"My
Favourite Films"
Sunday Telegraph, 1990
I'm always very scathing about actors who don't go to the theatre, but
I'm one who doesn't go to the cinema very much because I was brought up to
go to the theatre rather than the flicks, as we called them then.
In Wigan and Bolton in the Forties there were cinemas, but there were
also theatres, and because my parents preferred to go to the weekly theatre,
I picked up that habit and immediately enjoyed it. If I was going out
on my own in the evening I'd always go to the theatre, whereas most of my
contemporaries went to the flicks.
I saw things like Queen Elizabeth Slept Here, a great range of
plays from Ben Travers, John Gielgud as Lear in Manchester, musicals, but
very little opera and ballet; musically, my taste is very catholic.
All that theatre-going must have influenced me and my sister, who is five
years older than me. She is now an amateur actress and wardrobe
mistress in East Anglia.
Like most children of my generation, I was an ABC minor and went to
Saturday morning cinema shows. I remember being entranced by Robert
Newton as Long John Silver in Treasure Island and watching The
Broken Arrow, although on the whole I don't like Westerns. I can
remember having nightmares about the witch on the broomstick in The
Wizard of Oz and being very scared by Bambi.
I was dotty about Ivor Novello and I remember going to see a film
called The Dancing Years and queuing up for Patricia Dainton's
autograph afterwards; she was on a promotional tour for the film — what must
she have thought of the North of England!
There was a memorable occasion when we were on holiday in Bournemouth
and my father took my sister and me to see Olivier's Hamlet on
Sunday, soon after cinemas had been opened on that day. We weren't
allowed in until the five o'clock performance because children were supposed
to be at Sunday school until then; I don't know if they would have allowed
Jewish children in.
Most Shakespeare on film is not good — the best is Trevor Nunn's video
of Macbeth. I haven't
seen Kenneth Branagh's Henry V yet. My favourite Olivier film
is The Entertainer because he is in such amazing control of his
performance. While he was making the film, he was also playing
Coriolanus at Stratford and had a specially refitted ambulance to drive him
between there and Morecambe.
There's a wonderful anecdote about him and the BBC newsreader
Mac-Donald Hobley, who was also in it — that they had just finished a scene
on location when a lady stopped them and asked for Hobley's autograph,
saying "And is your friend an actor?"
There are various film genres that I dislike. Cartoons bore the
pants off me; I don't like Westerns because you can always work out what's
going to happen; and horror films either frighten me to death or are
ridiculous. Monsieur Hulot's Holiday suits my sense of humour.
It's virtually silent and the jokes are so visual and tell you so much about
people's characters. My comic heroes are the silent ones, like Buster
Keaton, Charlie Chaplin and Laurel and Hardy.
Dr Strangelove is a very funny, very disturbing film in which
Peter Sellers gives a gigantic performance. It's extraordinary that
such an anti-nuclear film was made at a time when CND was frowned upon, and
that the money should be put up by America for something that openly
criticised American foreign policy.
Nobody could claim that Fred Astaire was a great actor or singer; nor
was he, in repose, very attractive to look at. But, of course, all
those inadequacies are irrelevant the minute he starts to dance — such charm
and wit infuses all his choreography. He's my favourite dancer — you
come away from one of his films, such as Top Hat, exhausted and full
of admiration. He's a thousand miles ahead of the English dancers of
the same period, like Jack Buchanan and Jack Hulbert.
Mephisto made a great impact on me, especially the performance
of Klaus Maria Brandauer. He plays a German actor who collaborates
with the Nazis and, although he began as a rebel, realises that if he's
going to get on as an actor he will have to play the party game. He is
a terrible traitor to his ideals, but it's what we all do.
Torch Song Trilogy is the first film, as far as I know, that
presents the gay characters within it as if they are normal and the
heterosexual characters as the strangers in the society. In most
films, homosexuals are presented as freaks. Torch Song has a
great deal of humour and humanity, and is a low-budget movie that works.
The common thread through these films is that they have a great
performer at the centre of them. I didn't choose them with this in
mind, but, unwittingly, I've probably named some of the great actors in my
lifetime. -- Ian McKellen, 1990

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Monsieur
Hulot's Holiday (Jacques Tati, 1953)
Top Hat (Mark Sandrich, 1935)
The Entertainer (Tony Richardson,
1960)
Dr Strangelove; or, How I Learned to
Stop Worrying and Love the Bomb (Stanley Kubrick, 1963)
Mephisto (Istvan Szabo,
1981)
Torch Song Trilogy (Paul
Bogart, 1988)
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