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i n t e r v i e w


spotlight september/october/november 1997

Alan Bates: An Actor Who Prefers To Be Anonymous


by Peter Buckley
From SHOW (the magazine of films and the arts) May, 1972
© 1972 by H&R Publications, Inc.

PART TWO (of three). Naturally Alan is excited about the surprise run-away success of Butley - "We knew it was good, but we had no idea that everybody else would think it was that good" - but not excited enough to turn it into a personal long-run. "A few months here in the West End, then a few more in New York, if they even bother to ask me, and that's it. No more long-runs. They're very bad for an actor; you just stagnate and that's death in this business. And besides, take-overs are very much the thing these days, aren't they. Everybody's doing it, and often the second cast makes the play work so much better, although I suppose I really shouldn't say that. Christ, I know all about those deadly long-runs. I lived with Look Back in Anger for over two bloody years and it almost ruined me. Actually it made me, so I can't really complain about THAT,  but it was a long time ago."
Cliff, the "other man" in Anger, was more than the start of Alan's career; it was the first of his many second-lead roles and it's all evolved naturally from there. Throughout the years he's kept up that well tuned second fiddle - always there, always superb, and always in the back seat. In Zorba the Greek it was all Anthony Quinn, in Georgy Girl it was Lynn Redgrave, while in Women In Love it was Glenda Jackson's turn. Even in The Fixer, for which he was nominated for the Academy Award, his central figure was overshadowed by the superb mosaic of minor characterizations that made the film so memorable, and in the award winning The Go-Between, everyone, including Bates, is far out-stripped by Dominic Guard.


A "well-tuned second fiddle"?


Yet this is the way the parts have been written - they are by nature supporting roles - but second lead certainly doesn't mean second place. Alan was far and away the best thing in Far From the Madding Crowd, although the script was balanced on the side of Julie Christie, Peter Finch and Terrance Stamp, and while Finch may have seemed the only one completely at home in Hardy country, Bates' Gabriel Oak was a memorable and loving creation. It is in fact almost the same role that he repeated last year as Ted Burgess in Joseph Losey's study of recherche, The Go-Between.
But in all these films, Bates was less than number one, and perhaps that's one of the reasons why he likes to return to the stage again and again. There he holds center spotlight, and as he lets out all the stops, his power and versatility have been a great surprise to many who have come to regard him as a gentle, brave soul.
The theater also gives him the chance to display his natural ability with comedy - he's a born comic and mimic witha broad strain of Rabelaisian camp running throughout his urban patter - but his films, as a general rule, have ignored the fact that he is a very funny man. Even in comedies he's starred in, he has always seemed the straight man in the midst of the lunacy, but onstage he lets rip on all sides and even his Hamlet had the odd flash of comic invention.
But the theater is less than half of the Bates story. More than any other leading English actor, he alternates religiously between the cinema and the stage. Right after finishing The Go-Between, he plunged into his spectacular, starry Hamlet, and long before Butley came onto the scene, Joe Egg was in the can. Like so many of the films that he has starred in, he admits surprise at the commercial success of The Go-Between, and an understandable apprehension over the possibilities of Joe Egg.

"It's hard to guess how the public is going to react to Joe. It is, to say the least, a very tricky subject and it could put a lot of people off. It's a very real and tragic situation, so tragic in fact that the only way to face it is with a laugh. The film is actually quite different from the stage play, even though it has been adapted for the screen by Nichols [Peter Nichols, on who's autobiographical play the film is based].
"When it was done live, there was a much greater reliance on outrageous fantasy - like the vaudeville bits and the actor-audience dialogue - and on an excessive use of broad comedy. That's really the bigest cop-out of them all when you think of it. I mean if you can get an audience rolling with laughter, it's much easier to kick them in the teeth. It's a trick, a good one which works in the theater. In Butley every other line is a laugh line and it's hysterically funny, but underneath it is a serious play and you're never for a moment allowed to forget that. You can do that much more easily when you've got your audience right there. You can throw out the conventions and juggle them all up in the air, but it doesn't necessarily work on film. It's a different medium and it requires a different approach.
"The film of Joe is a more sober, realistic piece. You've got the kid right there on the screen. You're with the problem, and there's a whole new feeling of claustrophobia. You can't suddenly turn your back on the situation and start trading jokes with the audience. That talking to the camera business hardly ever works when you're trying to play it straight, but with comedy, it's always disaster. As a result, the film is a whole different piece than the play. Don't get me wrong, it's still very funny, but the humor doesn't come so easily. It's not quite to obvious.
"The company claimed that they held it back until after they released Nicholas and Alexandra - because there was such a strong similarity between the two, you see. Honestly, I don't understand all of that distribution crap, or maybe I just don't buy it. I just think they were afraid of Joe. They weren't sure of what they had and didn't know what to do with it. It happens all the time. Anyway, the nicest thing about it all was that the wait for Joe's release meant that I didn't have to rush into another movie for a while. We don't want to glut the market with Alan What's-his-name, do we."
The film industry hasn't exactly been overwhelmed with what's-his-name over the years - just over a dozen movies in the same amount of time - but with few exceptions, they've all been excellent, important films. From his first appearance in 1960 in The Entertainer, Bates' name on the credits has had a certain box office appeal as well as a guarantee of quality, and he personally values three of them as important steps in his career.

"A Kind of Loving (1962) was the big break of course since it was my first major part, and although it had a limited success at the time, it still stands up as a fine movie. Then Zorba - that was the first one aimed at the big international market. The earlier ones were specialized English studies - good, but tight, little films for tight little audiences -- and then there was The Running Man which was supposed to be big but never got off the ground, but Zorba really soared and it opened up the whole new international field.
"The most important one for me though was The Fixer, not so much because of the film itself, but because of the part. It was totally different from anything I'd ever tried before, totally new, and undoubtedly the hardest bloody thing I'd ever done in my life, both physically and mentally."


Go to Part Three