth. He starts shooting a blockbuster bank-heist film, Finding Steve McQueen, in September, starring alongside Kate Bosworth and Forest Whitaker.聽
Fimmel is extraordinarily soft-spoken鈥攊ntroverted, even鈥攆or a guy at risk of being typecast as a barbarian. At an interview with three of his Vikings castmates at Comic-Con in July, Fimmel managed to get through the entire Q&A saying exactly zero words. But he鈥檚 only now being tested in parts with more range, like his supporting role as a bearded-hipster pickle entrepreneur in the 2016 roman颅tic comedy Maggie鈥檚 Plan and a loving, alcoholic father in an adaptation of the horse-racing novel Lean on Pete that was shot in Oregon and wrapped this summer. On that project, he ducked out for a few days to reel in his first steelhead with a friend at the mouth of the Chehalis River.聽
It was nearly 100 degrees on the trail. The Blue Cut Fire had just broken out in San Bernardino, and disaster-relief crews were a constant presence on the highway. Each of the past three summers, Fimmel has escaped this kind of heat, shooting Vikings in the cold mists of Ireland. The Ragnar role even landed him an endorsement deal as the face of high-end down-jacket company Canada Goose, which photographed him earlier this year among the icebergs of Newfoundland.聽
Here, though, it was just really hot. We put the horses up, Fimmel hosed Wanker down, and we went for a Bud Light at the VFW. If any of the vets and bikers recognized him, they didn鈥檛 show it. This time next year, it may not be so easy.