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- <text id=89TT1947>
- <title>
- July 24, 1989: Laurence Olivier:1907-1989
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1989
- July 24, 1989 Fateful Voyage:The Exxon Valdez
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- SHOW BUSINESS, Page 52
- "Absolutely an Actor. Born to It"
- Laurence Olivier: 1907-1989
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>By Richard Corliss
- </p>
- <p> "I believe in the theater," said the new Baron of Brighton
- in his maiden speech to the House of Lords in 1971. "I believe
- in it as the first glamourizer of thought." That was the theater
- to Laurence Olivier, and that was Olivier to all who fell under
- the glamorous spell he wove. More immediately and lastingly than
- any other modern actor, Olivier picked words off the playscript
- page, flung them passionately into the dark and secured them in
- the minds of theatergoers. Brilliance, for once, had its
- rewards. As critic Kenneth Tynan proclaimed in 1966, "Laurence
- Olivier at his best is what everyone has always meant by the
- phrase `a great actor.'" Director, producer, prime mover of
- Britain's National Theater, embodier of the most vital
- Shakespearean heroes, Olivier at his death last week at 82 held
- undisputed claim to yet another title: the 20th century's
- definitive man of the theater.
- </p>
- <p> Like the century he almost spanned, Olivier the actor
- displayed turbulent energy, embraced awesome excess; his genius
- and his folly fed each other spectacularly. Said Albert Finney,
- who in 1959 understudied Olivier as Coriolanus: "He makes the
- climaxes higher, and he makes the depths of it lower, than you
- feel is possible in the text."
- </p>
- <p> So too with the text and texture of Olivier's life and
- career. He was the son of a fifth-generation Anglican clergyman,
- yet he found his soul upon the wicked stage. The foremost
- classical actor of his time, he attained his first eminence as
- a West End matinee idol, and his second as a Hollywood dreamboat
- in Wuthering Heights (1939) and Rebecca (1940). Though he pored
- over scripts like a new critical scholar, he was an
- irrepressibly physical stage performer, scaling balconies and
- executing dizzying falls with Fairbanksian elan. Like many men,
- Olivier housed a congeries of contradictions; uniquely, he
- transformed them into living art.
- </p>
- <p> At the apex of his stage career--in the mid-'40s, when he
- and Ralph Richardson led the Old Vic company through triumphal
- seasons in London and New York City--Olivier could spread out
- the banquet of those contradictions in a single evening. In
- Henry IV, Part I, he was the stuttering, heroic Hotspur; in Part
- II, the cagey-senile Justice Shallow. The curtain would fall on
- his Oedipus, with its searing scream of self-revelation; after
- intermission he would mince on as Mr. Puff, the giddy
- paragraphist of Sheridan's The Critic. It was all part of a
- 70-year striptease in which this consummate quick-change artist
- always had one more veil to remove, and proof of what director
- Peter Glenville called Olivier's "greed for achievement."
- </p>
- <p> He first showed that good greed at age nine, on the
- auditorium stage of All Saints' School in London. In the
- audience was Sybil Thorndike, then an Old Vic leading lady, who
- told Larry's father, "But this is an actor. Absolutely an actor.
- Born to it." From a list of his acting credits at school (Maria
- in Twelfth Night, Kate in The Taming of the Shrew), one imagines
- that his teachers had already spotted what director Elia Kazan
- would later cite as Olivier's "girlish" quality. Throughout his
- career--as Lord Nelson in That Hamilton Woman, as Richard III,
- as the homicidal mystery writer in Sleuth--Olivier would bat
- his eyes at the audience, soliciting its surrender. But belying
- those feminine eyes were the cruel, pliant lips, and on them the
- smile of a tiger too fastidious to lick his chops in
- anticipation of a tasty meal.
- </p>
- <p> Emlyn Williams once remarked that Olivier had "always
- seemed to be at the height of his career." Not quite so. In
- 1929, his first regular stint of acting in the West End, he was
- in and out of half a dozen indifferent plays before Noel Coward
- cast him as the "other man" in Private Lives. Four years later,
- in Hollywood, he was fired from his first A-picture role as
- Greta Garbo's lover in Queen Christina. Once again Coward
- rescued Olivier, casting him in Theatre Royal (1934) as a
- dashing figure fashioned after John Barrymore, whose lightning
- sexuality Olivier had long admired and would often emulate.
- </p>
- <p> In 1935 John Gielgud, the leading exponent of romantic
- classicism, hired Olivier to play Romeo to Gielgud's Mercutio.
- Then they swapped roles, and critics hailed the young
- boulevardier as a rising tragedian. Years later, when asked to
- enumerate his rival's strengths, Gielgud acutely replied,
- "Attention to detail; complete assurance in his conception of
- character; athleticism; power; and originality."
- </p>
- <p> By 1943, when Olivier, as a lieutenant in the Royal Navy,
- was granted leave to make a film of Henry V, he had synthesized
- all his gifts. Here was a Henry true both to Shakespeare and to
- movie spectacle--a Henry with Napoleonic martial wiles and the
- careless charm of a Cary Grant. It was the first of Olivier's
- three Shakespeare films as producer, director and star. In
- Hamlet (1948), which won him Oscars for best picture and best
- actor, he turned the melancholy prince into a manic-depressive
- swashbuckler and Elsinore into a film-noir castle. Richard III
- (1955) was his most masterly and entertaining picture. Looking
- eerily Nixonian, Olivier's Richard murdered with a style that
- suggested both deformed ambition and a sly sexual perversity.
- All three films convinced moviegoers that sentiments expressed
- in iambic pentameter could be matters of life and death.
- </p>
- <p> Except in the Shakespeare films, Olivier in this period
- usually appeared with Vivien Leigh, his wife from 1940 to 1960.
- They had fallen in love as co-stars of the 1937 film Fire over
- England; toured the U.S. in a Romeo and Juliet so poorly
- received that they had to refund money to angry ticket holders;
- returned to Broadway in 1951 in Antony and Cleopatra and Caesar
- and Cleopatra (dubbed by wags "Two on the Nile"). By the
- mid-'50s this beautiful actress was tobogganing into mental
- illness and Olivier was in desperate need of a new challenge.
- Luck smiled from a surprising direction: the angry young Royal
- Court Theater. As Archie Rice in John Osborne's The Entertainer
- (1957, filmed in 1959), a great actor found himself playing a
- seedy music-hall comic in a tantalizing blend of parody and
- autobiography.
- </p>
- <p> Yet Olivier always remained a Proteus of the footlights; he
- bent, folded, spindled, mutilated himself to fit his dynamic
- conception of the roles. In early Shakespearean parts, Olivier
- padded his legs so as to look good in tights. In 1945 he went
- to a gym to sculpt those legs into felicitous muscularity
- before playing Oedipus in a Greek kilt. To deepen his natural
- tenor voice into Othello's baritone, he studied with a vocal
- coach and was soon speaking a full octave lower. His most
- faithful theatrical aid was the makeup kit. Said Coward: "I
- cannot think of any other living actor who has used such vast
- quantities of spirit gum with such gleeful abandon."
- </p>
- <p> There was no Method to his masquerades. Graduates of the
- Actors Studio might psychoanalyze themselves into their roles;
- Olivier worked from the outside in, often finding character in
- caricature, refusing only to err on the side of restraint.
- Although it was what made him exciting to watch, his outsize
- playing occasionally exceeded conventional interpretations.
- Olivier's Othello (1964, filmed the following year), with thick
- ruby lips and rolling Jamaican cadences, provoked charges of
- racism. His Shylock (1970, televised in 1974) was found by
- critic Clive James to resemble Disney's stingy zillionaire
- Scrooge McDuck.
- </p>
- <p> Late in his life Olivier might have retired on his laurels:
- the knighthood in 1946, the life peerage in 1970, the thanks of
- several nations and generations. But in 1974 nature played a
- dirty trick on this man for whom strength and agility were two
- tools of genius. Olivier was struck with dermatopolymyositis,
- a crippling degeneration of skin and muscular tissue. Although
- he had been robbed of the energy to seize the stage eight times
- a week, Olivier could not stop working; he even "appeared," as
- a recorded hologram, in the 1986 West End musical Time. He
- guested in British mini-series (Brideshead Revisited, Lost
- Empires). And he worked for any movie producer with gall and a
- ton of money. Dozens of robust cartoons followed: MacArthurs and
- moguls (The Betsy), wily old Jews (The Boys from Brazil) and
- scheming Nazis (Marathon Man), all shamelessly strutting their
- charisma, all fulfilling critic Alan Brien's dictum that "there
- is a kind of bad acting of which only a great actor is capable."
- </p>
- <p> Olivier was still capable of greatness. In 1982 he answered
- a last call from Shakespeare, playing King Lear for TV, in a
- magnificent portrayal that was also a literally death-defying
- gift to posterity. The boy of nine, mesmerized by the poetry of
- a 16th century playwright, was now a frail old man of 75,
- leaving a record of his transcendence for the electronic age and
- ages to come. The greatest actor of the century knew how to
- leave them begging for more.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-