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i n t e r v i e w


spotlight may / june / july 1999

Reflections

Alan Bates interviewed by Gordon Gow in 1971

 

"... People will always offer you what you've just done,

and it's very hard to break that custom."

PART TWO (of three). THE NEXT Bates film was a major success: "Zorba the Greek," directed by Michael Cacoyannis from the novel by Nikos Kazantzakis. Anthony Quinn loomed large in the title role, all freedom and impracticality, while Bates scored by diffident contrast as the English writer who gradually adjusted to a foreign set of values in Crete. This was a singular film, not following any recognised trend; nor was it mimicked by the usual imitations that flow in the wake of a lucrative film.
"It's a sort of epic subject, which wasn't made in the epic way in terms of money. It was an incredibly simple script condensed from a very complicated book; as complicated as "Women in Love" but even more sparingly adapted for the screen. It dealt with very big issues in a very economical way. I was a bit worried about playing it at the time because the part is not image making -- the very opposite, in a sense."
He voices the term 'image making' with a hint of retrospective shame, and laughs it off. "In a way, it's unrewarding, though -- because an incredibly difficult thing, on stage or screen, is to suggest someone who is in a permanent state of doubt, and to whom things happen. Like "Zhivago," I suppose; hard to play someone like that. People always tell me I'm good at it and so they give me those kinds of parts, which makes me rather mad. It's a compliment, of course -- but what I mean about it making me mad is that I have to fight sometimes to get anything else. Less so now. But people will always offer you what you've just done, and it's very hard to break that custom.
"I didn't make a film for eighteen months after "Zorba the Greek" and then I did "Georgy Girl," quite deliberately. Not only because I liked the script, but because it was completely different. I had to fight a bit to get that part. Not that "Zorba" wasn't a marvellous experence. Living on Crete while we were making it. That was terrific. But the part of Basil was a problem -- he just didn't know himself. It's the author figure, and you can never get to the bottom of it when that's the case. I've played about three or four." Notable among these was his interpretation of the Eugene O'Neill figure in the London stage production of "Long Day's Journey Into Night;" and of course Birkin, the character associated with D. H. Lawrence himself in "Women in Love."

"I think bombastic behaviour is a sign of nervousness."

"You can never explore those characters fully, because the authors haven't been able to do so with themselves. They can write about their brothers and their sisters, and all the other characters, fantastically clearly. But not themselves. I think one gets very hung up on the commercial aspect in films, you see, whether it means a lot to you or not. Because that's how it's all set up here. So you always have at the back of your mind a sense of what the part you are playing might mean to your career. This was true -- it isn't now. You can play anything now, and nobody thinks twice about it."
The author-figure question as aligned with another factor in the case of "Zorba the Greek": a consideration that applies to any film or play, namely the rapport between fellow actors. Probably "Zorba" was a special case, since Anthony Quinn not only had the dominant role but is by nature a potent personality. Bates says of Quinn, "at his best he's a marvellous actor, and he's a very instinctive actor. He has a sort of animal quality, although I think he's got a bit stuck with it ... with that aspect of himself. But all you can really ask of anyone is the emotional contact that it takes for two people to act together, and he's got that in abundance. When you meet eye to eye and you have a scene to play, he does give an awful lot. He's a larger than life character. He's that without trying, before he starts. He's not the easiest man to work with by any means. He's quite temperamental. He gets nervous very easily, I think -- I don't know whether he would confess to that. But I think bombastic behaviour is a sign of nervousness."

"...when I'm acting I tend to sort of contain a nervous tension..."

One might assume that Bates himself, being quite evidently a sensitive performer, would have his personal moments of nervousness. He concedes that he does. "But mine doesn't show itself in that way. Sometimes I wish it did. I can let off steam all right, but when I'm acting I tend to sort of contain a nervous tension -- which works in certain parts very well. I think actually it's fair to say that the part you play does affect your state of nerves, while you're playing that given part. So if you're playing an extrovert, as Quinn was as Zorba, your nerves will probably reveal themselves in that way."
I asked him if he had ever seen "A Double Life," in which Ronald Coleman personified an actor who became so identified with the character of Othello that he strangled a woman in his offstage world, because his entire existence had assumed such proximity to the mental condition of the Moor.
"I did see that, and I think it's valid. I mean, I can't remember a case where it's actually happened, but one has heard of some very near misses. I know for example that if you play something like the other brother in "The Caretaker" -- not the one I played, but the one Robert Shaw did in the film -- over a period of time that can become a very depressing experience, and you can in fact get deeply affected and very low from a long run in a part of that nature. A man so unable to move and so unable to express himself physically. So to a lesser extent I had that kind of feeling with my role in "Zorba the Greek." We were six months shooting it. But I feel about the final film rather as I do about "A Kind of Loving": most of that film has a great purity about it. Then I enjoyed "Georgy Girl" in the way that I enjoyed "Nothing But the Best," although it wasn't so unique or sophisticated. But it just had great life and energy -- it was fun."
So, presumably, was the satire he made in France for Philippe de Broca, "Le Roi de Coeur," set in an abandoned village during the first world war, where Bates as an English soldier was sent to dismantle a time bomb and stayed on to live in peace with the only remaining inhabitants, fantasticated charmers of the insane asylum, who regarded the outside world as a vast terrain of madness -- a point will made when a battle took place before their derisive eyes.
"Mind you, it's very hard to work with a foreign language crew and cast. It's a double effort. But I did it because Philippe de Broca came over to London and just talked toe about it, and the idea appealed to me so much that I didn't even read the script before I agreed. And of course I liked his films -- I'd seen about three, including "L'homme de Rio." He was very disappointed that "Le Roi de Coeur" wasn't at all well received in France. That was strange -- it did very well in New York and London in the limited art areas. I think it was slightly too fantastic. The mad element of those people should have been more intense, more real. Then the moral of the film would have really worked. It was a bit too much of a fairy story. Beautifully done, of course -- very light. And the sequence of the mad people taking over the town was marvellous. That poetic style wasn't really held right through. It was full of smashing things, but it came scene by scene and one lost the thread, and only in that sequence did it fully realise itself. The madman going into the church and putting on the bishop's robes and sitting alone there with a pigeon -- that was a marvellous image, very movingly done."

Made in 1966, it must have been an early sample as well of the significance of nudity as a gesture, severing conventional ties. When Bates walked finally to the gates of the asylum to join with the insane -- who stood for a sanity beyond 'normal' man's grasp -- he was naked. I don't think the full backward nudity was completely new to cinema then; but to Bates ... "It felt new, I can tell you. And I don't think he shot me all that well either. A bit too low down and a bit too near. Genevieve Bujold, who was in it, was supposed to be nude in one scene, and wouldn't; and she was full of -- well, I don't know whether it was awe at me doing it, or disgust. To me it was a very witty way to end that story. It seemed absolutely right, although it was a bit hair-raising at the time, in the middle of a French town on location, with as many people watching as could get near enough."
Three films later, of course, Bates and Oliver Reed were presented in frontal nudity for the wrestling by firelight in Ken Russell's "Women in Love."
"Originally it was scripted in a different way. Larry Kramer, who wrote the screenplay, had taken the scene and set it outside -- I don't quite know why he did that -- and somehow it just didn't ring true. And then Oliver or somebody who knew him, said that the scene ought really to be the way it was in the book -- and that was right, for the wrestling and a lot of other things too: we went back to the book constantly. The run through the woods, for instance. I did that straight out of the book. I'm not saying that Larry hadn't taken it from the book, but one needed to read that chapter in the book again -- and I've always been a great reader of Lawrence. And the run and the wrestling were really what Lawrence was all about. Physical contact. Contact with the earth, contact with the ground, contact with each other -- expressed physically, not only sexually. The point of discussion about that fight is -- yes, it's got sexual undertones, but it's first and foremost a physical contact, as an expression of need or of friendship. A need to expand yourself. The reason they fight is because each of them is in a particular extreme state in his life. They both lived in a very constricted society. And to me that kind of explosion, although it's got an intellectual side to it too, is a natural thing. It's extreme, but it's not unnatural."

"... it couldn't be more natural -- to have no clothes on."

The wrestling would presumably have been shot under customary studio conditions, without the gathering of onlookers who had to be braved by Bates on the location for "Le Roi de Coeur." The naked run, culminating in a fairly erotic role on the ground, was filmed outdoors but could have been filmed with a minimum number of crew members. In both cases, however, it was inevitable that a few jaunty quips would be bandied about in the course of preparation for shooting.
"Getting rid of inhibitions is not my hang-up. It's just the sense that you're the only one person in a group of people (however small the group) who is naked while the others aren't. You can forget the camera because you don't see the result for months. Not completely, anyway. At rushes, you see yourself suddenly while you sit in a little theatre with some shocked publicity people, or whoever. But while you're filming, it's all right so long as you are convinced it's being done for a good reason in the right context. The wisecracks on the set can be useful, to break the tension -- because there is an automatic tension of people being very respectful ... not looking, you know. That in itself creates an atmosphere which needs to be broken. Christ, it couldn't be more natural -- to have no clothes on." ||||

From Films and Filming, June 1971 © 1971 by Hansom Books

Part 3: "Far from the Madding Crowd," "The Fixer," "A Day in the Death of Joe Egg"

Part 1: "Zorba the Greek," "Georgy Girl," "King of Hearts," "Women in Love."