Showing posts with label seminar. Show all posts
Showing posts with label seminar. Show all posts

Thursday, March 21, 2013

Alan Rickman Stars In New Short Film DUST Read more about Alan Rickman Stars In New Short Film DUST by broadwayworld.com



Stage and screen crossover star Alan Rickman - most recently seen on Broadway in Theresa Rebeck's SEMINAR - headlines a new short film titled DUST and the poster, behind-the-scenes promo video and still images from the controversial indie project have now been released.

The official synopsis for DUST is as follows: "TODD, a 60-something loner with a twitch, follows young JESSICA (7) and her MUM home from school. He waits until nightfall before breaking into their house and creeps into Jessica's room. Lifting the helpless, sleeping child off her pillow, he locates... a tooth! In a fit of compulsion, Todd crushes the tooth and snorts it from Jessica's bedside table. Wings burst out of his back and he leaps from her window, freed for another short while... until his tooth fairy addiction hits again. The next day after school, Jessica heads towards an ice cream van, a gleaming new coin in hand..."



Tuesday, March 20, 2012

Alan Rickman: SEMINAR Partners With Givenik.com for Tomorrow's Performance (BROADWAY.COM)


Tomorrow, March 21st, SEMINAR will partner with Givenik.com for a special post-performance reception for audience and cast members at Glass House Tavern (252 West 47th Street).

The evening will help support the Lark Play Development Center. Purchase through Givenik.com any ticket to SEMINAR for the Wednesday evening, March 21st 7PM performance and send your confirmation number to RSVP@givenik.com to be invited to a special post-show cast party at Glass House Tavern, supporting The Lark!

When purchasing tickets, be sure to remember The Lark when choosing who receives your 5% donation. In one of the most hailed performances of the season, two-time Tony Award nominee, Emmy Award and Golden Globe winner Alan Rickman (Private Lives, Les Liaisons Dangereuses, the Harry Potter franchise) makes his eagerly-anticipated return to Broadway starring in the World Premiere of SEMINAR, the new hit comedy by Pulitzer Prize finalist and Peabody Award winner Theresa Rebeck (Mauritius, Omnium Gatherum, “NYPD Blue,” NBC’s “Smash”).

Directed by acclaimed Obie Award winner Sam Gold (Circle Mirror Transformation, The Aliens, Look Back in Anger, The Big Meal), the production opened Sunday, November 20 at The Golden Theatre (252 West 45th Street).



READ MORE:  http://broadwayworld.com/article/SEMINAR-Partners-With-Givenikcom-for-Tomorrows-Performance-20120320#


Alan Rickman's 1996 Emmy Win for Rasputin! I didn't know that.




http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XioOcfkXyMA


Monday, February 27, 2012

Alan Rickman: Broadway stars dream of a night off (STARTRIBUNE)



Article by: STEVEN McELROY , New York Times Updated: February 27, 2012 - 9:57 AM

They're usually too busy performing to see other shows, but here's what's they'd like to catch if they had the time.

It's good to be on Broadway, but playing the lead in "Wit" or "Spider-Man: Turn Off the Dark" does mean working almost every night, making it difficult to ever see another show. What, then, to squeeze in? We asked gainfully employed Broadway performers which coming productions they'd most want to catch if they had the chance.

Alan Rickman (starring in "Seminar"): "'Death of a Salesman,' Arthur Miller on Broadway. 'Three Sisters,' Chekhov at the Brooklyn Academy of Music. Mike Nichols and Lev Dodin. Two great plays. Two great directors. Turn off your cellphones."

Read what the others stars have to say:  http://www.startribune.com/entertainment/stageandarts/140567883.html



Wednesday, February 22, 2012

Alan Rickman: PHOTO FLASH: Alan Rickman and Cast Celebrate 100th Performance of Broadway's Seminar (THEATER MANIA)



The cast of the Broadway production of Seminar celebrated its 100th performance at The Golden Theatre on Wednesday, February 15 with cookie cakes and cookies provided by Insomnia Cookies.

Sam Gold has directed this play by Theresa Rebeck, centering on a writing seminar led by a brilliant but unpredictable literary legend.


Alan Rickman stars alongside Hamish Linklater, Hettienne Park, Lily Rabe, and Jerry O'Connell. As previously reported, Rickman will play his final performance on April 1 with Jeff Goldblum taking over his role on April 3.

Read more:  http://www.theatermania.com/broadway/news/02-2012/photo-flash-alan-rickman-and-cast-celebrate-100th-_50830.html



Thursday, January 19, 2012

Alan Rickman: Alan Rickman's Broadway show 'Seminar' could go to London - but not without Alan (Mugglenet)


In a new article by the Daily Mail, Alan Rickman could be preparing to bring his Broadway performance in Seminar, by Theresa Rebeck, to the West End of London in the autumn.

However, this is only in early discussions to transfer the show from the John Golden Theatre in New York City to the West End Theatre District, and the producer David Ian has told the Mail's Baz Bamigboye that the show will NOT make it to London unless Rickman comes with it.



http://www.mugglenet.com/app/news/show/5256

Tuesday, January 10, 2012

The New York Times Interview with Alan Rickman (Huff Post)

2012-01-09-alan.jpg
Getty Images

Alan Rickman sat down with New York Times theater reporter Patrick Healy early Saturday morning to discuss acting, his famously distinctive voice, and his role in the new Broadway play "Seminar."
- Johanna Barr

Alan, thanks so much for joining us.
I'm not awake yet. I don't know that I'm actually here.

First theater role?
The very first thing I ever did was at what we call primary school, when I was 7 years old. I played the title role in a play called "King Grizzlybeard." I remember my mother cutting a little triangle of fur out of a rug for the beard.

When you started your training at RADA (Royal Academy of Dramatic Art), how similar was your voice to what we hear now?
What I hear is not what you hear, so I don't even know what you're talking about. Certainly, when I was at drama school it was the source of many complaints, big problems, a great deal of work. A lot of it's just to do with the architecture of your mouth, the sound you make, and it's about the muscle strength in your tongue, so once it all gets taken apart -– you know, I had big problems.

What sorts of problems?
That I had very lazy diction, that I had a spastic soft palate ... my voice teacher said, 'You sound as if your voice is coming out of the back end of a drainpipe.' So that's how cruel drama school is. It means, I suppose, basically, that I had to learn to bring it all forward. It was all kind of traveling backward.

Differences between the New York and London theater scenes?
It is very different performing here, in a good way, because you really do feel that theater is part of the life of this city, in a way that you don't in London. London's so spread out as a city, anyway. There isn't in any way the same kind of contact between people working. You know, you come out of the theater and we go over the road to a bar or restaurant, and there's a bunch of actors who are all doing a show, so you get to know each other here. Of course, it's kill or be killed here. You get a bad review and you're off anyway.

On whether he has a penchant for playing villains.
Well, you'd have to name them and you'd run out after about three, I think. Because, if you say "Die Hard" and "Robin Hood," then you start going "uhh..uhh…" because everything else is a bit more complicated than that.

Did [Harry Potter author] J.K. Rowling know ahead of time what would happen with your character, Snape?
Yeah, she knew everything. It's fair to say that she put the ending into a safe. She knew how it would finish.

Did she tip you off?
Before I said I would do [the first film] I said I had to talk to her. We spoke the next day, and she gave me a very small piece of information ... that let me know there was more to him than met the eye.

Can you share that with us?
No. I promised her I never would.

Having played the character all those years, did you have emotional or cathartic moments toward the end?
With the last film, it was very cathartic, because you were finally able to see who he was. It was strange, in a way, to play stuff that was so emotional ... but satisfying on all sorts of levels. You know, Ray [Fiennes, who played Voldemort] and I had a scene where you just thought, well, finally it's just a couple of actors talking to each other, with no special effects.

On holding a wand.
Holding a wand is not the most threatening thing. And pointing it at Dame Maggie Smith, who you've grown up worshipping from the cheap seats at the National Theatre, and she's pointing it at you … and she can arch an eyebrow like nobody. Thank god for the sheets of flame

Did he ever consider not acting in all eight of the movies?
No, I wasn't going to let anyone else finish him.

On differences between acting and directing.
It's satisfying to be in control of the visual aspect, as much as anything else. I'm passionate about storytelling, and sometimes you want to tell a story as an actor, and sometimes, now, you want to tell a story as a director. It takes a long time -- or it did for me -- to get to the point where you've actually got something to say. All these hopeful faces staring at you on the first day, it's a bit challenging. But over the years you've learned that one of the greatest things a director can say to an actor, that will make them immediately trust you, is the actor will ask a question and the director will say, 'I don't know.'

What about Leonard, your character in Seminar?
The story is of four young writers in New York who hire a mentor, pay him $5,000 each for a ten-week mentoring period, and pretty early on are pretty resentful of the money they've given him. He's a truth-teller. Relentlessly truth-telling … but fortunately he's also a human being. You do wonder whether that's going to be the case or whether he's just a destroyer, but he's not.

What would Leonard think of Jo Rowling's writing?
He'd probably be very jealous of what she's achieved. I'm sure he'd have to say -– her storytelling. You can't fault it, really.


http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2012/01/09/the-new-york-times-arts-leisure-weekend_n_1193051.html

Friday, December 23, 2011

Alan Rickman: Tavern burlesque (New York Post)

Last Updated: 3:02 AM, December 22, 2011
Posted: 2:01 AM, December 22, 2011

Burlesque dancers entertained the cast of “Seminar” at Lower East Side bar Nurse Bettie on Tuesday night. Cast members including Alan Rickman and Lily Rabe enjoyed tricks by “The Great Deceiver” Albert Cadabra, a performance by contortionist Ekat MissEkatarina and burlesque by Gal Friday and Hazel Honeysuckle. Brooke Shields popped in with Alan Cumming after her “Addams Family” show, and they jumped onstage to join Rabe in a dance-off.
 
Dave Allocca/Startraksphoto.com
Alan Rickman


Read more: http://www.nypost.com/p/pagesix/tavern_burlesque_LLXWaL7fOjwYKbOqrYVwOL#ixzz1hMAXtHfH

Monday, December 19, 2011

Alan Rickman talks Broadway, Potter and more in new audio interview (HP Supporters)

 


We have a new audio interview with Severus Snape actor Alan Rickman, from NPR.org, which you can listen to below. Alan talks about many things from his career, from Die Hard to Harry Potter to his new Broadway stage show. He also responds to phone-in questions and emails from listeners. Enjoy it, as it’s not often we get to here much from Mr Rickman.

Click here for HP Supporters site and AUDIO

Tuesday, December 13, 2011

Alan Rickman clarifies just how much J.K. Rowling told him about Snape's fate in the 'Harry Potter' series: HITFIX

Could the audience and critic's favorite crash the supporting actor party?

Alan Rickman clarifies just how much J.K. Rowling told him about Snape's fate in the 'Harry Potter' series
Alan Rickman's final turn as Prof. Servus Snape in "Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows, Pt. 2."
Credit: Warner Bros.

 

More than any awards season in recent memory, the past few months has shined the spotlight on the great actors and actresses who still haven't been honored with the Oscar spotlight. Whether it's the embarrassing fact that Gary Oldman still hasn't been nominated once or that legendary actors such as Nick Nolte, Christopher Plummer, Glen Close, Julianne Moore, Ian McKellen or Sigourney Weaver are statue-less, the unrecognized club has found more vocal support than usual. One member of that illustrious group who should be getting a bit more consideration for his work this year is none other than Alan Rickman.

Since stealing the show in "Die Hard," the British theater and screen actor has been consistently superb in films such as "Sense and Sensibility," "Truly Madly Deeply," "Love Actually" and even "Galaxy Quest." The Tony Award nominated actor's greatest performance to date, however, has been portraying Prof. Severus Snape in eight 'Harry Potter" films. Over the course of a decade, Rickman brought one of the most intriguing, entertaining, sly and unreadable characters to the screen. Moreover, thanks to Rowling's books, he gave Snape more of an arc than almost any of the other supporting "Potter" characters outside of the big three. Currently starring in the critically acclaimed new Broadway comedy "Seminar,", Rickman took some time early this week to chat on the phone about bringing Snape's unexpectedly complex journey to an end. A journey that many believe is worthy of an Academy Award nomination for best supporting actor.

There is a longstanding story that Rowling let Rickman know early on that Snape was not the bad guy or Voldemort henchman in waiting many expected him to be. Before I could even finish my question about this anecdote Rickman jumped in to clarify.

"Not true. I don't know who thinks that is true, but it's not true," Rickman says. "She gave me one tiny, little, left of field piece of information that helped me think that he was more complicated and that the story was not going to be as straight down the line as everybody thought. If you remember when I did the first film she'd only written three or four books, so nobody knew where it was really going except her. And its was important for her that I know something, but she only gave me a tiny piece of information which helped me think it was a more ambiguous route."

So, in many ways, Rickman's portrayal through the series is even more impressive as he had just one nugget to use as he shaped Snape over the years.

Rickman adds, "What I knew was he was a human being and not an automaton and I knew there was some sense of protection for Harry or I worked that out. It was enough to know, I didn't know he was a double agent."

When new books came out, however, the knowledge of Snape's future actions in stories down the road gave Rickman almost everything he needed (For example, Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince" novel was published in 2005 before even the preceding book, "Goblet of Fire" was just shooting)

"The books are so full of all you need to know and so full of details," Rickman says. "That's why when I meet children and I ask, 'Have you read the books?' And they say, 'No, no, we just them on TV.' Then I say, 'Well, you've got to start reading the books.' And, of course, many of them do and become hooked in a very different way."

Rickman also believed in and trusted Rowling to make Snape's story one of the more interesting narrative threads in the entire "Potter" series.

"The writer in this case is such as consummate storyteller that you let her lead you Whether she's given you all the information or not. Something in there leads you in the right direction," Rickman says. "And the number of people who followed Snape's story as also a member of a reading audience is also a testament to Rowling's skills I think. And frankly, every time i put that costume on something weird took over. It's the only character and I suppose by my own instance really, never changed his costume over 10 years. Everybody else grew up or had different kinds of outfits. Never Snape and you sort of got the feeling that's the only thing he's got hanging in his wardrobe."

And did Rickman keep that well worn frock?

"I don't think I dare tell you the answer to that," Rickman replies mischievously.

[He did note, though, that he officially kept Snape's wand.]

It will truly be an upset if Rickman breaks his SAG, Golden Globe and Academy streak for "Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows, Pt. 2," but considering the money Warner Bros. has ponied up in for your consideration ads to remind the industry of just how critically acclaimed the film was and of Rickman's performance in particular, it wouldn't be shocking. And the film's inclusion on the National Board of Review's top ten films of 2011 was a nice sign that more accolades could be on the way for "Deathly Hallows." In the meantime, Rickman is receiving raves for his leading role in "Seminar" which currently runs until March.

"It's been extraordinary to be just up the road from Daniel [Radcliffe] and to go up and see him twice [in "How to Succeed in Business Without Really Trying"]. Once at the beginning of his run and once when I came back to New York," Rickman says. "Being on the stage in New York is always exciting because you feel like your' part of the life of the city. People are aware of theater here and it's a terrific play. It like people get touched in the laughter places and the pain places in an honest way so the audience response is very tangible."

And if Oscar doesn't come calling, perhaps a third nomination will be the charm for Rickman at next year's Tony Awards. One thing's for sure, Rickman is too talented not to get rewarded by his peers at some point. Let's hope it's sooner rather than later.

Do you think Rickman deserves an Oscar nomination for his work as Snape in the "Harry Potter" series? Share your thoughts below.


For year round entertainment commentary and awards season news follow @HitFixGregory on Twitter.com.

Saturday, November 26, 2011

PLAYBILL'S BRIEF ENCOUNTER With Seminar and "Harry Potter" Star Alan Rickman

By Harry Haun
26 Nov 2011
Alan Rickman
Alan Rickman
Photo by Joseph Marzullo/WENN
Alan Rickman, currently dipping his tongue in acid Broadway's Seminar, talks about his stage and film career, including "Sweeney Todd" and his "Harry Potter" pictures.
*
Leonard, the literary lion conducting private writing classes in Theresa Rebeck's new Seminar, is a man without a country — primarily because she never ascribed him one — but the role is played with a lofty imperialism only an English actor could muster by Alan Rickman, replete with a full arsenal of Rebeck zingers.
The actor whose Broadway appearances are rare and the character who has no specific nationality should not have connected, but — ah! — there's a backstory. Under the radar is a longstanding friendship going on between actor and author. "I've known him a while," says Rebeck. "He's a deeply generous human being. I could go on and on about what a great person he is. He has been very kind to me over the years. He reads my plays and talks to me about them or writes me really very cryptic and beautiful emails that are provoking your thoughts about things. We had been in discussion about this play in a very mysterious way. And I did ask him, at one point when he was here, 'Would you just read it to me?' I thought it would truly be a wonderful thing to hear him do it. And I was right."

A second reading, for backers, put the play on the fast track to Broadway, with Rickman leading the charge. Director Sam Gold hired a first-class class of wannabe novelists (Lily Rabe, Hamish Linklater, Hettienne Park and Jerry O'Connell) to hear his words of wisdom and derision. It's now playing the Golden Theatre.
Welcome back to Broadway. It has been almost a decade.

Alan Rickman: I guess it has. But I was in New York last winter at BAM, performing there with Lindsay Duncan in John Gabriel Borkman, and I was directing at BAM the spring before that.
That was Strindberg's Creditors. Did you enjoy doing that?

AR: I loved doing that. It was very special, to watch it move from the Donmar to, really, one of the most thrilling theatre spaces in the world — at BAM [at the Harvey Theatre in Brooklyn]. It was a joy for the actors [Owen Teale, Tom Burke and Anna Chancellor]. And it was a pleasure to say to Lindsay Duncan [for Borkman], "Yeah, but wait until we get to BAM." She'd never walked out on a stage like that before.

New Yorkers could get the impression that you and Lindsay are the English Tracy and Hepburn. She co-starred with you both times you were on Broadway — in 1987's Les Liaisons Dangereuses and 2002's Tony Award-winning Private Lives — and the two of you got Tony-nominated both times so you obviously play beautifully together. Do you work with her a lot?

AR: Well, no. With her, it was a ten-year gap before we did Borkman, so I wouldn't call it a lot, but it was great to kinda close that gap. She's busily working away back in England, and I'm over here.
Rickman in John Gabriel Borkman.
photo by Ros Kavanagh
You don't seem to do a lot of contemporary roles.
AR: Well, I've played quite a lot of them on film, but, in terms of being on a big Broadway stage, it has only been twice: One was 18th century, and the other was the 1930s. But it's relaxing to just put on ordinary clothes.
One of those was a drama, the other a comedy. How would you characterize this play?
AR: Seminar is similar in a way. Give me any straight play — it should have a lot of laughs in it. I remember the laughs in Hamlet when I did that. There were plenty in that, and Les Liaisons Dangereuses is, of course, incredibly funny. That house was rocking with laughter, even though, as you say, it was ultimately a drama. We, of course, walk out into this play, not knowing it's funny. It's dead serious to us, but Theresa's writing is terribly witty. Fingers crossed. All I know is the play makes me laugh, but it's tough, too — tough and funny and sexy. Those are three great words.

Have there been people in your life who mentored you that you consider teachers? I'm thinking about Sir Nigel Hawthorne and Sir Ralph Richardson. You were their dressers, weren't you?

AR: I was, yeah, when I was in drama school. Well, I think anyone who's honest — and why wouldn't you be? — would say there are marker posts in your life which are absolutely to do with great teachers. I don't know how great a teacher Leonard is, but he's definitely passionate. I've had some absolutely crucial teachers at several points in my life.

This play is so word-led. Does that make you appreciate your character more, get you deeper into his psyche, because he is a man who loves words?

AR: I love words. I love language. I think one of the great things that theatre can do is celebrate language, and Theresa doesn't write a lazy line. You have to play right the way through a thought all the time, and some of them are very long — so it's not that kind of snap-happy [dialogue]. Although it's very crisp and very funny, you still gotta get hold of the whole thought all the time, and that means being really aware of the power of language.

The last time I saw you was at a Roundabout opening. I'd just come from a screening of "Sweeney Todd," where I'd left you gushing a torrent of blood as Judge Turpin. I told you I didn't know you had that much blood in you, and you said, "It's called acting."

AR: Well, it wasn't called acting — it was called fake blood, being pumped by three guys off screen. It was in tubes. That movie was a privilege to make, but I associate it with the scariest sentence I've ever heard in my life. We were in a room. There was a piano, a pianist, me — and the door opened, and Stephen Sondheim walked in and said, "O.K., let's hear it."

Your first musical?

AR: No, but the first one with such a kind of spotlight put on it, I suppose. I had to get some training. I had to work with a voice teacher. There were some notes in there that were not in my range so, thank God, a voice teacher was there to get me up there.

Did they have someone dub your voice sometimes, for certain notes? In the movie of Gypsy, Rosalind Russell got a lot of help from Lisa Kirk.

AR: No, no, I'm afraid that was all me in "Sweeney Todd."

It must be wonderful to go into a musical role like that and know "I can do that."

AR: Well, I didn't know. This career is an adventure as much as anything else. There's not anything planned about it — or it seems that way to me — so I had no expectation of suddenly being asked by Tim Burton. Whoever knew that Tim Burton was going to direct a film of Sweeney Todd?

You were in all eight of the "Harry Potter" films, and that's an epic arc you have to play as Prof. Severus Snape — from sinister to sensitive. Who'd have thunk it?

AR: Well, it's a great story, and I have a really complicated and interesting character. Of course, by the time I got to play the last scenes, I had spent ten years watching Daniel Radcliffe grow from 12 to 22. I only shot seven weeks a year, so every year I'd come back, and he had grown a bit, his voice had changed, and he was becoming more and more the young man and not a little boy. In many ways, No Acting Required. At the end, when I'm looking him in the eyes, I have that relationship to play out — in fiction and in reality.

Snape's a great double agent, although you don't get to see that side of him until late. That's as much as I can say, without spoiling anything for some little kid who reads this article and he's on Book Three. You don't want to spoil anything for anyone when they haven't got to the end yet.

I trust it's not giving anything away if I congratulate you on Snape winning the MTV News' "Harry Potter" World Cup as the greatest character in J.K. Rowling's series.

AR: It was a big cup — it was too big to be able to take home — but it was incredibly gratifying to have the young people's approval like that.
Rickman and Daniel Radcliffe in "Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire."
2005 Warner Bros. Entertainment Inc. - Harry Potter Publishing Rights
Daniel is also your Oscar campaign manager. Did you know he's talking you up for a Best Supporting Actor Oscar for your work in the final installment?

AR: Oh, is he? That's very nice. I gotta pay him.

Have you seen him in How To Succeed in Business Without Really Trying?

AR: I saw him in the first preview. Yeah, I was there cheering him on. He was brilliant.

I didn't know he could do all that musical comedy stuff.

AR: I think he can do almost anything. He's literally one of those people who, if he puts his mind to it, he'll do it. He put his mind to 'O.K., I have to dance' and became as good a dancer as anybody in the chorus. He was with them, completely. Fantastic!

I'm sure you've had more than three Broadway offers in your career.

AR: Yeah, but often you're not free. Having a commitment — even though it was seven weeks a year to "Harry Potter" — is a difficult thing to slide around, especially if you're doing other projects. I was doing Borkman in Dublin before it came to New York and directing the Creditors in England before it came here, so to commit to a potential six-month run in New York is quite hard. We were able to do it with Private Lives because I had just finished 'Harry Potter.' In fact, I was shooting a 'Harry Potter' while I was on stage in the West End with Private Lives. And then, when that finished, I knew I had six months off to come to New York to do it, but it's not easy to organize, that. Now I have finished with the 'Harry Potter' series, and here I am.

Are you doing mostly movies now or stage work in London these days?

AR: I have something to direct next year, I hope, which is a new film. I directed one before — "The Winter Guest" with Emma Thompson and her mother, Phyllida Law. And I just finished acting in a film called "Gambit," in London, with Colin Firth and Cameron Diaz. That, I think, comes out next summer. It's a remake [of a Shirley MacLaine-Michael Caine-Herbert Lom thriller of 1966], but the script is by the Coen Brothers so, as you can imagine, "remake" doesn't really describe it. They weren't directing it, so I never saw them on the set. Michael Hoffman directed it. He did the movie that was out recently with Christopher Plummer and Helen Mirren, "The Last Station." That was his. He did the movie of Midsummer Night's Dream with Kevin Kline. We had a really good time on it.

Do you like going from one medium to another?

AR: Yeah, it makes me feel really lucky. Again, it's an adventure…

View Playbill Video's preview of Seminar:


Playbill

Wednesday, November 23, 2011

Alan Rickman: Truly, deeply appealing

Over the years, the British actor has built an impressive gallery of rogues and romantics. To him, it's just storytelling — and a love of language.
Actor Alan Rickman at the Golden Theater in Manhattan, New York.
November 20, 2011|By Patrick Pacheco, Special to the Los Angeles Times
Reporting from New York —

— Alan Rickman is aroused from a heavy-lidded languor recognizable from so many of his performances when the talk turns to a longtime crush. No, it's not Rima Horton, the economist he's lived with in London for 34 years. Nor is it the stage, which he still finds terrifying. What really excites him — truly, madly, deeply — is the English language.

"It's so rich and cruel and beautiful, like a fireworks display, and yet it can be so subtle and so crude," says the 65-year-old classical actor and director. "Marry that to the stage and something mysterious happens. Don't ask me what. It's magical."
The actor, once a critical darling who punctuated extensive stage work and art-house movies with scene-stealing supporting roles in commercial films, became an international mainstream figure playing Severus Snape, the tragic antagonist of Harry Potter in the eight-film franchise that concluded this past summer with "Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows — Part 2."
Now, he is applying a different brand of dark arts as Leonard, the caustic and embittered novelist at the center of Theresa Rebeck's new play, "Seminar," which opens Sunday on Broadway. With barbed tongue, he terrorizes a group of aspiring writers who've paid a princely sum for him to evaluate their work. . That is, when he's not trying to bed the women in the group despite the yawning age gap.
"I knew the actor playing Leonard had to be irresistible, and Alan is," says Rebeck. "Like Leonard, Alan is a life force, a fighter, someone who is still swinging for the fences with a vitality that is very appealing."
Rickman says the story of an iconoclast bullying his charges into meaningful change attracted him to the play — as well as, of course, the language. "Theresa's writing is incredibly demanding," he says in silky tones that belie his British working-class roots. "She's like a Restoration comedy writer. It's high style. The words are extremely well chosen, and sometimes you wish that word had not been chosen right next to that word because the equipment's a bit rusty."
He conveys a modest vulnerability sitting in his dressing room during previews of a play that will make its world premiere without workshops or an out-of-town tryout. His nervousness is striking from someone who has racked up an impressive gallery of rogues and romantics in action films ("Die Hard," "Robin Hood: Prince of Thieves"), sci-fi satire ("Galaxy Quest"), musicals ("Sweeney Todd: The Demon Barber of Fleet Street"), romantic comedies ("Love Actually," "Truly Madly Deeply") and period drama ("Sense and Sensibility").
Looming large on his theater resume are his stint with the Royal Shakespeare Company plus two Tony-nominated performances on Broadway: "Les Liaisons Dangereuses," his 1987 debut, and "Private Lives" in 2002. More recently, he starred in Ibsen's "John Gabriel Borkman" at the Brooklyn Academy of Music in January.
"I can only see my limitations," he says with a resigned laugh. "That's just who I am. I was working with [director] Peter Brook once on Shakespeare's 'Antony and Cleopatra' with Glenda Jackson, and he said, 'The thing is, you'll never be as good as the text.' And that came as a kind of relief, really. I'm fascinated by my friends in the acting profession who can't wait to get out there. I'm not on that list."

LA Times