God save the Bean
Rugged actor rises above the stigma of the British thespian gone Hollywood.
By Linda Blandford, Special to The Times
London — It is the dream of most British actors to work in Hollywood.
It is the revenge of those who aren't invited to disdain those who do. Ewan
McGregor has been quoted as saying, "In Britain I'll get shagged off
for doing 'The Island.' " McGregor, though, is still boyish enough to
be the Prince William of British stars. The London tabloids, specialists
at tearing down success, may leave him alone, particularly since McGregor
is currently doing that very English penance of appearing for almost no money
on the London stage.
The more mysterious case in "The Island" is Sean Bean. He is one of
the biggest stars in Britain. From the time he tore off Lady Chatterley's knickers
12 years ago (to say nothing of the saucy sex that followed, and this on the
BBC), he has been a national sex symbol — every middle-class woman's fantasy "bit
of rough," as the upmarket press likes to put it. "Britain's greatest
sex bomb," goes the opening to his unauthorized biography. He is also one
of Britain's richest actors because year after year he has delivered for Hollywood
a dynasty of vicious killers — from the fanatical Irish terrorist hunting
Harrison Ford in "Patriot Games," to the coldhearted betrayer of Pierce
Brosnan's Bond in "GoldenEye" and Nicolas Cage's carelessly psychopathic
adversary in "National Treasure," where his craggy, louche good looks
and cocky, lean-framed walk surely made its American mark.
The mystery is that he is one of the few Brits to work constantly in the U.S.
without stirring up resentment at home. Perhaps it's because he's not too proud
to play what is sniffily called here "character" parts. They do like
to see the prosperous humbled. Even the venerated Laurence Olivier, for example,
wasn't too grand to play Neil Diamond's rabbi father in "The Jazz Singer." It's
also because Bean is one of those shrewd Brits who managed to break into Hollywood
without leaving home. Another is Jim Broadbent, who can be seen unloading his
wife's paintings from his beaten-up and dusty old station wagon. No shiny foreign
car and posse of assistants for him: "still one of us," is the message.
English actors are caught in a trap: If they move to Los Angeles, there will
be no reentry to the clannish arts world back home should they fail. Michael
Caine, clinging to his cockney accent, didn't go home until it was in glory
to live as an English lord, sticking it to them, it could be said. In London,
it
is the received wisdom that L.A. is bad for English actors. All that money,
sunlight and valet parking corrupts, they say; look at Dudley Moore. Brits
are neither
good at nor approving of "pleasure."
Enter Sean Bean, the working-class outsider from a colorless housing development
in Sheffield, the town that gave England a failed manufacturing sector, unemployment
and "The Full Monty."
Bean chose to meet in a London pub, his local, where he's known and safe. In
the early evening, it was full of blue-collar toughs, the smoke from roll-your-own
cigarettes hanging over empty chip bags and beer bellies. A roomful of men
in dead-end jobs, any of whom Bean could have been. He came in with their same
untidy
walk: careless, unfussed, a walk that marks space as its own and that women
no longer expect to move aside for. Of course they recognized him. DVDs are
still
moving by the boxful of his five-year TV series "Sharpe," in which
he played an intense and magnetic superhero of the Napoleonic Wars. And, of course,
no heads turned in the pub. In the new world of "laddish" Brits, real
men don't flinch for stars.
Son of a welder and a stay-at-home mum, Bean left his local school at 16 with
a record of truancy and academic failure. If he didn't learn much else, he
learned "how
to take a knock, how to have a laugh, the codes of honor, doing things we shouldn't
be doing." It's the world he goes back into when he comes home from the
U.S.: soccer, beer, the lads, running to Sheffield to see family, old friends,
Sheffield United games. His dark Yorkshire accent reaches deep into this one
true part of his life. "It's a bit more real, innit? It's your history,
it's memories — it's a thickness around you." Perhaps roots are all
that ground him.
Three times divorced, an absent father to three children by two wives, at 46
he's dating a woman half his age. And yet the tabloids leave him alone. Two
tiny stories in as many years in the salacious News of the World, the Sunday
paper
that thrives on stars' cocaine binges, drunken evenings and broken marriages.
It's not as if he isn't copy. He downs lager like his fans drink tea. By the
end of the evening, his six-pint riff on the wilder shores of his imagination
has an edge to it — menace, perhaps, mockery certainly. He has the mind
of a magpie's nest: brilliant, glittering, inventive and disorderly all at once. "My
imagination when it's unleashed," he says at one point, "is like a
wild animal." There's restlessness but also challenge. "Hunt for me
and you'll fail," he seems to be saying.
The layers are complicated. He slathers over the memory of Sophie Marceau,
his costar in his first shot at international leading-man status in "Anna Karenina." "Well,
I couldn't, could I? She'd had a baby. She was married." A seam of the puritanical
North Country runs through him. He worries about evil and the presence of a benevolent
God. "Cold," "hollow," "hard": These are the words
he doesn't like. It's possible to see how he got out of Sheffield and, unlikely
applicant that he was, into the Royal Academy of Dramatic Art, the Juilliard
of Britain. Three years after graduation, he was playing Romeo at the Royal Shakespeare
Company — but a street-wise Romeo in biker's leather. This was a young
actor who'd had a life before acting.
The contradictions and complexity were there from the start. In his first film, "Winter
Flight," for David Puttnam's Enigma, Bean played Hooker, the military bully.
Look carefully and see realized in that small but key role all the visceral class
rage of Margaret Thatcher's Britain. Bean's Hooker was pitiless but, as the film's
director Roy Battersby puts it, the work of an actor "with a big hinterland." His
villains always have something more going on than being merely vicious.
Over the course of a long evening, he is open about much, not the least his
disappointment at the failure of Bernard Rose's "Anna Karenina," a pastiche of Tolstoy's
great love story. He's right, of course; it's terrible. But there was something
about Bean too, playing the passionate Vronsky not with the cadence of his usual
English but with what's known as RP, received pronunciation, the posh stuff for
Shakespeare. The most ordinary RADA graduate leaves with flawless RP. Bean's
is slightly off. Its constriction pulls him back inside himself so he comes across
as stiff and empty. It isn't that he can't do accents. In the mean tale of drug
dealers, "Essex Boys," he imbued with merciless violence that most
idiosyncratic of British accents; he knew those villains' language in his bones.
It is as if, for all the money, the sumptuous house up the road in Hampstead,
celebrity and recognition in Britain, he is still the outsider to an establishment
that RP personifies.
His house is the clue to the weird splits in his bi-continental life. The English
look of money is always personal: It's about comfort, photos and mounted trophies
above the fireplace. Bean's house is about perfection: It's cold, hard, hollow,
the very words he hates. Beautiful, yes, but the quirky, unassuming bloke in
the pub, the one who holds fast to friends and roots, is a ghost in it. Outsider
once, outsider still.
Up the motorway to the north is the small safety of his childhood. Across the
ocean is the safety of work and American hotels, never driving, working hard,
being reliable and, above all, never drinking on the job: playing the demons
rather than drinking them away. In the next few months, he has three films
that will be released, three more in production. Dangerous, passionate and
remote,
he has all the characteristics of a classic leading man. This is a star waiting
for his L.A. Confidential.
fonte: calendarlive