For actress Maggie Gyllenhaal accustomed
to the director-driven world of feature film,
For actress Maggie Gyllenhaal accustomed
to the director-driven world of feature film,
By Meredith Blake In The Honorable Woman, an eight-part mini-series airing on SundanceTV, Maggie Gyllenhaal stars as Baroness Nessa Stein, a heiress whose life is inextricably bound up in one of humanity’s most enduring conflicts. As a child, Nessa witnessed the brutal assassination of her father, an Israeli arms dealer, and three decades later she is committed to using her wealth and influence to foster peace and prosperity in the Middle East. The series opens as Nessa announces plans to bring high-speed data cables to the West Bank in a lucrative deal with a Palestinian businessman. “Terror thrives in poverty, it dies in wealth,” she declares idealistically. But within minutes, the businessman turns up dead under suspicious circumstances and viewers are thrust into a complex mystery that involves secrets buried deep in Nessa’s past. The Honorable Woman, written and directed by British TV auteur Hugo Blick, landed on Gyllenhaal’s doorstep at a time when she was frustrated about being sent the same kind of part over and over again — “single mom” roles that were bad versions of the character that earned her an Oscar nomination in 2009’s Crazy Heart. “I was really looking to play an intelligent, powerful woman who was also all the other things that we women all are,” says the 36-year-old over breakfast at a Brooklyn cafe not far from the home she shares with her husband, actor Peter Sarsgaard. Nessa, a character whose stylish and poised exterior barely disguises a profound emotional vulnerability and a history of intense personal trauma — she sleeps in a high-tech panic room, and with good reason — certainly fit the bill. Still, Gyllenhaal says she hesitated to accept the part. “My husband and everybody who works with me were all like, ‘What are you talking about? You have to do this, it’s a very unusual and extraordinary piece.’ But I really did try not to do it. I tried really hard. I knew that in order to play her I would have to grow up in some major way as myself and that I would probably be a different person by the end of it than before I began.” Blick had no such reservations about Gyllenhaal. “I didn’t want a casting that suggested a kick-ass action girl or a Barbie doll,” he said via telephone. “She needed to have a cool exterior of intellectual presence. You have to have this outside of calm and then inside you have to be emotionally in bits. I really needed an actor who could perform all those layers, and Maggie was that.” In a rarity for a spy thriller, even one with the complexity of a John le Carre novel, The Honorable Woman is populated with female characters who are more than mere honey traps. Chief among them are Janet McTeer as a steely MI6 boss who coolly gives orders to her ex (Stephen Rea), and Lubna Azabal as a formidable Palestinian woman who works as a nanny for Nessa’s brother (Andrew Buchan) and tightly wound sister-in-law (Katherine Parkinson). “I was really intrigued to take the chassis, the vehicle of the genre which is quite masculine, and place women at the centre of the story,” says Blick, who also wrote and directed the noir series The Shadow Line. Gyllenhaal, who will be making her Broadway debut opposite Ewan McGregor in a revival of Tom Stoppard’s The Real Thing, joins a growing list of movie talent migrating to television for creative fulfillment. “Not only are there not that many interesting independent scripts, there’s no real systems to help get them distributed anymore,” she replies when asked about the challenges facing the independent film business. “If you’re making work so that people will see it and be affected by it, it makes a lot more sense to do it in television.” But even though Sundance is a comfortable small-screen home for an actress who burst onto the scene in the 2002 festival favourite Secretary, the move to television was not without risks. For Gyllenhaal, used to the three-act structure and two-hour arc of feature film, the sheer scope of The Honorable Woman was unprecedented. And as the mother of two young daughters, she also had to consider how she’d juggle a lengthy shoot that would take her family to London and Morocco with the more quotidian demands of child rearing. “About the third day, I remember just crying quietly in my trailer and I tried not to mess up my makeup. I hadn’t ever taken on anything like that,” she recalls. Executives at SundanceTV, which co-produced the series with the BBC, also a partner on last year’s Top of the Lake, had few such qualms. “When Maggie’s name was suggested, it didn’t even take us a beat to be fully in,” says network President Sarah Barnett. “She’s such a nuanced performer, and she’s so able to convey such layers within a character, and she has this incredibly physical presence.” Barnett, a Brit, also jokes that Gyllenhaal’s plummy English accent “is more impeccable than mine.” Critical reaction to the series and in particular to its lead performance has been just as positive. Gyllenhaal’s Nessa is “like no modern woman we have ever seen before on any screen,” said Times critic Mary McNamara. Despite such a rewarding experience, Gyllenhaal isn’t sure she’s ready to leave the world of cinema for the supposedly greener pastures of series television. “I did see also how if it weren’t great, to be involved in something of that scope could be awful. I can’t imagine reading one episode of something and signing up for seven years,” she says. “That seems very scary to me.” For an actress accustomed to the director-driven world of feature film, having a single writer-director overseeing the entire project — in contrast to most television shows — was essential. Though she’s dabbled in such high-octane blockbusters as The Dark Knight, Gyllenhaal’s resume suggests an artist drawn to projects with broader social and political themes, including Hysteria, a period comedy, and Won’t Back Down, a drama that follows two mothers fighting a powerful teachers’ union. The Honorable Woman, filmed last summer at a time of relative peace in Israel and the Palestinian territories, debuted just weeks after violence had exploded in Gaza, and it is possible to see its troubled protagonist as a one-woman metaphor for the tumultuous region. — Los Angeles Times/MCT Bradley Cooper to Actor Bradley Cooper has been roped in to play Mack Bolan, the fictional character created by author Don Pendleton, in a new film. The character was a fighter against terrorism in the original Pendleton novels and the role will see Cooper reunite with The Hangover director Todd Phillips, reports contactmusic.com. Linda Pendleton said that her husband wrote the first novel in the series War Against the Mafia “out of his desire to express his discomfort with the reaction of many Americans to our soldiers who were dying for our country in the jungles of Vietnam and those coming home to outrageous verbal and physical abuse.” She added: “Mack Bolan became Don’s symbolic statement. He also became every soldier’s voice. Don created a heroic character in Bolan, a true hero who was dedicated to justice.” — IANS Jason Statham voted the manliest celebrity Death Race star Jason Statham has been named Britain’s celebrity manliest man, beating the likes of David Beckham and Gerard Butler. The 47-year-old, who is dating model Rosie Huntington-Whiteley, topped the survey with an impressive 24% of votes, reports femalefirst.co.uk. King Arthur actor Ray Winstone, 57, bagged the second position with 18%, while The Dark Knight Rises star Tom Hardy, 36, secured the third place with 10% of the votes. Beckham and Butler shared fourth position with 8%, while Idris Elba followed closely behind with 7%. Prince William and Simon Cowell found themselves at the bottom of the list with just 1% of the votes. The celebrity list comes ahead of a “manliest man” competition. Men’s Fitness magazine and men’s cancer charity Orchid have teamed up with male grooming brand The Bluebeards Revenge to launch a campaign to find Britain’s Manliest Man. — IANS MAN OF THE MOMENT: Jason Statham
star as Mack Bolan