Orlando Sentinel (Sunday)

Jim Broadbent puts an eccentric at film center

Character actor can’t recall reading a script quite like ‘Duke’

- By Simran Hans

In Room 45 of the National Gallery in London, Jim Broadbent surveyed Francisco de Goya’s portrait of the Duke of Wellington. It was not his first encounter with the painting. But, “I haven’t seen him next to Napoleon before,” he said, nodding toward Vernet’s study of the French emperor hanging nearby.

Broadbent’s latest film, “The Duke,” now in theaters, is based on the real-life theft of the portrait in 1961. The actor, 72, plays Kempton Bunton, who held the painting ransom in protest against what he saw as unfair taxes on ordinary people.

If any of the tourists visiting the museum knew they were standing a few feet away from one of Britain’s great character actors, they didn’t let on. To many young people, Broadbent is Professor Slughorn, the affable Hogwarts potions master in the Harry Potter films. Their parents may have seen him portray Harold Zidler, the mustachioe­d owner of the Moulin Rouge, or Bridget Jones’ father.

The story of Bunton, a mischievou­s taxi driver, failed playwright and possible cat burglar from Newcastle-upon-Tyne, has given Broadbent another eccentric character. “You couldn’t sell it as a piece of fiction,” Broadbent said earlier, in the gallery’s restaurant. “Stealing a picture from the National Gallery? It’s too far-fetched.”

On the 50th anniversar­y of the heist, Bunton’s grandson, Christophe­r, 45, had the idea to tell his family’s story. Inspired after reading his grandfathe­r’s plays, he drafted a script, he said in a recent interview, and emailed 20 British production companies. He received six replies, including one from producer Nicky Bentham. Richard Bean and Clive Coleman reshaped the script and Roger Michell signed on to direct, followed by Broadbent as the lead.

“I don’t remember reading a script quite like it,” said Broadbent, remarking on its old-fashioned quality. With a whimsical sense of humor softening its satirical bite, it reminded him of the films produced by London’s Ealing Studios in the 1950s, like “The Lavender Hill Mob” or “The Ladykiller­s.” When Bunton is tried in court, he addresses the jury as if they were the audience at a stand-up show.

Broadbent has been honing his own comic instincts since childhood. He grew up in Lincolnshi­re to artist parents, and attended a Quaker school, where he would impersonat­e his teachers with studied accuracy, realizing that if he got it right, people would really laugh.

“I think that’s what drew me into character acting,” he said. The impression­s weren’t just about mimicry, “It was actually observing and nailing essential characteri­stics.”

His alert blue eyes and gawky 6-foot-1 frame lend themselves well to physical comedy, though his looks, he said, have facilitate­d a versatile career. “I was never going to be the regular sort of good-looking, handsome chap,” he said. “From the word go, since I wasn’t easily castable in any particular thing, I knew I had to cast my net very wide.”

He graduated from the London Academy of Music and Dramatic Art in 1972 and soon became a fixture on London’s repertory scene.

When filmmaker and theater director Mike Leigh met Broadbent over drinks in 1974, he found the actor “very, very cautious.” Leigh is known for his improvisat­ional style of working, which Broadbent “wasn’t sure whether he could do,” Leigh said in a recent interview.

But the director saw an emotional intelligen­ce, and cast Broadbent as a “very gentle, Northern, workingcla­ss guy” in “Ecstasy,” at the Hampstead Theater. Impressed by Broadbent’s rare sensitivit­y, and anticipati­ng his range, Leigh cast him again in his next production, “GoosePimpl­es,” where the actor “played the exact opposite, a really nasty fascist character.” In total, the pair have worked together seven times.

In the 1980s, Broadbent was rarely offstage — except when he was on TV. Helen Mirren, who plays Dorothy, Bunton’s wife in “The Duke,” said in an email that it was impossible to remember when she first encountere­d her co-star’s work, “as he has been a part of our theater and screen landscape for so long, but it was probably in ‘Not The Nine O’Clock News’ and ‘Blackadder,’ two iconic comedy TV programs in Britain.”

Soon, Broadbent was craving new challenges, and a change of pace. “I felt very easy onstage, and hadn’t felt that on the bits of filming I’d been doing, and was so self-conscious in front of a lens being put up your nose,” he said, and so moved more toward

films.

Another collaborat­ion with Leigh, the feature “Topsy-Turvy,” won him a prize at the 1999 Venice Film Festival, and was a hit in the U.S. “That was the beginning of that: You become awardable,” Broadbent said. The awards led to work with Hollywood directors like Baz Luhrmann and Martin Scorsese.

“There’s a whole bunch around that time, like ‘Moulin Rouge!’ — it’s completely out of my comfort zone, I certainly wouldn’t have cast myself in that role at all,” Broadbent said, “you know, singing and dancing.” But he won a BAFTA for his performanc­e. And then in 2002 he won an Oscar for playing literary critic John

Bayley in “Iris,” a role “I tried to persuade Richard Eyre that I wasn’t right for,” Broadbent said. Bayley, he thought, was “a sort of cerebral academic, which is not me at all.”

The appeal of “The Duke” came partly from being directed by Michell again (the pair worked together on the 2013 film “Le Week-End”). Bunton’s story turned out to be Michell’s final project, and he died in September last year. “Roger had it all,” Broadbent said. “He was very sensitive to people, and their vulnerabil­ities and strengths.”

Broadbent was also drawn to Bunton’s complexity. “He was a failed playwright, an activist, fairly unemployab­le

for any extended period,” Broadbent said.

Though Broadbent’s parents were conscienti­ous objectors to World War II, the actor said he personally prefers to “keep a low profile.” He described himself as “resistant to authority” but said he “never wanted, particular­ly, that resistance to define who I am.” Bunton, by contrast, campaigned for what he believed in, like an exemption for retirees from Britain’s annual TV license fee. “He was prepared to stand up, and make his presence felt, and complain in a way that I have never done,” the actor said.

Broadbent, Leigh said, “is a consummate character actor. He doesn’t play himself.”

 ?? ALEX INGRAM/THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? Actor Jim Broadbent, who is seen April 11 at the National Gallery in London, stars as mischievou­s taxi driver Kempton Bunton in “The Duke.”
ALEX INGRAM/THE NEW YORK TIMES Actor Jim Broadbent, who is seen April 11 at the National Gallery in London, stars as mischievou­s taxi driver Kempton Bunton in “The Duke.”

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