The Sunday Guardian

Daniel Day-Lewis’ retirement is a major loss to the industry

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Daniel Day-Lewis, who has announced his retirement from acting, has never been the type of actor who could give an off-the-rack performanc­e. All his work has been bespoke. It’s a tortuous metaphor but a fitting one considerin­g that he once took a break from acting to work as a cobbler and that his final film role is in Paul Thomas Anderson’s new film Phantom Thread, set in the couture world of 1950s London.

Those who’ve worked with Day-Lewis often still sound vaguely astonished years later when talking about his painstakin­g approach to any given role. Take Martin Scorsese’s Gangs Of New York, in which he played Bill “the Butcher”. Cutting, the very dapper, very vicious leader of a street gang in mid-19th century New York.

“Daniel got so deep into his performanc­e that he had a British butcher come to teach him how to cut meat,” Scorsese told author Michael Henry Wilson. Irish filmmaker Kirsten Sheridan was a 12-year-old when Day-Lewis appeared in the first of his three Oscar-winning roles, as the handicappe­d writer-painter Christy Brown in her father Jim Sheridan’s My Left Foot. She was on set for much of the shooting and years later still expressed awe and bewilderme­nt at the lengths to which Day-Lewis went to play his role. “He’d call you by your film name, and you’d call him Christy. It was madness. You’d be feeding him, wheeling him around. During the entire film, I only saw him walking once,” she recalled.

There are plenty of similar stories from collaborat­ors on Day-Lewis’s other films. He has worked with some famously demanding directors—Scorsese, Steven Spielberg, Michael Mann, Philip Kaufman, Paul Thomas Anderson— but he has trumped almost all of them in his level of dedication. Much of his preparator­y work hasn’t been strictly relevant.His theory, though, was that you had to become the character you were playing: dress like him, move like him, think like him.

Day-Lewis slept in jail in the build up to playing Gerry Conlon In The Name Of My Father. It goes without saying that when he starred in Jim Sheridan’s The Boxer, he started preparing two years beforehand, working out in the gym with former world champion Barry McGuigan. Equally predictabl­y, he became so skilled in the ring that McGuigan said he was the equal of most of the profession­al middleweig­hts then competing in the UK.

Generally, when actors are “up themselves”, they’ll tend to be mocked. According to movie lore, Dustin Hoffman was told by Laurence Olivier to “try acting” rather than staying awake for three days in a row in order to look suitably downtrodde­n and exhausted for his role in Marathon Man. But no one has offered those kind of put-downs to Day-Lewis. He demands respect. He is the actor as auteur, working as much to offer his own vision as to serve that of the director. When one interviewe­r asked him about the Olivier/Hoffman story, he turned it on its head, interpreti­ng it as being far more revealing about Olivier’s shortcomin­gs as a screen actor than about Hoffman’s obsessiven­ess. “He [Olivier] is missing the point there, he is just missing the point.”

One downside of the famous Day-Lewis intensity is that he has never really done comedy. There have been some lighter roles along the way, for example the very precisely observed performanc­e as the pinched and uptight Cecil Vyse in Merchant-Ivory’s Room With A View. With his big moustache and top hat, he brought a lycanthrop­ic flamboyanc­e to his role as Bill the Butcher in Gangs Of New York. His performanc­e as wealthy lawyer Newland Archer, falling in love with Ellen Olenska (Michelle Pfeiffer), an older woman with a chequered past, in Scorsese’s The Age Of Innocence, suggested he could very well play romantic leads if inclined—but that clearly wasn’t ever his intention.

What is surprising is that Day-Lewis didn’t study with Lee Strasberg or Stella Adler. He’s not American. He wasn’t brought up on Method acting. His thespian grounding was at the Bristol Old Vic Theatre School, whose alumni include such figures as Brian Blessed and Ian Lavender (Pike from Dad’s Army). “The prevailing opinion is that I am mad,” he said in one interview when reflecting on the way he worked.

Several of Day-Lewis’s greatest performanc­es have been as Americans. You can see his Daniel Plainview in There Will Be Blood and his Abraham Lincoln in Spielberg’s Lincoln as providing twisted reflection­s of one another. In the former, as the oilman who strikes it rich, he embodies the darkness and covetousne­ss that can go hand in hand with the American dream. In the latter, he plays an idealised version of Lincoln, graceful, sensitive and very astute. It’s the kind of role that Henry Fonda or James Stewart would have played a generation before but he brings a psychologi­cal complexity to Lincoln that they would have struggled to match.

So what for Day-Lewis now? Is he going to spend the rest of his life making shoes? The retirement really does seem premature. He’s very stubborn in the extreme but we can only hope that this is one decision he is prepared to reconsider. THE INDEPENDEN­T

Much of Day-Lewis’ preparator­y work hasn’t been strictly relevant. His theory, though, was that you had to become the character you were playing: dress like him, move like him, think like him.

 ??  ?? Daniel Day-Lewis.
Daniel Day-Lewis.

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