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Nichols and Nora
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My favorite story about
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acting happened minutes before the filming of a crucial scene in Marathon
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Man in Central Park. Dustin Hoffman had to appear physically exhausted, so
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half an hour before the shoot, he jogged rapidly three, four, five times around
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the reservoir, then staggered up to his co-star, Laurence Olivier, and gasped
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that he was ready. Baffled by Olivier's nonchalance, Hoffman, still breathing
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hard, asked him how he prepared for a scene. "Prepare?" Olivier replied,
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carefully setting down his cup of tea and languidly rising from his chair. "I
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don't prepare. I pretend."
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One reason I love the story
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is that it so symmetrically counters the usual assumptions about the difference
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between American and English acting--the spill-your-guts Americans and the
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technically polished English, the American search for "emotional truth" and the
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English displays of mere skill. Hoffman, for all his straining after
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naturalistic verisimilitude, remained dependent on acting-class exercises,
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while Olivier, for all his years of training, had so deeply integrated
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technique into his being that, like a classical pianist, he could stop thinking
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about it the moment he began performing. In short, it's the difference between
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talent and genius--between Glenn Close proficiently performing her character's
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attributes one by one ("Look at me, I'm acting!") and Marlon Brando intuitively
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discovering his character's essence ("Look at me, I'm alive!") and conveying
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all his ambiguities and contradictions simultaneously.
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These
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thoughts were occasioned by what I regard as without question the two most
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enthralling performances of the decade--and I hasten to temper such a
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superlative with a dose of irony. Mike Nichols' performance in Wallace Shawn's
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The Designated Mourner (the filmed version of the London production of
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the play) has been universally praised but, by the time the Oscars roll around
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next March, will surely be overlooked. Janet McTeer's Broadway performance in
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Ibsen's A Doll's House , on the other hand, has been both widely honored
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and roundly reviled--she won the Tony for best actress last Sunday, but among
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the reviews were several sputtering fulminations.
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Jack, Nichols' character in The Designated Mourner ,
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is a former graduate student of English literature who, in his own description,
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"went downhill from there." His wife, Judy, and her father, Howard, are members
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of the intelligentsia in an unnamed country in the near future, and the
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story--told by the three characters seated at a table in direct address to the
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camera--involves the gradual destruction of their lives by an oppressive
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regime, and the moral disintegration of Jack, the eponymous survivor. A man
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characterized by envy and cynicism, superficial wit and subterranean rage,
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ceaseless introspection and emotional detachment, insufferable smugness and
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barely concealed self-loathing, Jack is a bundle of apparent
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contradictions.
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In describing Nichols'
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interpretation, the problem of technique immediately arises, because to give
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examples of specific line readings suggests that he's merely made a sequence of
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acting choices, when what makes his performance so engrossing is his ability to
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embody all these aspects of his character at once. Now cynicism comes to the
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fore, now rage, now a brief interlude of tenderness, but their opposites also
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are always present--for Nichols is embodying the character, not the character's
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characteristics. Watch Nichols in his most typical gesture. He ducks his chin
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onto his chest, bobs his head back and forth, gulps as if stifling a burp, then
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suddenly lifts his head and expresses a thought that not only seems to have
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just occurred to him, but which also seems to have struggled with conflicting
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emotions before emerging. A technique, certainly, but one so expressive of
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character that it never occurs to us that he's reciting a text. At times he
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speaks in short, halting phrases, pausing between the most unlikely words, and
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then he'll rush through a series of phrases so quickly that he'll nearly run
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out of breath and almost gasp out the last words--rhythm as characterization,
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his cadences revealing the contours of his troubled spirit as concisely as his
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words.
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It's
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tempting to go on for paragraphs. How can one overlook the abruptly truncated
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laugh, for instance, that conveys a perplexed intellect? Or the voice suddenly
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shifting from silky to raspy when derision erupts from his muddled emotions?
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But each moment remains significant only as it traces the trajectory of his
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spiritual deterioration. Finally, when he learns that Judy has been murdered,
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he can barely breathe, his anguish seems nearly unendurable, but it's only a
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momentary spasm, he regains his soulless equanimity, and as he quietly intones
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his last lines--"The greatest pleasure in life [is] the sweet, ever-changing
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caress of an early evening breeze"--we realize we've witnessed the exquisitely
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ironic fusion of elegy and despair, the inseparable linking of a brilliant text
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and a superb performance.
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Every actress would like to play the most
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legendary Nora but, for much of the first act, Janet McTeer seems to want to
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play the most irritating. She's an unusually sexy Nora, but in an annoyingly
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kittenish way: flighty and fluttery, as the role calls for, but with a
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whimpering and giggling nervousness. This Nora, we begin to think, isn't so
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much a woman as a collection of manic mannerisms. But we gradually realize that
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this Nora, in fact, is playing the role that's expected of her--merely "playing
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tricks," as she says in the last act--and that there's another Nora beneath the
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childlike silliness that will astonish even her. There is so much she's not
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allowed to experience, much less express--her native intelligence, her creative
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energy, her increasing unhappiness--so much that can emerge only in
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distortion.
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McTeer's
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bold choice to play Nora as far more fraught than usual at the beginning of the
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play--with a hyperanimation that, in her increasing frustration, becomes
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nervous exhaustion and eventually a kind of hysterical dementia--allows her to
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make Nora's transformation at the end at once more plausible and more powerful.
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Some critics have suggested that her performance--like most performances of the
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role--turns Nora into two different and irreconcilable characters, the domestic
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doll and the feminist icon. But, on the contrary, she subtly provides the
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psychological continuity between these two aspects of her character.
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In the opening scenes, for instance, even as McTeer enacts
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Nora's dependence on her husband, she shows the cunning that is the only outlet
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for the character's acute and sensitive mind--submission as manipulation. This
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is no ninny--this is a woman forbidden to use her intelligence. And even as she
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proclaims her happiness, McTeer's Nora reaches compulsively for her macaroons
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with a hint of voracity that hints at her dissatisfaction.
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Nora's jittery, skittery
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behavior is charming in a way. It's certainly the kind of self-abasing
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flirtatiousness her husband finds seductive. (McTeer's decision to play Nora's
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marriage as erotically electric makes Nora's decision to leave all the more
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difficult, and all the more shattering.) But when her web of lies begins to
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unravel and he calls her "pretty bird," she rolls her eyes in a gesture at once
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accepting of his flattery, aware of her deceit, and resentful of his
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condescension. She knows nothing of this consciously but, in dozens of such
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gestures, McTeer reveals the unconscious conflation of Nora's conflicts--the
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way her wildly unfocused energy is the consequence of her inner turmoil, of
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both social oppression and emotional repression. Over and over, McTeer portrays
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a Nora with a capacity for feeling she herself refuses to recognize and a
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capacity for insight frustrated by her familial role. When she hears herself
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saying that being with her husband is "like being with papa," she pauses for a
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second, then flashes her eyes with something close to a recognition of primal
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sin, utters a sound somewhere between a hysterical giggle and a shriek of
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horror, and rushes across the room as if in flight from her own words.
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By the
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final confrontation with her husband, McTeer has so skillfully foreshadowed
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Nora's transformation that, though it seems bewilderingly abrupt to her, it
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seems emotionally inevitable to us. Gone are her neurotic mannerisms. Nora now
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sits in an ominous stillness. "I'm saved," her husband says after the arrival
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of the forgiving letter. "What about me?" Nora responds, with a touch of
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meekness but at last with a sense of her separable self. Out of her stillness
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she suddenly shrieks, not as an appeal but as a demand, "I'm a human being!"
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Most astonishingly--for the first time in my experience of half a dozen
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Noras--McTeer even manages to make Nora's single most famous line ring true.
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When her husband says that no man would sacrifice his integrity for another
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person, Nora has to reply, "Hundreds of thousands of women have"--an impossible
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line for the character, a line in which it is not Nora speaking but Ibsen
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himself. McTeer's solution? She lowers her voice a full octave and intones the
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words in a constrained fury--the voice not of Nora but of wronged women
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forever.
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The trouble with this kind of detailed analysis
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is it implies that any competent craftsman could carefully study the
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performer's techniques and replicate them--Hoffman's "preparation." We can only
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be grateful that they can't, that Nichols and McTeer become rather than enact
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their characters--Olivier's "pretending." Perhaps all we can say of great
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acting is that it involves assimilation rather than accumulation, that the
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performer isn't so much a surrogate as a vessel. There's paradox in artifice.
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The supreme tragedies leave us not devastated but exhilarated, and the sublime
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actors, the moment their performances begin, stop acting.
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