Glenda Jackson
Jan. 5th, 2014 10:45 amIntroducing a sketch from The Morecambe and Wise Show last night, Penelope Keith explained- I suppose because it was thought necessary- that Glenda Jackson was once a very big star indeed. The sketch- featuring Jackson as Cleopatra- included a running joke about the Oscar she won for Women in Love.
Jackson belongs to that itchy and scratchy generation of post-war actors who found their chosen career unserious. Where many of her male contemporaries- like Peter O'Toole and her co-star Oliver Reed- diluted their talent with drink, she- like Vanessa Redgrave and Jane Fonda- pursued a parallel career in left-wing politics. In 1992 she quit acting altogether to stand for parliament, trading stardom for a career of relative obscurity as junior minister and back-bencher, punctuated by occasional, high-profile, episodes of windmill-tilting. Had she stayed where she was there'd have been no need to gloss her name for a contemporary TV audience and Judy Dench's late career surge might never have happened- because who would have offered Dench those iconic roles of hers if Jackson- with two Oscars under her belt- had still been available?
I refuse to say, "what a waste", because who knows what private karma Jackson needed to work out or what satisfactions she has enjoyed in her later life but it's hard not to regret the body of work she chose not to give us.
Jackson belongs to that itchy and scratchy generation of post-war actors who found their chosen career unserious. Where many of her male contemporaries- like Peter O'Toole and her co-star Oliver Reed- diluted their talent with drink, she- like Vanessa Redgrave and Jane Fonda- pursued a parallel career in left-wing politics. In 1992 she quit acting altogether to stand for parliament, trading stardom for a career of relative obscurity as junior minister and back-bencher, punctuated by occasional, high-profile, episodes of windmill-tilting. Had she stayed where she was there'd have been no need to gloss her name for a contemporary TV audience and Judy Dench's late career surge might never have happened- because who would have offered Dench those iconic roles of hers if Jackson- with two Oscars under her belt- had still been available?
I refuse to say, "what a waste", because who knows what private karma Jackson needed to work out or what satisfactions she has enjoyed in her later life but it's hard not to regret the body of work she chose not to give us.
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Date: 2014-01-05 11:42 am (UTC)no subject
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Date: 2014-01-05 12:30 pm (UTC)Richard Burton
Peter O'Toole
Nicol Williamson
Oliver Reed
Richard Harris
What the hell was wrong with them?
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Date: 2014-01-05 12:40 pm (UTC)Or - that they were addicts, pure and simple. And let's face it, acting is one career that is an enabler. Late nights, irregular work, stardom, isolation, loneliness. And the benefit that they were stars when being an actor was seen as mysterious and untochable, unlike today's world where I can tweet people I've just seen in the cinema.
Can I cheekily add you missed Marlon Brando? Pretty much all of the post-60s US actors have aped Brando - from Sean Penn to Stallone. And he went mad. Jack Nicholson, on the other hand, has also drink 'n drugged n' shagged his way through life, but somehow he's stayed relatively in tact. I suspect its because Jack is the kind of man who gets how ridiculous Hollywood is, and rather than getting mournful, joins us in laughing at it.
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Date: 2014-01-05 01:32 pm (UTC)I left Brando out for a couple of reasons. Firstly because I don't like his work (it's as if he's always acting into a mirror) and secondly because his decline was untypical. The other guys got hung up on booze but what exactly did Brando get hung up on- himself, perhaps? As you say, he went mad.
Nicholson is a great pro. He likes a laff but he's never lost sight of his craft. Give him the opportunity and he'll seize it. He's never done anything to sabotage his career.
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Date: 2014-01-05 02:59 pm (UTC)However...Corey Haim was a drug user in the 80s, and died broke, alone, and depressed in a crappy part of LA a couple of years ago. Perhaps the biggest difference is Barrymore/Downey can both act.
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