Showing posts with label Daniel Radcliff. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Daniel Radcliff. Show all posts

9 February 2012

Janet McTeer: 'In the second minute I go bonkers'

Janet McTeer
Janet McTeer has been nominated for an Oscar for her role in Albert Nobbs. 

"The expat British star of The Woman in Black talks about gothic horror, awards season madness and cross-dressing with Glenn Close in Albert Nobbs

When Janet McTeer gets homesick in New York, she does as many expats do: she reaches for the Downton. "It's fantastic," she says, over boiled eggs and soldiers on the Upper West Side. "I am completely addicted. Did you see that scene when Maggie Smith almost falls out of the chair? I pressed rewind on that so many times. It made me laugh until I peed myself. And that hadn't happened in a very long time."

Like Downton Abbey, McTeer is proving a durable UK export. She is currently scaring up a storm in The Woman in Black, a moody gothic adaptation of the novel by Susan Hill, which serves as a vehicle for Daniel Radcliffe's emergence into a post-Potter world. McTeer plays a grieving mother whom viewers quickly twig is completely deranged. Her approach is game, rompy. She sinks her Rada-honed fangs into the scenery with abandon, but her character is never cartoonish, always sympathetic. "I tried to be extremely real and normal for the first minute," she says, "and then in the second minute I go bonkers."
The Woman in Black is the high-profile, high-grossing, high-camp title in what's shaping up to be a year of McTeer. The high acclaim is Albert Nobbs, for which both she and Glenn Close have earned Oscar nominations for their roles as women who live as men in 19th-century Dublin – in McTeer's case, complete with wife. Though McTeer's gruff-voiced house painter won't fool audiences for long (after about half an hour, a show-stopping flash confirms things), it's a great fit. Aged 50, classically trained McTeer is as limber at this kind of leap as she is at ease with The Woman in Black's nouveau Hammer horror.
"There are some roles that are a no-brainer. You just have a sure, instinctive 'Yes!' I could have looked at Albert Nobbs and been all logical about it. But there just wasn't a choice. You look at it and go: 'Of course!'" Her gut proved right. She's fresh back from yet another awards ceremony in Los Angeles. Well, fresh-ish. "It was a crap flight. I'm too tall. You can't lie down." (She's 6ft 1in.) Generally, though, she's having a blast. "You either dread it [the awards season] or decide it is going to be fun."

Janet McTeer with Daniel Radcliffe in The Woman in Black. McTeer is notably unpretentious uncompany. Born in Newcastle, raised in York, she took a job aged 16 serving coffee in the York theatre. She could meet boys and see shows for free. "I remember thinking: 'Wow. This is where I belong.'" But her relaxed attitude to celebrity also stems from the fact that this is her second bite of the cherry. In 1999, McTeer won a Golden Globe and an Oscar nomination as a strung-out single mother in the Sundance hit Tumbleweeds, a part she landed off the back of the Tony she picked up for a Broadway transfer of The Doll's House.
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Read the full article... the guardian

4 February 2012

Outtakes: Janet McTeer on Daniel Radcliffe and her first gay friend

“In this week’s cover story, featuring interviews with Glenn Close and Janet McTeer, the stars of Albert Nobbs, there were a few nice moments with McTeer that, sadly, landed on the cutting-room floor. One of them dealt with McTeer’s work on the new film The Woman in Black, a thriller starring Daniel Radcliffe and releasing today into theaters nationwide. She told Metro Weekly:
“I really don’t have a ton to do in [Woman in Black]. I play Ciaran Hinds’s wife. Ciaran and I have worked together many times and all we do is laugh from start to finish. And Daniel Radcliffe, of course, was just delightful, I have to say. Absolutely delightful. Somehow, I appear to be the only English actor who wasn’t in a Harry Potter movies — I don’t know how that happened.
“Daniel and I hadn’t met before and it was so lovely to watch a young actor transitioning from all of those things he did as a kid to now being a young adult doing young adult kind of roles. And he’s so clever. He’s a very, very intelligent young man and such a nice man for somebody who has gone through that whole uber-uber fame at such a very young age. I think that’s quite tough on the kids during their developing years. He just turned out this incredibly hard-working, very concentrated, absolutely charming young man. I thought he was delightful.”
I also asked McTeer a question I frequently pose to straight actors I interview: “Do you remember the first time a gay person came out to you?” Her response:… “
Read the full article… Outtakes: Janet McTeer on Daniel Radcliffe and her first gay friend