Ian Richardson CBE
1934-2007
In 1989, the Royal Shakespeare Company actors were rehearsing Trevor
Nunn's production of
Othello in a church hall in London when
the news reached us that Laurence Olivier had died. The greatest
theatre man of our time was gone. The curtain had fallen. It
seemed heartless to proceed, particularly with a play that Olivier had
triumphed in, so we abandoned rehearsals as
Trevor and I went off to record our tributes for BBC.
I remembered this yesterday afternoon, with more bad news at
rehearsals, again with Trevor and the RSC. We were discussing the
storm scenes in
King Lear. Jonathan Hyde blurted out his
wife had just phoned to say Ian Richardson had died in his sleep, aged 72.
It seemed incredible. I had seen him so recently onstage, gloriously
strutting as Epicure Mammon in the National Theatre's
The Alchemist. Trevor reminisced about his first
major production for the RSC, The Revenger's Tragedy,
with Richardson starring as Vendice. This was but one of a string of
dramatic villains which culminated, as far as the general public is
concerned, on television, with his dastardly Urquart, the Prime Minister in
Michael Dobbs' House of Cards.
Over a decade or more, Richardson was a shining star at Stratford
for the RSC. When I played the Brooklyn Academy of Music in
1974, where he had just shared
Richard 11 and Bolingbroke with Richard Pasco on an RSC tour, I was mistaken
for him a couple of times. The next year we were both cast in
The Marquis of Keith,
again for the RSC. It is not an easy play and mine a fiendish part.
Richardson as ever was effortlessly in charge of his own, whilst I
floundered, even to the extent of forgetting my lines at a number of
performances. At each shameful dry, Ian helped me through by providing
a subtle prompt and although he must have disapproved of what can only be
called "an error in stagecraft", he never showed it. He was a company
man and a gentleman.
He was brought up in Scotland although drama school training had
eradicated his native accent. He was most famous for his voice which could
mellifluously flute or bellow, an instrument that any Lear would envy.
Of late he regretted that he wasn't much considered for the great roles he
was fitted to play and said something to the effect that "Lear only goes to
people like McKellen these days". On and off stage he hid what perhaps he
felt to be a failing: his height. A few inches short of six feet, he
always wore lifts hidden within his shoes. Yet he needn't have
worried. Striding on as Vendice, Richard 111, Angelo, or Richard 11 he
seemed as imposing as the tallest of actors. Within him was the fire
and the power. It exploded in the jealousy of his magnificent Ford in
The Merry Wives of Windsor just
as effectively as in the tragic roles. If only he had played King
Lear. -- Ian McKellen, 10 February 2007 |

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