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Post by teamyali on Sept 28, 2023 12:06:28 GMT
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Post by joem on Sept 28, 2023 12:24:31 GMT
A sad, sad day indeed. Apart from being a great actor, and a great stage actor to boot, he was universally known as a great person too.
Until I saw Rylance in Jerusalem I always thought of Michael Gambon in A View from the Bridge as the best performance by a male actor I'd ever seen. It was truly awesome.
The second great Dumbledore we've lost.
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Post by Jan on Sept 28, 2023 12:45:50 GMT
Until I saw Rylance in Jerusalem I always thought of Michael Gambon in A View from the Bridge as the best performance by a male actor I'd ever seen. It was truly awesome. Yes he was sensational in that, I saw it the night Arthur Miller was in the audience. He had a very wide range - he was good as both King Lear (RSC) and in A Chorus of Disapproval (NT). Also good in Pinter - I remember him in The Caretaker. The Great Gambon as Ralph Richardson called him. For the majority of his career he was a very private person. I recall one actor who was in a long-running play with him saying after each performance Gambon used to just immediately head off in his sports car. After this happened one night the cast realised that none of them knew anything about him at all, where he lived, whether he was married, nothing.
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Post by Marwood on Sept 28, 2023 13:24:56 GMT
I only got to see him twice on stage, in Eh Joe and All That Fall, and the roles he played in them showed that the issues that caused his retirement were evident then but he was still good in both of them, I’m just sad I didn’t get to see him at his peak.
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Post by Rory on Sept 28, 2023 16:23:26 GMT
A lovely actor, so magnetic.
I was backstage once in the small green room bar of the Gaeity theatre in Dublin where he was starring in Juno and the Paycock and when he came in after the performance, I was totally awestruck. A very young Cillian Murphy was in the show and in the bar that night too.
RIP to the great Gambon.
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Post by alece10 on Sept 28, 2023 17:31:02 GMT
The nearest I got to meeting him was when I was a seat filler at a press night. He didn't turn up so I had to sit in his seat.
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Post by bordeaux on Sept 28, 2023 20:22:50 GMT
My favourite performances of his were in the Michael Blakemore Uncle Vanya, West End, 1988 I would guess. A truly amazing cast and I can still hear his voice break as he cries 'I could have been a Schopenhauer or a Dostoevsky!'. Then there was another Ayckbourn, Man of the Moment, with Peter Bowles where Gambon plays a former have-a-go hero who meets the villain he tried to stop robbing a bank or something for some hideously plausible TV show. He walks into the guy's amazing garden somewhere in Spain and admires everything and so on, then the TV director asks him if he could do that again as they didn't get it on film and it looked so nice and natural. And of course he can't do it on demand - the sight of him trying and failing utterly to be his natural self for the camera is one of the most brilliant comic things I've ever seen. I was weeping.
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Post by Deleted on Sept 28, 2023 21:14:08 GMT
I was lucky enough to see him in Beckett's Endgame around 2004, the only time I ever saw him live. The Great Gambon was one of the finest actors of his generation in a career spanning well over 50 years. Probably at his best on stage like the truly great actors but also a titan of TV dramas with 4 BAFTAs in this field I think. His film roles were more "character" ones but he still bought his gravitas and charm to them.
Also a very interesting individual away from stage and screen. Sadly his generation of acting greats are all aging so please enjoy them whilst we still can.
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Post by sweets7 on Sept 29, 2023 6:05:32 GMT
Only saw him on stage once and genuinely the only actor I have ever stopped and thought: you’re like properly amazing as this lark. I mean it’s easy to look like that when playing an over the top character but he was just sitting in a chair and it was the way he was contorting his body. Sad loss but he had really stopped acting some time ago I think, he became concerned about memory loss…or so I remember.
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Post by Jan on Sept 29, 2023 6:12:43 GMT
.... also a titan of TV dramas Quite so. The Singing Detective one of the best. Also great in the BBC adaptations of both Cranford and Wives and Daughters which I happen to have watched recently.
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Post by Deleted on Sept 29, 2023 15:27:57 GMT
.... also a titan of TV dramas Quite so. The Singing Detective one of the best. Also great in the BBC adaptations of both Cranford and Wives and Daughters which I happen to have watched recently. The Great Gambon won Best Actor at TV Baftas 3 years in a row around the millenium. I'll have to rewatch The Singing Dectective. How Dennis Potter's work would be considered tday would be interesting. He got vilified by the press and moral campaigners but that last interview with Melvyn Bragg where he rounds on the hyprocacy of Murdoch was electrifying. Hopefully we get a Great Gambon night on say BBC4 where some of his best work can be shown.
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Post by Jon on Sept 29, 2023 15:44:15 GMT
Only saw him on stage once and genuinely the only actor I have ever stopped and thought: you’re like properly amazing as this lark. I mean it’s easy to look like that when playing an over the top character but he was just sitting in a chair and it was the way he was contorting his body. Sad loss but he had really stopped acting some time ago I think, he became concerned about memory loss…or so I remember. Michael Gambon gave up on theatre due to memory loss in 2015 but I think it must have gotten worse because he pulled out of the Sky series Breeders because he couldn't recall his lines. Nick Hytner in his book about his time as AD at the National recalled how Gambon was in rehearsal for People and had to taken to hospital, the ambulance crew asked if there was anything Gambon like to relay to the cast and creatives to which he replied 'Don't worry about those bastards, they're already on the phone to Simon Russell Beale!'
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Post by Rory on Sept 29, 2023 18:05:25 GMT
Was he in line for the Alun Armstrong role in Breeders? Only one I can think of.
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Post by Jon on Sept 29, 2023 18:14:34 GMT
Was he in line for the Alun Armstrong role in Breeders? Only one I can think of. I think it is because the ages match up.
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Post by sweets7 on Sept 30, 2023 0:02:57 GMT
Only saw him on stage once and genuinely the only actor I have ever stopped and thought: you’re like properly amazing as this lark. I mean it’s easy to look like that when playing an over the top character but he was just sitting in a chair and it was the way he was contorting his body. Sad loss but he had really stopped acting some time ago I think, he became concerned about memory loss…or so I remember. Michael Gambon gave up on theatre due to memory loss in 2015 but I think it must have gotten worse because he pulled out of the Sky series Breeders because he couldn't recall his lines. Nick Hytner in his book about his time as AD at the National recalled how Gambon was in rehearsal for People and had to taken to hospital, the ambulance crew asked if there was anything Gambon like to relay to the cast and creatives to which he replied 'Don't worry about those bastards, they're already on the phone to Simon Russell Beale!' Also one for the unique blessing of the country of his birth and never let the truth get in the way of a good story. He told a good yarn like all of Irish (except for obviously we all don’t.) Nearly bumped into him on the steps of the Gate theatre in Dublin too. He was non plussed chatting to whoever it was. I was mortified.
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Post by sukhavati on Sept 30, 2023 6:45:12 GMT
I think it was about six years ago - I was walking down Wright's Lane in Kensington; there's a Warner Bros office there. Was heading to the tube station when I heard a very distinctive voice in front of WB that stopped me in my tracks. I turned to my right, and there was MG on his mobile. I couldn't well pull out my own and photograph him - he was literally three feet away from me, and our eyes met. Decided it would be best to just resume my walking, but I did get a small thrill out of seeing him on the street. Loved him in so many period dramas, Doctor Who, and of course all the Potter films thanks to my nieces and nephews. Never did see him in a play, but I'm more of a musical or ballet girl anyway. May he RIP.
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Post by Jan on Sept 30, 2023 10:46:35 GMT
How Dennis Potter's work would be considered today would be interesting. He'd be lauded up to The Singing Detective and then immediately cancelled for Blackeyes. Pennies from Heaven and The Singing Detective absolute masterpieces.
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Post by Deleted on Oct 1, 2023 0:28:31 GMT
Dennis probably made the mistake of directing Blackeyes himself. The follow up Lipstick on Your Collar was much better IMO. Pennies from Heaven and The Singing Detective I agree where superb and I enjoyed the Nigel Barton stuff when they did a Potter retrospective in the late 1980's I think.
Brimstone and Treacle would be very interesting to see the public's reaction to now too
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