Authors: Maureen Paton
âAlan takes endless time to decide about which scripts to accept, goes through the whole Hamlet routine and cogitates for ever about whether to take a part,' adds Barnes fondly. âHe often rings up friends. He rang me up about playing Colonel Brandon in Emma Thompson's film of
Sense And Sensibility
â he said to me, “The thing has got Hugh Grant in it.”
âI think he was worried at the time about all the attention on Hugh Grant. Plus I have the impression they didn't get on in
An Awfully Big Adventure
.'
The director Mike Newell was a modestly successful film-maker who unexpectedly hit the jackpot with the low-budget British movie
Four Weddings And A Funeral
. It became the biggest-grossing UK film of all time and turned Hugh Grant into an international star, charmingly knock-kneed and sweetly stammering. The overgrown-boy-next-door image was, of course, far too good to be true. An over-tired Hugh sullied his escutcheon when his idea of in-car entertainment at the seedier end of Sunset Boulevard excited the prurient attention of the Los Angeles Police Department. The rest is mugshot history.
Grant was signed up for Newell's follow-up project, a screen version of Beryl Bainbridge's story of a post-war Liverpool repertory theatre company and its struggles to stage a production of
Peter Pan.
The title,
An Awfully Big Adventure
, was a quote from a poignant line in J. M. Barrie's play about the little boy who didn't want to grow up: âTo die will be an awfully big adventure.'
By general critical consensus, the lightweight Grant was disastrously miscast as the manipulative and vitriolic theatre director with whom the naïve young heroine falls in love without realising that he is homosexual. (The word is not in her ken.)
Not many people know, however, that Alan Rickman was offered the role of the waspish, cold-hearted Meredith first. The
casting would have made a great deal of sense. âI asked Alan's agent if it was the case that Alan doesn't want to play villains,' remembers Newell. âHe said yes, that was the case, but that Alan would like to play the part of P. L. O'Hara instead.'
O'Hara is the film's equivalent of the cavalry, riding to the rescue of the heroine (and the movie itself) on an old Norton motorbike. Just when you feel the story couldn't get more leaden, along comes Rickman to wake things up. The result is a broken-backed piece of work that is fascinating only for a few well-observed cameos and for yet another of Alan Rickman's scene-stealing performances.
âHe is not a chameleon actor, because he is very noticeable,' says Peter James, principal of the London drama school LAMDA. âIt seemed to me that
Mesmer
was the next logical step for him. You can't cast him in absolutely anything, although he's managed to cover a surprising breadth of roles. But it would be very difficult for him to play a plumber. He looks so elegant, so aristocratic.' As opposed to Kenneth Branagh, who is forever being told (despite the kings he has played) that he looks like a plumber. Both Ken and Alan come from similar backgrounds â if anything, Branagh's origins are more bourgeois â yet you would never associate Rickman with the tradesman's entrance.
âGod didn't mean him to play small roles,' is Newell's classic observation. âBut I don't agree that he couldn't play a plumber; he would just make you feel that the plumber was a leading part.
âIn theatrical terms, he's absolutely a star. But on film he's a leading actor, a great big leading actor who graces any film he's in. He's financially very useful because people feel easier about investing in a film he makes.
âAlan feels he's a leading actor; in the theatre, he's allowed to play a huge range of parts. In Hollywood he played villains before heroes, thus he has been typecast in villainy. That way he's going to have a boring time; it limits him.
âHis villains are in fact warped tragic heroes. But he's very canny, and doesn't get that across in a wrong-headed way as some actors do. It's difficult to get actors to play motiveless malignity; they want the devil to be understood, at least. On the contrary, I want to be satisfied in my villains, not for them to be understood!
âAlan
is
pernickety sometimes; but then famous old actors like Ralph Richardson and Laurence Olivier were also pernickety about getting something absolutely right and pat. There is a sense of
rhythm and fitness and being in the right place at the right time. But I had a harmonious relationship with him.
âAffection is important to him,' adds Newell. âHe wants to have the sort of authority where people take advice from him. He's a guru.'
Newell denies the rumour that there was a rancorous atmosphere between Rickman and Grant on
An Awfully Big Adventure
; Hugh's encounter with the prostitute Divine Brown was to occur later, duly recorded by Emma Thompson's
Diary
(â“All right for some,” I thought') on the filming of
Sense And Sensibility
.
Rickman and Grant are, however, completely different types, though Newell insists, âThere was no coolness. But Alan does have a bit of Eeyore in him, though he would be puzzled if you pointed that out. It doesn't strike him that he's pessimistic.'
The one thing Grant and Rickman indisputably do have in common, of course, is their invaluable early dramatic experience as Old Latymerians. Hugh was also taught English and Drama by Alan's old mentor, Colin Turner, and appeared in many school productions during the 70s. In 2001, Latymer Upper's Head of Middle School Chris Hammond was invited to a party at Mel Smith's London house where he found Alan Rickman and Hugh Grant reminiscing together about their days at Latymer, all rivalry between the first choice and second choice for the male lead in
An Awfully Big Adventure
apparently long forgotten.
Given his aversion to yet more screen villainy, it's rather amusing to see Rickman briefly donning the mantle of a black-hearted fiend when P.L. O'Hara plays Captain Hook in
Peter Pan
with Hugh Grant's Meredith taking over after O'Hara is drowned. There is no comparison between the two performances. O'Hara is also an intriguing mixture of hero and villain in his own right, befriending and sexually awakening the heroine without realising â until the devastating finale â that he is in fact seducing his own long-lost daughter. Both Meredith and O'Hara are seducers of the young and innocent; and when O'Hara tries to upbraid Meredith for his treatment of a youth, he is fatally compromised by his own cavalier behaviour.
âThere was a big difference in the two voices for Captain Hook,' Newell admits. âHugh had a thin tenor and Alan a great booming, baritone voice. It's the difference between a film actor and a stage actor, because Alan is very much a theatre animal.
âAlan is very ambiguous and enigmatic, very powerful. He stands still, which reinforces the enigma. He's a calm actor rather than a tumultuous one; everything seems to come from a very deep and solid place. You are constantly invited further and further in, so you find yourself suckered in.
âHe's what is known as a backfoot actor, with tremendous weight and talent. He would have been fairly obvious casting as Meredith; he would have been magnificent. He's very difficult to miscast, because he hides everything.
âI do regret not being able to go into O'Hara's previous history before he was presented in the film. I wished I had actually shown his failed life as an actor, his cramped Maida Vale flat.' In the event, however, the sad cast of Rickman's haggard face said it all.
âIt was a great moment of revelation for Alan at the end of the film when O'Hara realises that he's the father of Stella, the girl he's seduced. He played the version without words; we had two versions. He said to me, “I know what you're going to ask me, to do it without words.” And of course he had this amazing eloquence without words.
âWe used a Norton motorbike â the biggest bike we could get hold of, 450 cc or 500 cc. I wanted something truly huge, but this was the biggest, meanest bike the English made in those days. He rode the machine for 20 to 30 yards, then a stuntman took over. You are not supposed to notice the join.
âAn old bike like that is a cranky thing, and I was concerned about Alan breaking bones. I was very unhappy about him half-learning to ride it. I remember one time that it wasn't quite in control. But he was very game.
âAs for the death scene, he fell just nine inches into the water; we showed the cast-iron wheel hitting his head, but in fact it was foam rubber. The sound effects did the rest.'
An Awfully Big Adventure
contained Rickman's first film sex scene, with P. L. O'Hara and Georgina Cates's Stella both naked from the waist up for an unusually delicate and tenderly erotic deflowering of a virgin. We see a back view of Rickman, bending over her in bed: he might have been her tutor.
He certainly fitted Bainbridge's description of O'Hara in the original novel: âin profile, the man appeared haughty, contemptuous almost.' O'Hara clings to the rags and tatters of a thing he once called integrity, but the character is so tarnished by his equivocal relationship with Stella â partly paternalistic, partly predatory â
that only Rickman's strong and complex presence ensures he retains our sympathy. O'Hara's doubts and misgivings are evident throughout.
Charles Wood's screenplay was far too episodic to maintain a strong narrative, and most viewers will have been either bored or confused or both.
An Awfully Big Adventure
was a cinematic flop, going quickly to video.
So much for the dream team of Newell and Grant, with only Rickman and a few other stalwarts â Alun Armstrong as Stella's uncle, Prunella Scales, Nicola Pagett and Carol Drinkwater â emerging with much credibility.
Mike Newell says, rather cruelly under the circumstances, that for the supporting cast of
An Awfully Big Adventure
, âI wanted people who were over the hill or about to be over the hill'. And Alan himself admitted in a location interview on Barry Norman's
Film 95
: âIt's a strange film to be doing in a way, a bit like being a vulture on your own flesh . . . we have actors playing actors, using a stage for a film set and using our own lives as raw material. Georgina is remarkable . . . she claims to be seventeen but I'm going to put it out that she's forty-three.'
He reminisced about his own days in rep: âI had to haul up my own cross because I was Inquisitor and ASM at the same time for a production of Shaw's
St Joan.
And then I had to put the kettle on. Everyone's memories of rep have that kind of mixture â pleasure and pain.'
There is precious little pleasure in
An Awfully Big Adventure
, compared with much pain and cynical back-biting, led by a hard-boiled Nicola Pagett and a jaded Carol Drinkwater.
The theme of lost innocence â pace Peter Pan â is brusquely handled in a relentlessly downbeat and depressing setting that should at least dissuade a few cross-eyed daughters of Mrs Worthington from following a hard life on the wicked stage.
It's hard to care about anyone, not least the coldly self-contained young heroine Stella. Little wonder that
An Awfully Big Adventure
failed to catch fire at the box office, with most people attracted only by the names of Hugh Grant and Alan Rickman.
Variety
magazine loathed it, calling the film âa dour, anti-sentimental coming-of-age story . . . a rather disagreeable look at the irresponsible and corrupting behaviour of adults toward youthful proteges'. Austerity Britain, indeed.
Rickman's character was a misfit in more ways than one: he looked anachronistically modern, with a blond bob that inspired a catty story in the London
Evening Standard
about shipments of hair gel to the location in Dublin (there wasn't enough of pre-war Liverpool left to shoot there).
This unglamorous evocation of his theatrical beginnings fired him up to go back to the stage with a long-held ambition. After one or two forays as a director, he wanted to flex his controlling muscles again. Ruby's one-woman show had been really a matter of editing.
Rickman wanted to join the grown-ups and direct a proper drama, specifically Sharman Macdonald's
The Winter Guest
â a project that had been thwarted by the failure of his Riverside bid. Even so, for someone who gives the impression of being the epitome of self-control, he was still oddly uncertain about his own capabilities. âWhen he wasn't sure if he could do
The Winter Guest
, he asked me to look at it with a view to me doing it,' says Richard Wilson. âAnd while he was directing it, he said to me, “Your name is mentioned often.”
âBut you always felt Alan should become a director â I'm surprised it took him so long. Alan is always being sought after for his advice. He gives it freely. I have asked him things too; he is a sort of guru.
âHe does go along to an enormous number of productions. He's very supportive of friends who haven't worked for a while, giving encouragement to them during bad spells. Now he's a movie star, it doesn't prevent him going to Fringe shows. And there's no reason why it should.
âMy feeling is he would want to do both: act and direct. It's nice to be able to think about your role and forget everyone else as an actor, because directing is tough. But I would be surprised if he ever left the theatre.'
For a Fringe salary of less than £200 a week, Rickman premièred
The Winter Guest
at West Yorkshire Playhouse in January 1995. A co-production with London's fashionable Almeida Theatre, it starred Emma Thompson's actress mother Phyllida Law. The play had come about through conversations between Alan and his old
Les Liaisons
co-star Lindsay Duncan. Back in the late 80s, Lindsay would visit her mother, a widow who had become seriously ill with Alzheimer's disease, in a seaside town on the west coast of
Scotland. Not that it was all gloom and doom: when they got together, there was much laughter and mutual comfort. From Duncan's stories, Rickman gradually realised there was the genesis of a motherâdaughter play in this; and who better than his old discovery to depict that most intense of all family relationships? Poignantly, Duncan's mother, to whom the film was dedicated, died while Sharman was writing the play whose very title referred to winter's most reliable visitor: Death.