The Freeman

At 79, Ian McKellen has no plans to give up acting

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Sir Ian McKellen says his upcoming role as King Lear in an upcoming London production may be his last major Shakespear­e role but he has no plans on retiring, as long as his knees and memory hold out.

Playing the tormented ruler is one of two projects prompting reflection from the 79-year-old star of the “X-Men” and “Lord of the Rings” film series.

“I’ll keep going as long as the knees keep going. And the mind and the memory are still there. Any day now they can begin to fade and then I’ll perhaps regret that I didn’t do stuff I could have done while I was fit. So being fit, here I am and if I’m not acting, what the hell I going to do sit at home,” McKellen said.

McKellen is playing King Lear in a production at London’s Duke of York Theatre starting in July. He is reprising a role he played for the Royal Shakespear­e Co. a decade ago.

He says playing King Lear allows him to reflect on the journey of an old man, one that feels very personal to him.

“For me it’s worth re-exploring because nearly 80 myself, that’s King Lear’s age, I can concentrat­e in part on the fact that it’s an old man, it’s an old man’s journey, it’s a man who’s withdrawin­g from life. It’s a man whose mind is giving way, really and much else in his life is a confusion to him and I find that all too easy to relate to. So I take the part very personally.”

McKellen also got a career and life retrospect­ive through a documentar­y focused about him called “McKellen: Playing The Part.”

The documentar­y, which was broadcast in the UK and Scandinavi­a last May 27 and will be in select US theaters this summer, focuses not only on McKellen’s famous roles, but also his activism for gay rights.

McKellen said he was initially reluctant to do the project, but decided to go forward because of the involvemen­t of director Joe Stephenson, and because the film would focus on topics he cares about.

“The trouble about talking about yourself is that, for me, is that I don’t feel I’m an expert. I don’t feel I’ve got a right to have an opinion,” McKellen said.

“I do know about two things,” he said. “One is acting, because I’ve been doing it for so long and the other is about being gay, because as far as I know, I’ve been gay all my life, so I can with authority talk about those two subgroups.”

Stephenson said he wanted to show younger audiences, who might just be familiar with McKellen from his role as Gandalf in six films based on J.R.R. Tolkien’s Middle Earth books or as Magneto in the “X-Men” films, that there was more to the actor.

The two-time Oscar nominee said he never had aspiration­s to be a film star, but as a child he was fascinated by stage actors and their craft.

“When I was a young actor myself I loved being with the older actors, they had things to educate me about, tell me about. I would think, ‘One day I’ll be like you’ and now I am like them,” Mckellen said, adding that he doesn’t offer advice unsolicite­d.

“It’s wonderful to be in an industry where young and old have equal responsibi­lity on occasion and are sharing things together and the respect is mutual and not just dependent on your age.”

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IAN MCKELLEN

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