gary oldman on becoming winston churchill
Last Updated : GMT 09:40:38
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Last Updated : GMT 09:40:38
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Gary Oldman on becoming Winston Churchill

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Themuslimchronicle, themuslimchronicleGary Oldman on becoming Winston Churchill

Gary Oldman
London - Muslimchronicle

He fought with distinction and held almost every major office in Britain. He commanded a country in the midst of world war and is credited with inventing the social safety net. He has been called an imperialist and a warmonger. A drunk and a racist. He won the Nobel Prize for Literature, rivalled only Shakespeare in his prolific literary output, and painted more than 500 pictures in his lifetime. And, some argue, he single-handedly saved civilization.

Winston Churchill was a complex and contradictory leader unlike any in recent history. And he also presents one of the most sought-after and challenging roles for any actor worth his salt.

 

“He could pitch. He could bat. He could run,” Gary Oldman said in a recent interview. “He’s the ultimate all-rounder.”

Oldman, a British lion in his own right, takes on Churchill in Darkest Hour. The movie, directed by Joe Wright, chronicles the defining 28 days in 1940 when Churchill was made prime minister and finally convinced Britain to stay the course and fight Hitler — when the fate of the world hung in the balance. The film is an often tense character study, exposing Churchill’s own moments of self-doubt and the resistance he faced from the public, his party and his king.

Countless movies have been made about Churchill, but Wright was drawn to this particular period because of what that uncertainty revealed about the man. “I was fascinated by the portrayal of Churchill as a human being,” Wright said. “He’s become such an icon that he’s either untouchable or he’s a demon. To take him down from his perch and not throw him in the gutter but look at him eye to eye” was the appeal for him.

The movie also tries to understand Churchill through his use of language, with the sound of typewriters constantly clacking in the background. “They are the most iconic speeches in the history of the English language and they were all written in 28 days, so how these speeches came to be and how he came to express the will and the sentiment of the nation is really the subject,” Wright added.

In one of the most stirring scenes, Churchill famously addresses the House of Commons, arguing that the British need to face the Nazi threat at all costs: “If we fail, then the whole world, including the United States, including all that we have known and cared for, will sink into the abyss of a new Dark Age made more sinister, and perhaps more protracted, by the lights of perverted science. Let us therefore brace ourselves to our duties, and so bear ourselves that, if the British Empire and its Commonwealth last for a thousand years, men will still say, ‘This was their finest hour.’”

Speaking those words is a dream for actors, but the role also represents an enormous risk, Oldman said, where you could easily slip into caricature. “He’s quite often portrayed as old, grumpy, a curmudgeon. Lugubrious and grunting and shouting,” Oldman said. “That’s how I’ve seen him played and I think that contaminated my own thinking about him.”

To get at the man beneath those cigar-puffing, jowly stereotypes, enhanced by makeup, Oldman spent four months researching and preparing for the role — watching footage, reading his many works and those of biographers like Martin Gilbert and even the politician Boris Johnson. He visited Churchill’s family homes, Chartwell and Blenheim Palace, and talked to people who knew him. “I discovered a man who was not as fat as we all thought he was in 1940 and who had really an athletic tread. He skipped around and he had this sort of stoop and it was forward moving,” Oldman said, adding, “There’s a real twinkle in the eye, and he has humour. The Churchill I saw and I discovered had charm.”

Oldman also spent time in the war rooms in Westminster where those fateful decisions were made, and sat in the great man’s chair. “On the left-hand arm of the chair were these marks where he had made scratches with his nails,” the actor recalled. “And on the right-hand side were scratches from his ring that he used to wear. He was in this chair throughout the war, so you can imagine the stress and strain that he was under.”

What many people now fail to realise, he added, is “how precariously close he came to disaster” and that he was himself resistant to war. “His most powerful and beautiful words were about the horror of war.”

With Darkest Hour, Oldman now joins a long line of actors who have played Churchill, including Albert Finney, Richard Burton and even a satire featuring Christian Slater.

___

Don’t miss it!

Darkest Hour releases in the UAE on January 11.

OTHER MEMORABLE WINSTON CHURCHILL ROLES

— Brian Cox, Churchill (2017)
In Jonathan Teplitzky’s recent film, Cox plays Churchill opposite Miranda Richardson as his devoted wife, Clemmie, during the 96 hours leading up to D-Day. Cox’s Churchill, one reviewer in The Telegraph wrote, was “a distant cousin of a brown bear, or a Hereford bull, snuffling and stalking through his subterranean Whitehall war rooms, champing at underlings and barking at his reflection.”

 

— John Lithgow, The Crown (2016)
Lithgow’s version often comes across as a grandfatherly figure to Claire Foy’s Queen Elizabeth II in this Netflix series. To get into character, he donned a fat suit, a wig and plumpers to swell his jowls. He told The Los Angeles Times, “I never would have chosen myself” for the role. “I’m so different than him. I’m so tall and so American.” Still, his portrayal won him an Emmy in 2017.

 

— Timothy Spall, The King’s Speech (2010)
There’s been much debate over what this movie got right and wrong about the rise of George VI — see Christopher Hitchens’ writings for withering criticism. But Spall proved a welcome addition in a cameo as Churchill. So much so that he was invited to perch atop a fake Big Ben and perform as Churchill giving Caliban’s speech from The Tempest at the closing ceremony of the London Olympics.

 

— Rod Taylor, Inglourious Basterds (2009)
Taylor, who died in 2015, preferred a bow tie for his portrayal in Quentin Tarantino’s film. Taylor reportedly suggested the director try Albert Finney instead, but Tarantino said his heart was set on Taylor and the actor accepted.

 

— Brendan Gleeson, Into the Storm (2009)
In a sequel to HBO’s award-winning film The Gathering Storm, which starred Albert Finney, Gleeson here plays Churchill recalling in flashback his glory days during the war. Gleeson faced several challenges — he was 15 years younger and far taller than Churchill’s 5 feet 6 inches. But like many British actors before him, Gleeson said the biggest obstacle was getting “the idea of him as a hero out of my head.”

source: GULF NEWS

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