Wednesday, March 30, 2005

WHO TALK:Why so soon?

 

The role of a lifetime?
By Neil Smith
BBC News entertainment reporter

Typecasting can be the death of many a good actor's career, as Christopher Eccleston is no doubt aware.
Christopher Eccleston
Eccleston has decided to leave Dr Who after just one series

Why else would the 41-year-old Mancunian turn his back on Doctor Who just one episode into its new series?

But Eccleston may find it harder than he imagines to cast off the Time Lord mantle.

For the annals of film and TV are littered with actors who will forever be associated with one iconic role.

Take Sean Connery, who shot to fame as James Bond only to find audiences unwilling to accept him as anything else.

"I have always hated that damn James Bond," he once said. "I'd like to kill him."

But that did not stop him from returning to the part on two occasions: first in 1971's Diamonds Are Forever, and again, belatedly, in 1983's Never Say Never Again.

Character actor

In recent years Connery appears to have moved on, winning an Oscar for The Untouchables and reinventing himself as a gruff, grey-bearded character actor.

However, he acknowledges he will never completely discard Ian Fleming's suave superspy, saying: "It's with me till I go in the box."

Christopher Reeve as Superman
Christopher Reeve played the Man of Steel in four films

The late Christopher Reeve suffered a similar fate after playing the Man of Steel in 1978's Superman.

The Julliard-trained actor became a star overnight but - like Connery before him - could not make a similar impression in any other role.

"I asked Sean on how to avoid being typecast," he once revealed. "He said, 'First you have to be good enough that they ask you to play it again and again'."

Reeve was certainly good enough - perhaps too good. Though he tried to shake his heroic image - notably by playing a murderer in the 1980 thriller Deathtrap - he was unable to, as he put it, "escape the cape".

Other actors have resorted to drastic measures to reinvent themselves on screen.

'Prim Edwardian'

Frustrated with her goody-two-shoes persona, Julie Andrews stunned moviegoers by baring her breasts in 1981 comedy S.O.B.

"I don't want to be thought of as wholesome," she said at the time. "Does Mary Poppins have an orgasm? Does she go to the bathroom? I assure you she does."

Helena Bonham Carter in Planet of the Apes
Who's that chimp? Helena Bonham Carter in Planet of the Apes

Merchant Ivory regular Helena Bonham Carter was equally daring in her attempts to wriggle out of her period drama corset.

"I hate this image of me as a prim Edwardian," she once said. "I want to shock everyone."

That she did by playing a chain-smoking drug addict in Fight Club and, more bizarrely, a monkey in Planet of the Apes.

Her boldness was echoed recently by Bend It Like Beckham actress Keira Knightley, who deliberately pursued the role of a troubled alcoholic in psychological thriller The Jacket.

"As a British actor in Hollywood you get typecast very fast," she said in January.

"I don't want to play the same character for my entire career. That would be supremely boring."

'Mumbo jumbo'

Try as they might, however, some actors will forever be linked to one career-defining role.

None more than Sir Alec Guinness, whose legendary triumphs on stage and screen were completely overshadowed by his involvement in Star Wars.

"I shrivel up every time someone mentions it," he once said.

Sir Alec Guinness in Star Wars
Sir Alec regretted playing Obi-Wan Kenobi in Star Wars

Indeed, on one occasion he brought a small boy to tears by requesting he never see Star Wars again.

In an interview published a year before his death, the actor revealed how he had persuaded director George Lucas to kill off Obi-Wan Kenobi by saying his character would be more effective as a ghost.

"What I didn't tell him was I just couldn't go on speaking those bloody awful, banal lines. I'd had enough of the mumbo jumbo."

There are advantages to being typecast, however, as horror veteran Christopher Lee discovered after playing Dracula for the first time in 1958.

"I do not regret anything," he said.

Playing the Count gave him "a name, a fan club and a second-hand car, for all of which I was grateful".

Christopher Eccleston Will leave Doctor Who

 BBC ARTICLE:

Eccleston quits Doctor Who role
Christopher Eccleston as Doctor Who
The first episode of the new Doctor Who was shown on Saturday
Actor Christopher Eccleston has quit as Doctor Who after just one episode of the new series has been screened, the BBC has confirmed.

Bookies have tipped Casanova actor David Tennant as the hot favourite to replace Eccleston as the Time Lord, with odds of 6/10.

Other contenders for the role include Bill Nighy and comedian Eddie Izzard.

Eccleston's first appearance as the ninth Doctor attracted 10 million viewers.

'Incredible reaction'

Talks are taking place to replace him with Tennant.

A second series of the new Doctor Who, which will again be written by Russell T Davies and produced by BBC Wales, has already been commissioned.

Billie Piper, who plays Dr Who's assistant Rose, is expected to return for the second series.

David Tennant in Casanova
David Tennant plays BBC Three's legendary lover Casanova

An initial statement issued by the BBC said Eccleston feared being typecast and had found the series gruelling - although the BBC later accepted the statement was not correct and said it had not spoken to Eccleston before releasing it.

A BBC spokesman said it had hoped, rather than expected, that Eccleston would continue in the role.

He said that although talks to make David Tennant the 10th Doctor were taking place, other names may be put forward.

Bill Nighy was also considered for the Eccleston role, while Richard E Grant starred in a BBC web adventure of Doctor Who.

Period drama Casanova, which moves to BBC1 from BBC3 on Monday, added to Tennant's reputation after his success in the drama Blackpool.

'Jittery time'

Ladbrokes spokesman Warren Lush said: "Public demand has forced us to produce a long list of possible Doctors despite the fact that David Tennant is so hotly tipped for the role.

"Before Eccleston took the role the money was for Alan Davies and Eddie Izzard and they have to be seen as possible contenders again."

However, bookmaker William Hill has refused to take any bets on the identity of the new Doctor, after being "flooded" with inquiries from people wishing to bet on Tennant.

HAVE YOUR SAY
 The Doctor changeover has to be handled very carefully and Chris really has to do the regeneration
Wayne, Poole, UK

"It appears that the BBC has moved quickly to secure David Tennant's services following the departure of Eccleston," said William Hill spokesman Graham Sharpe.

"It seems that the role is his should he want it, which makes it impossible for us to open a book."

The BBC announced on Wednesday that it had commissioned the second Doctor Who series, which will again feature 13 episodes.

Russell T Davies said: "It's fantastic news. It's been a tense and jittery time because the production team has been working on plans.

"It's particularly good for BBC Wales. This is a major flagship show for the region, and their staff and crews are the best you could find. It's a tribute to them that Doctor Who is returning."

Doctor Who was relaunched last Saturday weekend following a 16-year hiatus.

With 9.9 million viewers, it beat Ant and Dec's Saturday Night Takeaway.

Saturday, March 26, 2005

The wait is over... Plus facts about the New Doctor!

 See the source image At last, the wait is over!

The Ninth Doctor

A northern accent. Big smile. Bouts of melancholy and mixed with manic excitement and an offbeat sense of humour… The Ninth Doctor was the bruised but brilliant ‘last of the Time Lords’.

Fact titleFact data
Also known as:
The Oncoming Storm
Home Planet:
Gallifrey
Random ‘Yes!’ Moment:
‘Just this once, Rose, everybody lives!’
Fact!
The Ninth Doctor has battled autons twice before, in his third Face!
First Appearance:

Tuesday, March 8, 2005

Eccleston ahead of Doctor Who launch

 

Eccleston launches new Doctor Who
Christopher Eccleston and Billie Piper in Doctor Who
Christopher Eccleston co-stars with Billie Piper as his assistant Rose Tyler
Actor Christopher Eccleston said it was an "easy" decision to become the ninth Doctor Who, as he launched the new series of the BBC show in Cardiff.

"I just wanted to work with Russell T Davies," he said.

The star said he had become a Doctor Who fan since working with the Queer as Folk writer: "It's a fantastic series and I am proud to be a part of it."

The new series of the show, on BBC One from 26 March, is the first since it was cancelled in 1989.

Eccleston admitted his role of the doctor could have been "a poisoned chalice".

"You have to deliver a lot of pseudo-scientific jargon and give it some charisma and wit," he said.

"I watched Tom Baker do it and thought he was brilliant."

Billie Piper, who stars as the doctor's assistant, Rose Tyler, also attended the launch of the new series of the sci-fi favourite.

Daleks return

Since the original show was cancelled 16 years ago it has been resurrected for a one-off TV movie and in the form of animated online adventures.

In 2003, it was voted the show people would most like to see back on TV. The new 13-part series, filmed in Cardiff, will also see the return of the Doctor's arch enemies the Daleks, as well as the Tardis.

HAVE YOUR SAY
 Christopher Eccleston is the perfect choice to play the new Doctor
Sebastian J Brook, London

It was also recently revealed that Eccleston, who is best known for his roles in hit film Shallow Grave and TV's Cracker and Our Friends In The North, e-mailed writer and executive producer Russell T Davies to ask for the lead role.

The show has already hit the headlines this week after an episode from the new series ended up on the internet, three weeks before transmission date.

The BBC has described the incident as "a significant breach of copyright" and is investigating how it happened.