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- <text id=94TT0339>
- <title>
- Mar. 21, 1994: The Arts & Media:Cinema
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1994
- Mar. 21, 1994 Hard Times For Hillary
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- THE ARTS & MEDIA, Page 66
- Cinema
- Dashing Danie
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>He can play it all, from Hamlet to Hawkeye. For Daniel Day-Lewis,
- acting is a very serious game.
- </p>
- <p>By Richard Corliss--Reported by Carrie Ross Welch/Dublin
- </p>
- <p> It is an actor's passion to observe the world. It is his art
- to become what he observes. And finally it is his job to let
- the world observe him. It's hard work, reconciling the natures
- of voyeur and exhibitionist. And when stardom falls on an actor,
- it is tougher to play the role demanded by the press and public:
- himself.
- </p>
- <p> It is a role Daniel Day-Lewis would rather avoid. "I love to
- sit and watch people. I love to sit and listen to people. And
- I do bitterly resent that it's not always possible now, because
- I'm an object of scrutiny. When the cloak which allows you to
- observe is stripped from you, then the most useful and indeed
- fascinating tool of your work is taken with it."
- </p>
- <p> Yet the world watches Day-Lewis. And with good reason. At 36,
- he is arguably the most accomplished film actor of his generation:
- handsome and wily, fierce and delicate, bold enough to submerge
- himself in a role, strong enough for his charismatic intelligence
- to shine through. He knows the camera is anX ray, a polygraph,
- searching his face for hints of lies and evasion. He had better
- not just act his character but also be it. That is Day-Lewis'
- goal and gift: to be so true to his characters that they need
- never be sentimentalized, made to seem finer, grander, wickeder
- or more appealing.
- </p>
- <p> Some actors have depth but not breadth. You won't see Robert
- De Niro or Gerard Depardieu (two actors Day-Lewis greatly admires)
- play Edwardian dandies. But you will see Daniel Day-Lewis play
- English goons, Irish louts and American woodsmen. In 1986, in
- the early bloom of his career, his first two major English movies
- opened back to back in the U.S. He was a purring snob in A Room
- with a View, an ex-fascist gay punk in My Beautiful Laundrette.
- Just like that, a chameleonic star was born.
- </p>
- <p> The Day-Lewis gallery grew. He earned an Oscar for best actor
- as Christy Brown, the Irish painter and writer crippled by cerebral
- palsy, in the 1989 My Left Foot. He reached dreamboat status
- as Hawkeye in The Last of the Mohicans (1992). And in his last
- two films, another rep-company parlay. He is Newland Archer,
- the sensitive 1870s New York City lawyer, in Martin Scorsese's
- rapturously sedate The Age of Innocence. He is Irish hell-raiser
- Gerry Conlon, framed and imprisoned with his saintly dad (Oscar
- nominee Pete Postlethwaite) for an I.R.A. bombing, in Jim Sheridan's
- In the Name of the Father. They are an amazing pair, Newland
- and Gerry, two men in their own prisons--one surrendering
- his passion to Old New York civility, the other maturing from
- Belfast bad boy to crusading son.
- </p>
- <p> Newland represents perhaps the most pristine, focused work of
- Day-Lewis' career. In the Name of the Father, a triumph of sustained
- and shaded rage, earned Day-Lewis an Academy Award nomination
- for Best Actor. He probably won't win; Tom Hanks is considered
- a lock for his role as an AIDS sufferer in Philadelphia. But
- even if that happens, it will be a tribute to Day-Lewis' Hollywood
- clout because he was offered and declined the Hanks role--as he did the role of Lestat, now taken by Tom Cruise, in Interview
- with the Vampire.
- </p>
- <p> In Day-Lewis, who was reared in England yet carries an Irish
- passport, there is a strong streak of Eire: the tale-spinning,
- the mordant thoughtfulness, the smile in his soft voice that
- lightens his remarks with a puckish irony. His father Cecil
- was the Irish-born poet laureate of England. His mother is actress
- Jill Balcon, whose Baltic Jewish father, Sir Michael Balcon,
- ran Ealing Studios, Britain's renowned comedy factory. Daniel's
- sister Tamasin, four years older, is a documentary filmmaker
- and writer on food.
- </p>
- <p> Daniel grew up in the middle-class London suburb of Greenwich.
- Home life was akin to A Room with a View; street life was My
- Beautiful Laundrette, a jumble of good times and hard prejudices.
- "In my case," he says in his gently urgent, upper-class voice,
- "they could have chosen any one of a number of insults, since
- I was Irish and Jewish, and from a different class to most of
- the kids. They knew that because of my voice. But children are
- very adaptable. They're great performers: they perform for their
- parents all the time, to find out how to get what they want."
- And so Daniel, from the posh side of town, took on his first
- role and accent: that of the working-class lad. "To me, it was
- absolutely unconscious. It was raw survival."
- </p>
- <p> Survival proved harder when he was sent to Sevenoaks School
- in Kent. "The place was alien and unattractive in every single
- one of its millions of details. A feeling of nausea stayed with
- me from the moment I got there until the moment I left. And
- there was the code of honor, so you never talk about your suffering.
- So you have to do it in silence. Or find a place where you can
- be on your own and scream." This is the voice of the actor-dramatist,
- who can both live in the moment of that schoolboy misery and
- glance back in amused, ironic perspective. Day-Lewis knows Sevenoaks
- was no dead end; it was where he found his two vocations: cabinetmaking
- and acting.
- </p>
- <p> His first acting role, in a Sevenoaks production of Cry, the
- Beloved Country, was, typically, a cue for school rebellion."I
- was playing a little black boy. I had to cover myself in black
- makeup, and what gave me the greatest pleasure was that I could
- never wash all of it off. Every night it sullied the sheets.
- For once I could be a legally disruptive influence." Soon after,
- he made his fleeting film debut, as a young vandal in Sunday,
- Bloody Sunday.
- </p>
- <p> In the Sevenoaks workshop, 12-year-old Daniel "demanded to make
- a Ping-Pong table, which to their credit they let me do. All
- my life's ambition went into this table. I took it home; we
- used it for years." That first experience working with wood
- "was the start of what became one of my greatest abiding loves."
- </p>
- <p> He has no regrets about Bedales, the liberal school where Tamasin
- was already boarding. Students worked in the loom house, the
- pottery barn, the woodwork shop. "I had the happiest days of
- my life there," he says. "After I left, I struggled for a year
- and a half in a fog of gloom from the sheer loss of that place."
- </p>
- <p> Out of the fog and into the footlights: at 20 Daniel joined
- the Bristol Old Vic Theatre School, where he understudied Postlethwaite.
- Watching the young actor, Postlethwaite recalls, "We all saw
- all this extraordinary pyrotechnic work going on, and we thought,
- `Oh, no, not another one of these! Can't we lose him somewhere?'
- " Not a chance. Day-Lewis joined the West End hit Another Country,
- then played Romeo for the Royal Shakespeare Company. In 1986
- he appeared in the National Theatre staging of The Futurists,
- directed by Richard Eyre. Three years later, he again teamed
- with Eyre for a notorious Hamlet.
- </p>
- <p> Day-Lewis' was a melodramatic Dane--an agitated youth who
- raced across his world of a stage as if late for a date with
- doom. It was a reckless, bravura turn that could sap any star's
- strength. In the middle of a performance toward the end of the
- run, Day-Lewis left the stage and did not return. The theater
- pages were full of rumors that he had seen his father as the
- ghost and was driven daft. "I have no bad feelings about my
- father, my father's ghost, the ghost of Hamlet, Hamlet, Shakespeare,
- Richard Eyre or the National Theatre. But I am continually encouraged
- to have bad feelings by those who want to perpetuate this idea
- because, in a moment of exhaustion, I left the stage and didn't
- go back again."
- </p>
- <p> Day-Lewis has long had a love-hate relationship with theater.
- And these days, you can hold the love. He says he is infuriated
- at the traditional notion "that film is the Faustian sellout.
- I personally think there are works in cinema history which have
- as much to say to us as any great piece of theater. It's never
- been an overriding ambition of mine to become what they call
- in Britain a classical actor. It's been a number of people's
- ambition on my behalf--but that's just because of my nose.
- I was given a nose they couldn't wait to put into various costumes
- and move around the stage."
- </p>
- <p> The beginning of Day-Lewis' adult work in films was a bit part
- in the 1982 Gandhi. Soon he was in the South Seas shooting The
- Bounty, where he skulks and sulks handsomely as the craven first
- mate of Anthony Hopkins' Captain Bligh. It was the first of
- many roles in which he cast himself against heroic type. Believing
- that acting was a nonstop education in the spectrum of personality,
- he went for characters at odds with his own: the cynical surgeon
- in The Unbearable Lightness of Being, a wimpy art appraiser
- in Stars and Bars, a missionary dentist in Eversmile, New Jersey.
- </p>
- <p> Day-Lewis' preparation for each film is a challenge of heroic
- proportions and minute detail. While making My Left Foot, he
- stayed in his wheelchair even when not on camera and taught
- himself to paint with his foot. For The Last of the Mohicans
- he learned how to skin animals and shoot muskets. In New York
- for The Age of Innocence, he checked into his Victorian-style
- hotel as Newland Archer and wandered the city dressed in 1870
- clothes. For In the Name of the Father, he lost a substantial
- amount of weight. In preparation for the scene where his character
- is battered into making a confession, he stayed awake for three
- nights, during which director Sheridan arranged to have him
- mock-interrogated by actual policemen.
- </p>
- <p> "It's in these months before the camera starts to turn," Day-Lewis
- says, "when you have this other life, and you can take any avenue
- toward it. The game is that you learn enough to stimulate the
- imagination into believing in the reality. Acting is always
- an imaginative piece of work. That is the beginning and the
- end of it."
- </p>
- <p> It must be tremendously debilitating, this training for a movie
- marathon of emotional exertions. "Actually, I'm a lazy bastard.
- I'm terribly happy doing nothing at all," Day-Lewis says. He
- has gone for two years without making a film--during which
- time he read, traveled, visited friends and rode his beloved
- Triumph motorbike.
- </p>
- <p> Just now, he is at liberty. No definite movie roles in his future.
- "Maybe there'll be a time when I'll bitterly regret not having
- made better use of my time. But that's unlikely because I know
- I can only be true to the impulses I have. And those impulses
- come very rarely."
- </p>
- <p> He has this humbling and sacred idea: that acting deserves as
- much craft, sweat and devotion as, say, cabinetmaking. "Acting
- is a vocation," he insists.
- </p>
- <p> "It has to be respected as such. But what tends to happen is
- that people go on contributing way beyond the time when they
- have anything within themselves to offer. By that time, usually
- it's all you know. It's a job, and you have to pay the bills.
- I find that sad. I'd rather pay the bills with any other means
- on God's earth than by performing. I think as soon as the work
- ceases to be vocational, you have a responsibility to get out."
- </p>
- <p> Daniel Day-Lewis wouldn't mind getting out right now, we guess,
- on a bike that takes him to no particular place at all. Where
- he can observe without being stared at, converse without being
- quoted. Where a consummate actor does not have to act. Where
- he can just be.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-