“Wait a minute. Robin Hood steals money from my pocket,
forcing me to hurt the public, and they love
him for it? That’s it then. Cancel the kitchen scraps for lepers and
orphans, no more merciful beheadings, and call off Christmas.” ~ The Sheriff of
Nottingham, Robin Hood Prince Of Thieves
“Marianne Dashwood would no more think of me than she would
of you, John.” ~ Colonel Brandon, Sense
And Sensibility
“Some men are born in the wrong century. I think I was born
on the wrong continent. Oh, by the way, you’re fired.” ~ Elliot Marston, Quigley Down Under
“I am an exceptional thief, Mrs. McClane. And since I’m
moving up to kidnapping, you should be more polite.” ~ Hans Gruber, Die Hard
“The Irish people established the Irish republic. It can
only be disestablished by the Irish people.” ~ Eamon de Valera, Michael Collins
“Well, I say we get drunk, because I’m all out of ideas.” ~
Metatron, Dogma
“Weasley’s wand causes devastation with the simplest spells.
We’ll be sending Potter to the hospital wing in a matchbox.” ~ Severus Snape, Harry Potter & The Chamber Of Secrets
“I get stage fright and gremlins in my head saying: you’re
going to forget your lines.” ~ Alan Rickman
“I am the character you are not supposed to like.” ~ Alan
Rickman
“What’s interesting about the process of acting is how often
you don’t know what you’re doing.” ~ Alan Rickman
It’s been a week for the deaths of the famous. It began with
the news that David Bowie had passed away, with his final album being his
farewell to the world in a way that most people didn’t know until after the
fact. And then on Thursday came the news of the death of one of my favourite
actors, the great stage and screen actor Alan Rickman.
Most North Americans were first introduced to him through Die Hard, but the actor had a long
resume before that. Born in a working class British family, he got into drama
in school, eventually attending the Royal Academy of Dramatic Art. The stage
followed, including Shakespeare, experimental, and repertory theatre. He got
cast as the villainous Hans Gruber in Die
Hard after his stage work got the
attention of producer Joel Silver, and the film exposed him to a wider audience. Writer Steven de Souza has said that
he wrote the script as if Gruber was the protagonist, which is a fair view. It
can be said that you can look at the film as if Gruber’s the hero, trying to
get a difficult job done while this annoying cop runs around getting in his
way. It was Rickman’s first feature film, and what a role it was- the ruthless,
clever leader of a gang, charming in his own way, and he got so many of the
best lines.
Rickman made a big impression with that first villain, and
there were others to follow. Quigley Down
Under featured him in a Western set in 19th century Australia,
playing a vicious ranch owner. He followed that with a more sympathetic role as
a ghost in the fantasy romantic drama Truly,
Madly, Deeply (I read a comment the other day wondering if Rickman’s ghost
is going to be haunting Juliet Stevenson for a few months). And then along came
another great villainous film role for the actor.
Robin Hood Prince Of
Thieves (aka the one with the lead actor not able to maintain an English
accent) saw Rickman cast as the Sheriff of Nottingham, and he’s the best part
of the film, a pleasure to watch as he chews the scenery, storms about with the
best lines, and just comes across as though he’s having a ball being so
nasty. His Sheriff is pure and unadulterated
evil, malevolent, and ill tempered, suggesting that carving out an enemy’s
heart with a spoon is better because it’ll hurt more, abusing his staff, and
killing his cousin without a second thought. Throughout the film, as nasty and
despicable a character as he is, you can’t help but enjoy watching him- Rickman
takes the character and makes it his own.
Contrast that with another role, then, as Colonel Brandon in
the 1995 adaptation of Sense And
Sensibility. Jane Austen’s novel had been adapted before, and this version
by director Ang Lee featured Rickman with Emma Thompson, Kate Winslet, Hugh
Grant, and a strong supporting cast. Where some of Rickman’s previous roles had
been villainous or Machiavellian, Brandon is the opposite: soft spoken, inherently
decent, principled, a man of integrity. The character fit in well with the
others, and Rickman’s performance gives the character a lot of humanity. He gives complexity and dry humour as well in his performance as Eamon de Valera, the Irish radical turned president in Michael Collins opposite Liam Neeson. That humour was also in play for his role as Harry in Love Actually.
It is a series that perhaps will have the longest impact for
Rickman’s career- the Harry Potter films.
He was cast as the pivotal professor of magic Severus Snape, seemingly that
teacher we all hope we never get. Snape stalks through the films growling and
sneering at his students, removing points from their houses, sending them to
detention for seemingly no reason at all, and coming across like a Goth who
never got past being a Goth. While on occasion he is seen to do things for the greater
good, Snape generally occupies an antagonistic role to the main character
through most of these films- he and young Harry (Daniel Radcliffe) have a
mutual dislike that started for Snape with Harry’s father, who the boy reminds
him of.
And yet he’s not the villain. Despite being thoroughly
cranky and seeming to vent a good deal of hostility on one student in
particular and his friends by association, and despite hanging around with the
wrong people on too many occasions, Snape’s motives aren’t revealed until the
last act of the book series and the movies. And it’s such a marvellous
revelation, because it takes this antagonist and shows him to be a hero. A very
human hero with flaws, but a hero nonetheless. J.K. Rowling had it in mind from
the start, and it really works.
It turns out that when Rickman was cast for the first film,
before the last of the books had even been published, he was let in on the
eventual revelation, so you can imagine he played to that in his approach to Snape. He glowers
and glares, seems as if he’s been in a bad mood for thirty years, and seems a
perpetual outsider. And yet he conceals his true feelings so well that when you
finally see his memories unveil his motivation, it’s a catharsis for the
character and the audience.
There are a couple of Snape moments through the films that
particularly stand out for me. First of course is late in the final film when
we see his memories, and we see his heartbreak as he holds the body of Lily,
the only woman he ever loved. Rickman played that moment perfectly, and we feel
a sense of compassion and empathy for a man we’ve spent several films booing
and hissing at. The other is a much more humourous moment in Harry Potter & The Goblet Of Fire
featuring whispered conversations between students working in a study hall.
Snape never says so much as a word, merely lingering in the background, glaring
at students on occasion. By the scene’s end, he walks up right behind Harry and
Ron (Rupert Grint), adjusts his sleeves while they’re continuing to prattle
on... and cuffs them both. It’s a hilarious moment, something that always gets
a grin out of me.
Through a lot of his feature work, he could always come
across as gruff, cranky, and not the sort of person you’d want to get annoyed
at you, but those were the characters more than anything else; many have been
paying tribute to him in the last couple of days and talking about his sense of
humour, warmth, and his creative spirit. He died in the company of his family
and friends after a battle with cancer, but has left a rich legacy behind. I
think Emma Thompson’s remark about him is most fitting: “he was, above all
things, a rare and unique human being and we shall not see his like again.”
A life well lived. Thank you, Alan, for giving us wonderful
performances and characters. You’re one of a kind.
Rickman was a good actor- distinctive, yet did not overwhelm the character with his own personality. I especially enjoyed his performance in Die Hard. He did the voice of a Ren Fest creep in the cartoon, King of the Hill...nice job except his Texas accent was pretty awful.. LOL
ReplyDeleteI'm so sad. First, Rickman was a great actor. Second, cancer is absolutely awful. We need to find a better, more effective cure for this terrible disease.
ReplyDeleteFirst Bowie, then Rickman on his heels. Sad week for us all!
ReplyDeleteI am sorry... I did not know abouth the death of the
ReplyDeletegreat actor Alan Rickman.
Love his humour in Love Actually too, a lovely film that I like to review many times.
Rickman was one of those journeyman actors who appeared in numerous films and plays and whose face was quite familiar but I could never have told you his name. He will be missed on the Silver Screen.
ReplyDelete@Lynn: that I didn't know, but then I never went for that series.
ReplyDelete@Kelly: we do.
@Cheryl: makes you wonder who's next.
@Sonia: it's hard to pick a favourite, but that one's a good one.
@Lowell: he definitely will be.
I especially loved his performance in Die Hard.
ReplyDeleteHe was a voice in King of the Hill? That must have been a big step down for someone of his stature!
I loved to watch and to listen to that man. An actor of great range and subtlety. I will be able to have a big, giant, long run of an Alan Rickman film festival - just me some wine and cupcakes, and a whole bunch of DVDs.
ReplyDeleteA truly great actor and from the sounds of it a great person as well. You have written a wonderful tribute. He will be greatly missed.
ReplyDeleteAnd lest we forget his comic genius in Galaxy Quest!
ReplyDeleteI'm in shock. This is the first I'd heard of this. But I haven't watched TV in a couple of days.
ReplyDeleteExcellent post!
Still in shock. I liked him as an actor, especially as Snape. The scenes you mentioned from Harry Potter are my favorites as well. Great post.
ReplyDeleteOh wow...
ReplyDeleteDogma was the greatest movie of all time! Well, almost. But it was pretty damned good. :)
R.I.P.