Arab Times

Vanessa Redgrave turns director with docu at Cannes

‘Sea Sorrow’ a highly personal documentar­y on migrant crisis

-

LONDON, May 10, (AP): Vanessa Redgrave has spent six decades in front of the camera. Now her own past and current tragedies have encouraged her to get behind it.

The Academy Award-winning actress makes her directing debut with “Sea Sorrow,” a highly personal documentar­y about the migrant crisis that is set to premiere at this month’s Cannes Film Festival .

“I’ve identified all my life with refugees,” said 80-year-old Redgrave, who was one of thousands of children evacuated from London during World War II to escape German bombs.

A mix of documentar­y and drama, “Sea Sorrow” includes Redgrave’s experience­s alongside interviews with current-day migrants and their supporters, including Alf Dubs, a British politician who fled Nazi-occupied Europe as a child. Also in the mix is a scene from Shakespear­e’s “The Tempest” — a play about shipwrecke­d souls — featuring Ralph Fiennes.

Redgrave says her son and film-producing partner Carlo Nero persuaded her to include autobiogra­phical material.

“I got worried, of course, by not wanting the film to be about me,” she told The Associated Press in a recent interview at the production office she shares with Nero and a friendly poodle-Pomeranian mix named Zep. “It’s about the refugees.

“But I do think that perhaps hopefully my telling the story alongside Alf Dubs and the refugees that some people will realize the thing we were all taught — and which the government, (Winston) Churchill’s government, reminded people: It could happen to you.”

It’s a lesson many people in Europe and North America have forgotten as direct memories of war have faded. These days the news often carries stories of people making dangerous journeys by sea and land to flee war or seek a more prosperous life. Redgrave says such reports can be powerful, but often turn the migrants “into a stream of images, not real people.”

“Once upon a time they were at university. Once upon a time she was a doctor, he was a teacher. They’re real people,” said Redgrave, who has been a UNICEF ambassador since 1990.

Danger

“I think everybody, including myself, are in danger of losing our humanity,” she added. “We have to (do) what psychiatri­sts or psychologi­sts call ‘work on it.’”

Redgrave says she learned a huge amount about filmmaking in her first foray as director, but isn’t sure she will do it again.

“I just directed to tell this story,” she said. “I’m not a filmmaker as such.”

She shows no sign of retiring from acting, with projects lined up including a role in Christoph Waltz-directed thriller “Georgetown.”

Redgrave is part of a British acting dynasty that includes her father Michael Redgrave, her late siblings Lynne and Corin Redgrave and her daughters Natasha Richardson, who died in a ski accident in 2009, and Joely Richardson. Nero, her son, is a director and producer.

A six-time Oscar nominee, Redgrave won the supporting actress trophy in 1978 for playing an anti-Nazi activist in “Julia,” at a ceremony picketed by the Jewish Defense League because of Redgrave’s support for a Palestinia­n state. Her acceptance speech condemning “Zionist hoodlums” — to a mix of boos and applause — remains one of the most dramatic moments in Oscars history.

For years, Redgrave supported small left-wing groups such as the Workers Revolution­ary Party and the Peace and Progress Party, and her political intensity hasn’t faded. She is furious about Brexit, withering about Prime Minister Theresa May’s government and glum at the thought of a likely Conservati­ve victory in Britain’s June 8 election.

You might think she’d consider celebrity-obsessed Cannes a bit silly. But she is delighted to be returning to the festival, where she won a best-actress trophy in 1966 for “Morgan — A Suitable Case for Treatment.” She won a second time in 1969 for “Isadora.” “I’m thrilled to bits,” she said. “Still can’t quite believe it’s true. “In spite of the lure of Venice and Toronto and other great (festivals), it remains the special one.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Kuwait