thehefner: (Titus: Goths Got Your Tongue?)
[personal profile] thehefner
The AV Club wrote of Paul Scofield's passing:

A gifted stage actor with--as the AP notes--"a dramatic, craggy face and an unforgettable voice likened to a Rolls-Royce starting up or the sound rumbling out of low organ pipes in an ancient crypt," Scofield had few film roles following his breakout performance in Seasons, preferring to stick to the theater that he loved so much. Nevertheless, he scored a second Oscar nomination for playing the famed poet patriarch to Ralph Fiennes' troubled Charles Van Doren in Quiz Show, and had memorable turns in The Train, A Delicate Balance, Henry V, Hamlet, and the 1996 version of The Crucible.

Scofield was an unusually humble man, turning down parts frequently and thrice refusing the knighthood, but among other actors he was already a legend: When hailed as the heir to Laurence Olivier and John Gielgud, Richard Burton demurred that it was Scofield who deserved that rank; a 2004 poll of the Royal Shakespeare Company proclaimed Scofield's turn as King Lear "the greatest Shakespearean performance ever." Good night, sweet prince, and may your passing be the last we have to endure for a little while.


For my part, Peter Brook's 1971 film of KING LEAR is the greatest version of my favorite Shakespeare play I've ever seen, and Scofield's understated performance was somehow far more powerful than any shouting, yelping, crazypants Lear. It's a fucking crime that it's not on DVD.

As with Clarke's passing, t's wonderful we had him for so long, and it's still a real loss.

Date: 2008-03-21 05:08 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] tompurdue.livejournal.com
Apparently the Brits get Scofield Lear on DVD. Cheap, too:

http://www.amazon.co.uk/King-Lear-Paul-Scofield/dp/B0009IZR7E

We'll need to track down a region-free DVD player to see it, but that won't be hard.

Date: 2008-03-21 05:13 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] thehefner.livejournal.com
Hm, temporarily out of stock. Well heck, in either case, this really might well be the incentive I'd need for a region-free DVD player.

I actually haven't seen this LEAR for many years. I certainly hope it holds up. It's seriously grainy, bleak, harsh, and stripped-down, using only a quarter of the text, some whole speeches being reduced to just a line or two.

Date: 2008-03-21 08:11 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] torberg.livejournal.com
the incentive I'd need for a region-free DVD player

You'd also need to make sure that it plays PAL-encoded discs as opposed to just NTSC.

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