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May 21, 2012

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Legendary Actor John Hurt Channels Melancholia with Lars von Trier


Legendary British performer John Hurt has consistently exemplified the qualities of an on-screen chameleon, skillfully transforming and inhabiting roles often marked by physical and psychological struggles.

In 10 Rillington Place (1971), he toyed with mental anguish as a murderer wrongly accused. Then, in The Naked Civil Servant (1975), he so embodied the part of Quentin Crisp, a troubled and flamboyantly gay writer, actor and raconteur, that he earned an Emmy. Later, he played the part of the crazed emperor Caligula in “I, Claudius” (1976), a tortured Turkish inmate in Midnight Express (1978) and the space explorer Kane, whose body is violently overtaken by a chest-exploding monster, in Ridley Scott’s Alien (1979).

All very memorable. But among Hurt’s characters, perhaps none are more memorable than the gentle, disfigured John Merrick in David Lynch’s classic study on human dignity, The Elephant Man (1980).

Surprisingly, says Hurt, “All of those [roles], in a sense, were the least challenging, because they were such wonderful parts to play.”

A native of Derbyshire, England, John Hurt studied at the Royal Academy of Dramatic Art and went on to solidify his acting chops on stage, where he took on many challenging roles, well before the likes of Merrick or Crisp.

“What’s really challenging,” notes Hurt, “is when you don’t have a very good part and someone wants it to be number one on the charts. That’s tough. That’s really tough.” Challenges aside, Hurt has found excellence in every genre, from science fiction (1984) to children’s fantasy (Harry Potter). He has even lent his distinguished voice to such projects as Watership Down (1978), The Lord of the Rings (1978) and The Black Cauldron (1985).

After narrating two of Lars von Trier’s films, Dogville and Manderlay, Hurt said told von Trier: “‘You keep giving me the narration, but you never put me in front of the camera!’ Shortly after, he called my bluff and asked me to do this part.”

“This part” is his role in von Trier’s apocalyptic drama Melancholia, a deeply meditative film that follows the lives of two sisters (Kirsten Dunst and Charlotte Gainsbourg) struggling for meaning in their lives and relationships as a new planet rapidly approaches Earth. In the film, Hurt plays the girls’ fun-loving father, in another role that the gifted actor would undoubtedly categorize as “least challenging.”

Mark Sells (MM): Growing up in a small coal mining village near Chesterfield, you lived near a cinema, but weren’t allowed to visit, right? And your parents wanted you to become an artist. When and how were you able to cut footloose and focus on acting?

John Hurt (JH): Boy, you want a long story already! (laughs) My parents always loved the theater, but they came from a generation and a period where cinema was quite new. They weren’t sure about the cinema. They thought that it was a bit risqué. My father was a clergyman, and they loved the theater. They just couldn’t conceive of one of theirs being one of those on stage.

I didn’t really make the move from painting to drama until my father had disappeared into the mission field. He went to British Honduras [now Belize] and left me on my own to do what I wanted. So I went from Saint Martin’s School of Art to the Royal Academy. And I was very fortunate I got in, because I always thought the Royal Academy of Dramatic Art was where Laurence Olivier and John Gielgud went. The world was a much bigger place back then. You didn’t have all the information at your fingertips. But I got in on a small scholarship that allowed me to go through.

MM: Do you still paint today?

JH: I do, yes. And I’m very pleased that I didn’t go straight into acting, because it’s an interest and an activity that I’m passionately fond of.

MM: Throughout your career, you’ve managed to juggle high profile audience pleasers with critically acclaimed dramatic films. What criteria do you use in selecting a role?

JH: My basic criteria with any film is that it should stand the chance of succeeding on the level that it is intended to succeed on. It really doesn’t matter whether it’s a comedy, a drama, an art film or a blockbuster, as long as it stands the chance of succeeding on that level or in that style.

Then the next thing I ask myself is if there’s something I can do with the part that’s being offered to make it completely personal. Again, it really doesn’t matter if it’s a lead, a supporting part, a cameo, etc.—as long as I can add something to it. This simple approach keeps my life varied, which I enjoy.

MM: Is there a character you haven’t portrayed that you wish you could play?

JH: That’s a very interesting question, because I’ve never really had ambitions to play any particular thing or any particular person. I’ve never been the kind of actor dying to play Hamlet or Lear or those sorts of things.

In essence, I consider myself the result of other people’s imagination. Half the things that I’ve done, I would never have thought of for myself. It’s always been at somebody else’s suggestion. And that’s the way I like it.

The problem with allowing actors to have too much say in what they play is that they would only do the parts that they would see themselves doing. And that’s enormously limiting if you think about it, i.e., I would never have thought of myself to play Caligula, quite honestly. But somebody else did.

MM: Was it somebody else’s suggestion that you do Melancholia?

JH: Actually, what attracted me to Melancholia was Lars von Trier. He is one of a small group of directors that, if he calls you up to do a film, you say “Where and when?” There aren’t very many. There’s Jim Jarmusch. And Billy Bob Thornton, who I just worked with [in Jayne Mansfield’s Car]. But it’s a very select group.

The film came about because I had done the narration for Dogville and Manderlay, which are exceptional films. But I had never worked in front of the camera with him. So, I said: ‘You keep giving me the narration, but you never put me in front of the camera!’ Then, one day, he called my bluff and asked me to do this part. And I’m so glad he did, because I got to work with Kirsten, and she’s absolutely sensational in it.

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