"Cyrano de Bergerac" by Rostand (1985 TV) Derek Jacobiseeders: 1
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"Cyrano de Bergerac" by Rostand (1985 TV) Derek Jacobi (Size: 2.77 GB)
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"Cyrano de Bergerac" by Rostand (1985 TV) Derek Jacobi with The Royal Shakespeare Company
3 hours total time. Ripped from commercial VHS tapes Writers: Edmond Rostand (play) Anthony Burgess (translation) Directed by Terry Hands Original Music by Nigel Hess Film Editing by David Martin Production Design by Ralph Koltai Costume Design by Alexander Reid Cast (in credits order) complete, awaiting verification Jimmy Gardner ... Doorkeeper / Capuchin Richard Clifford ... Cavalryman / Gascony Cadet Robert Clare ... D'Artagnan / Gascony Cadet Philip Dennis ... Flunkey / Gascony Cadet John Tramper ... Flunkey / Gascony Cadet Geoffrey Freshwater ... Musketeer Alexandra Brook ... Flowergirl / Sister Claire Niall Padden ... Eater / Gascony Cadet Phillip Walsh ... Drinker / Gascony Cadet Simon Clark ... Citizen / Gascony Cadet Jayne Tottman ... Citizen's Son Paul Basson ... Page Stephen Kennedy ... Page Raymond Llewellyn ... Pickpocket Jeffery Dench ... Marquis 1 David Glover ... Marquis 2 Dennis Clinton ... Cuigy Edward Jewesbury ... Brisaille George R. Parsons ... Lignière the Poet (as George Parsons) Tom Mannion ... Christian de Neuvillette Penelope Beaumont ... Precieuse / Mother Marguerite / Lise Clare Byam-Shaw ... Precieuse Cathy Finlay ... Food Seller / Sister Marthe Pete Postlethwaite ... Ragueneau John Bowe ... Le Bret Sinéad Cusack ... Roxane Jennie Goossens ... Roxane's Duenna John Carlisle ... Le Comte de Guiche Christopher Bowen ... Le Vicomte de Valvert / Gascony Cadet Christopher Benjamin ... Montfleury Derek Jacobi ... Cyrano de Bergerac David Shaw Parker ... Bellerose / Gascony Cadet Raymond Bowers ... Jodelet Ken Bones ... Carbon de Castel Jaloux John Blyton .... executive producer Keith Williams .... producer Original Music by Nigel Hess Film Editing by David Martin Production Design by Ralph Koltai Costume Design by Alexander Reid Sound Department Steve Blincoe .... boom operator Stunts Ian Mackay .... fights Camera and Electrical Department John Treays .... lighting technician ----- Quality: VHS rip Format: .wmv Audio: 2.0 stereo, 256 Kbps Aspect ratio: 4x3 ----------------- from The Observer, Saturday 22 October 2011 Lee Hall: the best performance I've ever seen Derek Jacobi in Cyrano de Bergerac, RSC at the Barbican, London, 1983 Gemma Kappala-Ramsamy A small group of us were on a school trip and our teacher, Hilary Durman, managed to get us possibly the worst seats in the house for Cyrano de Bergerac, the dramatic tale of a noble French soldier whose love for his cousin, Roxane, is obscured by self-doubt provoked by his ugly nose. As a 16-year-old you're really not expecting much of a night out at the RSC, but it was amazing. I think I fell in love with theatre that evening. Cyrano is such a bravura part in an unbelievably theatrical play. Everything about Derek Jacobi's performance was larger than life. It was the first time that I had seen a great actor command an audience in that way. It was thrilling to see somebody who knew how to entertain with something that was so poetic and verbally dextrous, but all of that was just grist to the mad energy of the performance. We were watching somebody using every bit of themselves. What amazed me was that all of those bits were for the same purpose, heading in the same direction. I was right at the top, hanging out of a balcony, yet I felt absolutely intimately connected with what was happening on that stage. Even more than 25 years on, it's clear as day to me. It was the last night of this very celebrated production – Jacobi went on to win an Olivier for his performance. The atmosphere was charged and the ovation at the end was like a tidal wave. I didn't know that could happen at the theatre, that a couple of thousand people could get so carried away. It seemed to me much more like the gigs I'd been to at the time. It was an intoxicating evening, which I now realise is quite rare in the theatre! The great thing about Cyrano is that he's just cleverer than anybody else. And of course he's the ugly duckling character, which is also something I've been very drawn to [in my work] – obviously Billy Elliot is an ugly duckling story about ballet and miners. There are many actors who can be passionate and inhabit a role vigorously, but the really great performances that I've seen have been when actors allow you to access their mind as well. It's dry as sticks if it's only an intellectual thing, but when you access somebody's thinking and see the heartbeat of a character in that way, the combination makes the role suddenly come to life. Derek let you see that. In the end, there's this incredibly romantic moment where you find out that Cyrano and Roxane have essentially been in love with each other and faithful to each other but they never knew. We were all in floods of tears, and as 16-year-old Geordie lads we didn't expect to be! Quite often we [playwrights] come from a literary tradition. But a writer working in the theatre is writing for performance, to show actors off at their best. What Rostand and Anthony Burgess, the writer and English translator of the play, were trying to do in Cyrano was to give as much good material to an actor as they could. That's what I've been trying to provide in The Pitmen Painters, because theatre is located in that incredibly mercurial place that fine acting brings to life. 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