The Smell Of The Greasepaint
Dec. 14th, 2007 12:00 pmI've never been much of a theatre goer. If I'm honest I find theatre disappointing.
I wish I'd seen Olivier on stage. I really do. Maybe then I'd have understood why he's supposed to be so great.
I saw Alec Guinness in one of Alan Bennett's plays about spies. It was awfully talky. I remember the verbal music and a wonderful twitchy, mini-nervous breakdown thing he did at the end.
I saw Antony Hopkins as Lear. Not very good. Hopkins admitted afterwards he really didn't understand what he was doing. The best thing in that production was Anna Massey's Goneril.
Dorothy Tutin and Alec McCowen as Antony and Cleopatra. Both of them woefully miscast. That's the nearest I've come to falling asleep during a show.
Charlton Heston in the Caine Mutiny, Lauren Bacall in Sweet Bird of Youth: just because you can fill the screen doesn't mean you can hold the stage.
Good experiences? David Warner's Hamlet- and a sexy, greenwoody As You Like It in Manchester with Janet McTeer as Rosalind.
I wish I'd seen Olivier on stage. I really do. Maybe then I'd have understood why he's supposed to be so great.
I saw Alec Guinness in one of Alan Bennett's plays about spies. It was awfully talky. I remember the verbal music and a wonderful twitchy, mini-nervous breakdown thing he did at the end.
I saw Antony Hopkins as Lear. Not very good. Hopkins admitted afterwards he really didn't understand what he was doing. The best thing in that production was Anna Massey's Goneril.
Dorothy Tutin and Alec McCowen as Antony and Cleopatra. Both of them woefully miscast. That's the nearest I've come to falling asleep during a show.
Charlton Heston in the Caine Mutiny, Lauren Bacall in Sweet Bird of Youth: just because you can fill the screen doesn't mean you can hold the stage.
Good experiences? David Warner's Hamlet- and a sexy, greenwoody As You Like It in Manchester with Janet McTeer as Rosalind.
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Date: 2007-12-14 12:50 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2007-12-14 01:45 pm (UTC)I saw it at college in the late 80's.
It's the context for my "I-Died-on-Stage-With-Ian-McKellan" story!
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Date: 2007-12-14 01:58 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2007-12-15 07:40 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2007-12-15 09:49 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2007-12-15 10:46 pm (UTC)I'm interested in hearing what you think when you see it.
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Date: 2007-12-14 04:40 pm (UTC)I also saw Alan Howard in The Hollow Crown series done by Terry Hands. He was awesome.
Basically I agree with Poliphilio - I don't see what the fuss is all about Olivier.
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Date: 2007-12-14 12:58 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2007-12-14 02:00 pm (UTC)And (brag, brag) I was at school with his son Jeremy- a promising actor who died young.
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Date: 2007-12-14 09:42 pm (UTC)A terrific play, ad his follow-up "The Provoked Wife" is even better.
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Date: 2007-12-14 10:50 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2007-12-14 01:54 pm (UTC)One of my favorite performances was our local theater's production of Arson and Old Lace, which I'd never seen before. I loved it. The wolfling loved it. We rented the movie, and even though I'm a Cary Grant fan, I enjoyed the play much more.
It's all about what the actors bring to the performance -- truth-telling as well as technical skill -- and what the director does to shape it all.
My favorite target for film-director bashing is Geroge Lucas, who can take talented actors, people capable of giving extrordinary performances, and transform them into wooden puppets.
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Date: 2007-12-14 02:05 pm (UTC)And that's another reason why I'm a bit down on Olivier. I think it's absurd to call a man the greatest actor of the century when he never entirely mastered the movies.
For me the greatest actor of the last century is Jimmy Stewart.
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Date: 2007-12-14 04:42 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2007-12-14 05:45 pm (UTC)He narrates In The Night Garden- the new(ish) TV show for very small children. It's a delight.
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Date: 2007-12-14 07:57 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2007-12-14 10:37 pm (UTC)Perhaps that's why he got the Night Garden gig.
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Date: 2007-12-14 07:02 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2007-12-14 07:48 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2007-12-15 07:44 pm (UTC)Salinger's character, Holden Caulfield, calls Olivier a "phony."
Personally, I love Branaugh's Hamlet, although my favorite is Kevin Klein's Hamlet --
http://www.amazon.com/Shakespeare-Festival-Broadway-Theatre-Archive/dp/B00005NG0C
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Date: 2007-12-15 09:54 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2007-12-14 02:54 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2007-12-14 03:39 pm (UTC)Good actors, both of them.
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Date: 2007-12-14 03:35 pm (UTC)I saw a live production of "Horsefeathers" that was played a little less broadly and (IMHO) much more funny than the Marx Brothers ever were. (David Canary was the star of that one.)
I saw Jill St. John and Robert Wagner in "Love Letters" (in Waterloo, Ontario).
oooh, you saw Anna Massey LIVE? (turns green with envy)
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Date: 2007-12-14 04:07 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2007-12-14 04:08 pm (UTC)Film is simply an entirely different medium. I wish I went out to see more plays...
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Date: 2007-12-14 04:21 pm (UTC)Can I recommend the film of Macbeth with the young McKellen and Judy Dench? It's a record of an RSC stage production and- to my mind- just about as good as it gets.
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Date: 2007-12-14 04:45 pm (UTC)And now he triumphs in Panto - What a guy!
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Date: 2007-12-14 05:55 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2007-12-14 05:41 pm (UTC)