Affichage des articles dont le libellé est interview. Afficher tous les articles
Affichage des articles dont le libellé est interview. Afficher tous les articles

samedi 20 juin 2015

Charles was at the Granada Festival

http://aboutactorcharlesdance.blogspot.fr/2015/06/charles-will-be-narrator-at.html

"Orchester Wiener Akademie Festival Granada 15 Charles Dance Egmont"
 
 from : https://www.facebook.com/FestivalGranadaOficial?fref=photo
 
with soprano Bernada Bodo
  
'La vida no para a los 35 años'
Charles Dance opened the International Festival of Music and Dance in Granada with a narrated version of the 'Egmont' by Beethoven and Goethe

He has the blue and look sharp there. Of those that do not leave you breathe. He is Charles Dance (Redditch, England, 1948), better known in our country lately as Tywin Lannister, the patriarch of a family of psychopaths who heads the top ten of evil in the HBO series 'Game of Thrones'.

The environment in which we receive has something of 'King's Landing: the Alhambra Palace Hotel' with its neo-Arab taste of the early twentieth century, and views of the city of Granada are the first thing that has seen just down the plane.

He never has stepped on the Moorish palace nor tread for now (when you are reading these lines, it will already be back to London); only Charles V, where last night inaugurated the 64th edition of the International Festival of Music and Dance with a narrated version of Egmont by Beethoven and Goethe, accompanying the Orchester Wiener Akademie and soprano Bernarda Bobro.

He acknowledged that he had not heard of the work or music before facing this challenge that is a second luxury option, as it was announced that the narrator would be John Malkovich (resigned a few days ago due to scheduling). What I knew Charles Dance was the long history of the Granada festival and therefore, apart from the experience of acting in the environment of Renaissance palace, accepted the invitation.
http://aboutactorcharlesdance.blogspot.fr/

"This is the best show with orchestra in which I participated as a storyteller ever. It's amazing," he says. It is a music lover and that is precisely the main difficulty facing it: "If you love music, it is very difficult not to be thrilling for her and that's against what I have to fight," he said in an interview with the world.

Pause speaks English and diction of an actor from the Royal Shakespeare Company. He was in the mid-70s, before starting to catch on camera. In addition to Game of Thrones, among her biggest success on the small screen is the jewel in the crown, a series of the 80s, when television had not yet lost its innocence. So romantic hero was ... nothing a Lannister can not overcome with time.

"I'm a victim of the British educational system," he says calmly. "My knowledge of Spain it is limited only know Madrid and Barcelona and now I'm in Granada, but I have to go back to London tomorrow," he laments.

Flamenco lover ("It is the greatest art there," he says), has its little story of love with our country: "When I was a teenager, there was a very famous song by Bob Dylan Boots of Spanish Leather was called, so the first time I came to Madrid wanted to have that pair of boots. I recommended a small shop next to the Plaza Mayor and there I took the measures. Six weeks later, he arrived in England a big box with the prettiest boots of the world. That was 25 years ago and still have them. They have been the best I've ever had. The have repaired three times, but I think that can be repaired again. So I need a new pair of boots of Spanish leather. Now I have a reason to return to Madrid ".

"The story of Count Egmont and Beethoven are completely new to me explains. I went to Youtube, I heard the overture and was impressed, it's fantastic," he says. "I think the translation has done as Christopher Hampton's story adds great features exactly what happened."

And what happened is that Lamoral Egmont (1522-1568), general, statesman and Knight of the Order of the Golden Fleece, lost the favor of Fernando Alvarez de Toledo, third Duke of Alba. He was a cousin of King Philip II, but that did not save him from the clutches of the Duke, who arrested him after the iconoclastic excesses of Antwerp (1566) and ordered his beheading by the Count de Horn on the main square in Brussels, charged with treason. Goethe wrote the play in 1788 and Beethoven music between 1809 and 1810.

"To be the narrator of this story is a great experience for an actor, I would be crazy if I had said no to me, being on stage with 60 musicians is like having an orgasm. It is a chill down my spine" says Dance.

With 40 years he dedicated to the performance but is aware that Tywin Lannister is now, even though the disappearance of his character last season of Game of Thrones has already been replaced by another evil heartless. "It's the nature of business," he says "The actors are like whores;.. Sometimes do a job for a director other by an actor, others for a place, but fame goes as quickly as it arrives Sometimes you're up and other down, "he reflects.

After doing wrong in films like 'The Golden Boy', Eddie Murphy or 'Alien 3', Charles Dance who is also a writer and independent filmmaker admits that he likes to "make films about people; no blockbusters or special effects. Next year I will make a film about the love story of a grandmother and a grandfather. Life does not stop 35, it is just as easy to fall in love at 60, but people do not talk about it. "
 

vendredi 27 juin 2014

Charles is shooting Deadline Gallipoli in Adelaide

HE died an ignominious death as Tywin Lannister in a recent episode of Foxtel’s most popular network series, Game of Thrones, but actor Charles Dance has surfaced in Adelaide, ready to wage a different kind of battle.
Here to play British commander-in-chief Sir Ian Hamilton in Deadline Gallipoli the famous British actor is unfazed by the success of the television series in which he died a sweetly vengeful death at the hands of his wrongly accused dwarf son.
“It comes in waves,” he says in his rich baritone voice. “In 1982 I did something called The Jewel in the Crown which was pretty successful, and that was a break for me. You have peaks and shallows and this is a peak, most definitely. It’s become a global phenomenon and I’m very glad to be part of it.”
In the Foxtel miniseries about Gallipoli war correspondents filming this week at Adelaide Studios, Dance will play the flawed British commander who proved ill-suited for a debilitating campaign on foreign soil.
In the series co-produced by nad starring Sam Worthington — Dance plays the general blamed for the massive loss of life on the Turkish peninsula.
I’m playing the schmuck who carried the can for it,” says Dance.
He will be in Adelaide until mid-July and remembers the city from a visit more than a decade ago when he starred in the South Australian produced Black and White, a film about the trial of a young Aboriginal man accused of murder, Maxwell Stuart.
It was about four or five weeks and we were living down at Glenelg,” he says. “I was brought up by the sea in England, in the south-west of Devon. The sea is very important to me.”

samedi 12 novembre 2011

Photoshoot by Gavin Smith to illustrate an interview

                            
CHARLES DANCE and his wife parted after 33 years, exchanging their exquisite manor house for two London flats, it seemed he was starting all over again. But, he tells MOIRA PETTY, he can iron and cook as well as any woman and, as his new career proves, knows that love can be found at any age Charles Dance, one of the romantic icons of his generation - a tag by which he is equally irked and flattered - is grappling for a phrase to encapsulate his views on matters of the heart. 'It's a trite expression,' he begins apologetically, but there is an intense glitter in his pale, hooded eyes. 'It is better to have loved and lost than never to have loved at all.' He is talking about the late-blooming love felt by one of the two elderly sisters for a young stranger washed up on a Cornish beach in Ladies In Lavender, an exquisite new film featuring Charles not as an actor but as first-time director. And yet the clichE tumbles out of his mouth with such heartfelt emotion that you can't help wondering if it is a subliminal hint as to his own state of mind.
A year ago, it was revealed that his 33-year marriage to his darkly beautiful sculptress wife, Joanna, was over. The couple met at art school, married at 23 and went on to have two children, Oliver, now 30, and Rebecca, 24. In 1989 they bought a Pounds 1 million, 17th-century manor house in Somerset, set over five acres of grounds in which peacocks flaunted themselves and geese roamed....
Dancing to a Different Tune
Now the grand family home has gone, replaced by a London flat for each. 'I miss the quality of the air and the quiet, when I wanted it, in the country.
I miss the opportunity to go out and do manual labour. I used to be able to go out and dig or build something in the grounds. In Kentish Town, north London, I've only got a small postage stampsized garden.' A postage stamp could never contain the restless quality of the rangy, 6ft 3in actor who turned 58 last month but has seemingly never solidified into middle age.
'I feel 35. I probably behave 25,' he says. As he and his wife were going their separate ways, he was plunging himself into a frenzy of pre-production for Ladies In Lavender, which he adapted as well as directed.