No Looking
Back for Sir Anthony
He is an Oscar winner, a knight, a movie star, and one
of the greats of British and Hollywood cinema. And while he may have appeared
in a many a film set in the distant past, don't expect Sir Anthony Hopkins
to get all nostalgic or sentimental about his past cinematic glories.
For as Sir Anthony reveals to Paul Fischer, acting is just a job, always
has been and always will be.
Anthony Hopkins shies away from some of the
characters that turned this once ordinary Welshman into a major star.
There's no hint of Hannibal Lector in his quiet, unassuming, almost ordinary
demeanour. Perhaps his quietly introspective butler in Remains of the
Day is the closest one gets to the real Hopkins, though some four decades
since bring the future Richard the Lionheart to the screen in the classic
Lion in Winter, it is hard to imagine who the real Anthony Hopkins is,
and no matter how often one talks to him, he won't give anything away.
Acting may be his life, and perhaps he has
hidden behind some of cinema's most extraordinary creations, but for Hopkins,
it's no big deal, just a job, one that he relishes, but a job just the
same. "It's more of a job now than it's ever been", Hopkins
explains matter-of-factly in a Los Angeles hotel room. "I used to
play the piano a lot, I was the only child and my father was a meat-and-potatoes
guy, a baker, who worked hard all his life. He didn't have time for me
playing Beethoven or Chopin, and I remember him one day saying: What's
that you're playing? I said Beethoven, to which he replied: No wonder
he went deaf; for God's sake get out of the house and do something.
His basic philosophy of life was not to get too carried away with yourself,
so in the acting profession, I've never tried to get too carried away
with myself. When you're younger you want to do all the big things, but
now I've done all the things that I've dreamed I would do, and I enjoy
it." Hopkins sees acting as "a high profile job, but a job,
and a skill I have, much like everyone else who works on a movie set.
It's a job, no big deal, and I guess it's saved my equanimity."
Hopkins latest 'job' is in Australian director Scott Hicks' gentle fable,
Hearts in Atlantis, from a story by Stephen King, set in the idyllic early
sixties, with Hopkins cast as a stranger with ESP powers, who changes
the life of a young boy in middle America. Though the actor doesn't exactly
believe in the powers reluctantly infused in his character. Hopkins says
that he "does believe in synchronicity", resulting "in
euphoria when experiencing them, having done so a few times in my life."
One such time, he recalls filming Hannibal in Florence and chose to fill
part of his downtime reading Which Lie Did I Tell? -- More Adventures
In The Screen Trade, the latest autobiographical work by legendary screenwriter
William Goldman.
"And he mentioned Stephen King (in the chapter devoted to Goldman's
problematic adaptation of King's Misery), and he mentioned me and how
he'd love for us to work together," Hopkins explained. "And
two days later my agent showed up in Florence and said, 'I have a script
for you. It's by William Goldman.' I don't know what scientific proof
there is for psychic phenomena, but this was a synchronistic event."
Hopkins adds that "the thing about synchronicity is that the more
you think about it, things usually happen. It's an overcomplicated word
for 'coincidences' but we all have them in our lives. As I keep on saying:
Nothing is too good to be true, nothing is too wonderful to ever happen,
and nothing is too wonderful to ever last, and that gets you through life,
I think."
The King tale , part of a larger work by the prolific author, is reminiscent
of King's Stand By Me in that it's a nostalgic look at a life-affirming
moment in the narrator's youth. A boy (Anton Yelchin) raised by a single
mother in 1960 middle America, becomes great friends with an aged boarder,
Ted Brautigan (Hopkins) who shares his love of books and, ultimately,
his secret-that he is a psychic on the run from government officials who
want to harness him for espionage purposes.
Nostalgia seems an odd theme for Hopkins,
a man whose good old days seem to be right now. Yet, amidst Hopkins' outward
pragmatism, lay a man of deep nostalgia. "One of the themes of this
film is reconciling our past, and when I see the film, I go back into
my childhood, long for the past and hope to go back there some day, even
though of course there is no going back."
Hearts in Atlantis is the polar opposite of
Hopkins' better known Hollywood incarnations. As well as being steeped
in a quietly sentimental nostalgia, William Goldman's script is sharply
based on a real sense of character. In the light of recent events, perhaps
this kind of Hollywood film will become more prevalent. Hopkins is optimistic
that the old fashioned nature of Hearts in Atlantis will have broad appeal
and may pave the way for American cinema to change and grow in this age
of real-life violence and terror.
"I'm told that people's response to THIS
particular movie has been very good, heartening and all those platitudes.
But I saw it as an audience in Toronto myself when it premiered there
and I hadn't seen it before. And so I was as detached from it as I could
be, having been IN the movie, and was especially moved by the ending,
had a lump in the throat, al the stuff I shouldn't admit to. Without giving
anything away, when you look at the ending of the film, it's clear that
we under appreciate and undervalue our own lives. I think what is significant
about this film, [even though it seems in this present time so insignificant
to talk about such things] is when Ted says something like: 'When we're
young, we feel or think we're in Atlantis, then we grow up and our hearts
break in two', which seems to me to be quite relevant."
After decades as a workaholic, sometimes alcoholic,
largely undiscovered British talent, he is now a highly paid Hollywood
film star who gives himself plenty of off-time (he likes to just get in
a car and drive across the U.S.), and approaches his work with a blithe
contentment and dearth of angst. His roles and films are amongst the best
of Britain and Hollywood, yet while he longs for some personal nostalgia,
he refuses to discuss a favourite film of the past, or a character that
remains a personal favourite.
Asked how he therefore wants to be remembered,
he concludes as he began this discussion. "I want to be known as
a jobbing actor, that's all, lucky to have been given the chance to do
what I've done in my life; no big deal, no sweat. You play different characters
and it doesn't mean a thing. You tap into some part of yourself that you
play, whether it's Hannibal Lector or this guy in Hearts of Atlantis.
It doesn't have an effect on you." But its effect on audiences remains
staggering, four decades on.
HEARTS IN ATLANTIS OPENS NATIONWIDE THIS FRIDAY
Anthony Hopkins
Date of Birth: December 31, 1937
Place of Birth: Port Talbot, South Wales, U.K.
Credits:
- Red Dragon 2002
- Zorro Unmasked 2002
- Bad Company 2001
- Hannibal 2001
- Hearts in Atlantis 2001
- The Devil and Daniel Webster 2001
- Dr. Seuss' How the Grinch Stole Christmas 2000
- Mission: Impossible 2 2000
- Instinct 1999
- Siegfried & Roy: The Magic Box 1999
- Titus 1999
- Meet Joe Black 1998
- The Mask of Zorro 1998
- Amistad 1997
- The Edge 1997
- Surviving Picasso 1996
- August 1995
- Nixon 1995
- Legends of the Fall 1994
- The Road to Wellville 1994
- Shadowlands 1993
- The Innocent 1993
- The Remains of the Day 1993
- The Trial 1993
- Bram Stoker's Dracula 1992
- Chaplin 1992
- Freejack 1992
- Howards End 1992
- The Efficiency Expert 1992
- The Silence of the Lambs 1991
- Desperate Hours 1990
- A Chorus of Disapproval 1989
- The Dawning 1988
- 84 Charing Cross Road 1987
- The Good Father 1986
- The Holcroft Covenant 1985
- The Bounty 1984
- A Change of Seasons 1980
- The Elephant Man 1980
- Murder by Decree 1979
- International Velvet 1978
- Magic 1978
- Audrey Rose 1977
- All Creatures Great and Small 1974
- Juggernaut 1974
- The Girl From Petrovka 1974
- When Eight Bells Toll 1971
- Hamlet 1969
- The Affairs of a Rogue 1949
- The Lion in Winter 1968
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