D anny Dyer is dressed in white and carrying a huge bouquet of flowers when I drop in on his Guardian photoshoot. “Hello, baby,” he says to me in a voice so bad-boy East End, so fabulously filthy, that he sounds like a parody of Danny Dyer . We’ve never met before, but you wouldn’t guess. Dyer has been in the limelight for 30 years, but never like this. As he approaches 50, he has become a middle-aged heart-throb. The week we meet, he’s on the front of Rolling Stone UK, and he can’t quite believe it. “I’m on it now , as we speak. And the cover before was Timothée Chalamet! Pretty cool! You know, I’ve had a long career and I couldn’t get on the cover of anything till now.” For much of his life, Dyer has been more infamous than famous, meat and drink to the redtop newspapers. Party animal? Tick. Boozer extraordinaire? Tick. Sex scandals? Tick. Dyer always provided good copy. But there was more to it than the debauchery. We rooted for him.…