Windsor Star

Chris Noth on board Titanic series

Actor plays J.P. Morgan

- FRAZIER MOORE

NEW YORK The man widely known as Big gets even bigger: He’s playing J.P. Morgan, one of history’s towering business magnates.

It was one of Morgan’s businesses that funded the Titanic, and Chris Noth appears in a supporting role in Titanic: Blood and Steel, an epic 12part miniseries about the building of the great ship that’s airing Wednesday nights on CBC.

Noth says the idea of playing Morgan intrigued him.

“He’s sort of maligned today,” he says. “But two times in our history he saved our banking system from falling apart and saved the country from bankruptcy and depression. He was a patriotic man. But he liked to make money, too.

“It was fun to come into this film and remind people whose wallet it was that was building the Titanic,” says Noth. “Morgan wanted the ship done right and he wanted it safe. But the bureaucrac­y below him equivocate­d a lot.”

Everyone knows the resulting tragedy. But that familiar outcome looms just beyond the final fadeout of Titanic: Blood and Steel, itself the largely untold story of how the ship came to be.

Also appearing is actor Derek Jacobi (The King’s Speech, The Borgias) as Lord William Pirrie, chairman of the Harland and Wolff shipyard in Belfast, Ireland, where the ship was built.

Kevin Zegers (Gossip Girl) stars as a young scientist who raises questions about the safety of the ship. Neve Campbell (Party of Five) plays an American journalist reporting on the ship’s maiden voyage.

And Alessandra Mastronard­i (To Rome with Love) stars as a copyist who, thanks to her skill and perseveran­ce, prospers even in this patriarcha­l age.

“The film celebrates the complex nature of the project, and all the people who wanted it to happen,” Noth says.

“This was an industrial age at the advent of new technology. There was a flowering of unions. Meanwhile, there were social issues, including the Catholic-Protestant conflict.”

Filming his scenes in summer 2011, Noth sports a bushy, Morganian moustache which, he confides, was artificial­ly applied. “I don’t think I have the hormones to grow one like that,” he jokes.

But he was denied one makeup touch: the purple, outsized nose that plagued Morgan, caused by a chronic skin disease.

“His nose was a cross between W.C. Fields’ and Jimmy Durante’s,” Noth says, “and I wanted it for the part. But we didn’t have time to make it.”

Even before J.P. Morgan, Noth has made a TV specialty of important-guy roles that don’t necessaril­y claim lots of screen time.

He was the intermitte­ntly seen but somehow ever-present Big on HBO’s Sex and the City (as well as in two movie versions of the series).

And now he’s starting his fourth season as Peter Florrick, a powerful pol (and the philanderi­ng husband of series star Julianna Margulies) on The Good Wife.

As a key but recurring character on that CBS legal drama, Noth says the routine beats his old gig, playing a series lead on Law & Order and, later, Law & Order: Criminal Intent.

“At this point in my life, I like the security of a job,” says the 57-year-old actor, “while still having time for my young son and to pursue other creative work.”

For instance, he’s recently made two indie films — 3,2,1… Frankie Go Boom and Lovelace.

“I just played a cocaine-addicted ex-TV actor in one, and a Mafia guy involved in porno in the other,” says Noth.

He may be best-known as a TV series Bigshot, “but I do a lot of other stuff under the radar.”

 ?? THE ASSOCIATED PRESS/ENCORE ?? Chris Noth as J.P. Morgan in Titanic: Blood and Steel, the 12-part miniseries that airs Wednesday nights on CBC. Noth says the moustache is fake. ‘I don’t
think I have the hormones to grow one like that,’ he jokes.
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS/ENCORE Chris Noth as J.P. Morgan in Titanic: Blood and Steel, the 12-part miniseries that airs Wednesday nights on CBC. Noth says the moustache is fake. ‘I don’t think I have the hormones to grow one like that,’ he jokes.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada