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TOTAL
Film June 1999
“I
WANTED TO BE AN OLD MAN
WITH A GOOD FACE”
MILKMAN,
LIFEGUARD, COFFIN
POLISHER, BOND.
JAMES BOND.
Arguably
the most universal of the
Brit stalwarts, Sean
Connery talks exclusively
about success, romance,
Avengers, acshents, and
how he definitely won’t
but probably maybe might
yet return as the
archetypal Martini-swigger…
Words
by Sara Lambert
Additional
Reporting by Andy Lowe
In
’61, Ian Fleming thought
him “too uncouth” for
the 007 tux, but, after
one interview and a quick
demonstration walk, Dr No
producer Harry Saltzman
insisted.
Pre-Bond, Connery
left school at 13 and
dipped in and out of odder
and odder jobs - including
a brief stint in the Royal
Navy -before pumping up
his pecs for the Mr
Universe contest (he came
third). He spluttered into
acting on a whim, notching
up the odd telefilm and
best-forgotten
rent-settler (Darby
O'Gill And The Little
People), before
cashing in on the
body-building and
pocketing the first of
many Walther PPKs.
Nearly
40 years later, the Bond
franchise trundles on
(without him) and Connery,
armed with one of the
rosiest CVs in the
business, can pretty much
nod and shake at his
roles. Over the next few
months, he'l1 be acting
his age in the
interpersonal tangle of Playing
By Heart (married man
confesses ancient
indiscretion – with
tempestuous results)
before seamlessly moving
on to the flirty,
odd-couple popcorn fodder
of Entrapment
(in which he gets to lock
tongues with Catherine
Zeta Jones).
When
you made the first Bond
film –Dr No, back in
1961- how did you see your
career progressing?
I
didn't have anything
resembling a great game
plan. Everybody claimed
they knew that the James
Bond films were going to
be a successful series -
it's just not true. The
same goes for myself. If
you had asked me when I
was 28, I definitely
wouldn't have imagined I'd
still be acting at 68.
I've never been one for
long-term planning. I
prefer a more personal
approach - impulsively
taking or not taking a
role, liking or not liking
it. Oh, and traveling a
lot. It's really about
doing what I think I can
do well in the kind of
movies that I would like
to see.
As
for looking to the future,
I always wanted to be an
old man with a good face,
like Hitchcock or a
Picasso. I'm incredibly
lucky to still be around
at 68, doing all the
things I want to do and
getting extremely well
paid for it all. There's a
parallel with golf- a lot
of it is in the mind, and
the moment you start to
lose the enthusiasm or
appetite, it affects your
judgements and decisions.
And then you stop
performing well. I think
enthusiasm and appetite
are more important than
anything.
So
what advice would you give
to an acting newcomer
today?
The
problem is always the
same. As a beginner; you
crave experience, but you
can't get any jobs to get
the experience. These
days, there's such a
strong appetite for
celebrity -it's the Andy
Warhol 15-minutes-of-fame
thing. Now, there're
people who make a movie
and have tremendous
success with it and then
suddenly their price goes
from zilch to zillions. So
it's more difficult for
the person who's had a lot
of rejections to keep
themselves balanced and to
go on with any certainty.
Some steady success isn't
enough -you need a lot of
initial success. In
America, things come in
cycles. You see it with
the major sportspeople
-all the deals have to be
renegotiated and they end
up so, so compressed.
Somebody like Michael
Jordan, he can say:
"I'm only going to do
this number of games this
year. How much money will
that be?" With
actors, it's even more
iniquitous and misleading,
so it's very difficult for
a young actor to get any
real grounding for
themselves. I think you
have to strip it down and
seriously ask yourself:
what do I want to do?
Mainly television? Film?
Radio?
Do
you see any of your young
self in someone like Ewan
McGregor?
Well,
he’s from a similar
background, but...It's all
up to Ewan, how long it
lasts. There's absolutely
nothing to stop Ewan doing
as well, if not better,
than myself, because he
has a very international
quality. I met Ewan for
the first time at a big
Scottish party in Paris
for the World Cup -which
was a disaster for
Scotland, but that will
all change next year. He's
very bright, he's got a
good fan base; he has a
lot of ingredients in his
favour. He also has great
enthusiasm and is a bit of
a risk-taker. I even
enjoyed A
Life Less Ordinary.
I'd certainly love to do
something with him.
Shall
we get The
Avengers out of the
way?
Well,
from the beginning, I
always tried to have
humour in any film I do.
I’ve always felt
that to find it is the
most important and
sometimes the most
difficult thing.
I thought there was
quite a bit of humour in The
Avengers, and I had a
bit of fun – until they
put the film together.
And if ever there
was a license to kill, I
would have used it to kill
the director and the
producer.
But eventually
they’ll be found out.
Your
character in The
Avengers, Sir August
De Wynter is knighted.
Yet in real life
you’ve been nominated,
but refused.
It
makes you wonder what
exactly is needed to
qualify. I wasn't
surprised that I didn't
get it, so I'm not angry.
But I am disappointed in
the government's behaviour
-I think it lacks class on
their part. It's ironic
that Margaret Thatcher's
government had recommended
me, but I was turned down
by a Labour government.
But it's all because I've
been involved with the
Scottish National party
for over 40 years and I'm
not about to change now.
For me, it's simple: if
it's called the United
Kingdom, then it should be
united. I don't think that
between England, Ireland,
Wales and Scotland, there
should be anything less
than an equal partnership
- which there is not.
How's
the Edinburgh studio plan
going?
As
you probably know, it's a
joint venture involving
Sony and Scottish Screen
and...Well, I'll give you
one sentence and then I
have to move on, because
it's a little premature to
be talking about it. It's
moving along well-
"in
development", as it
were.
The
reason I want to open a
film studio in Scotland is
simple: there isn't one.
And there's no British
film industry to speak of
either. It would be a
great starting point to
have a triangle of
Pinewood, Shepperton and
an international state-of
-the-art studio in
Edinburgh. Hopefully, it
would act as a massive
boost to the industry and
I very much want to be
involved in that.
You've
always kept your accent,
regardless of the role.
How do you get away with
it?
I
remember going to the Old
Vic years ago, and they
were doing Julius
Caesar. I knew the
play, but I couldn't
understand half of what
was being said, because it
was put together in a kind
of chant that didn't
please my particular ear.
I think you have to march
to your own drummer. I can
easily be less
Scottish-sounding than I
am, but there's a certain
music for me in words,
which is one of the
reasons I always work on a
script with the director
or writer in terms of
speech patterns. At the
end of the day, emotions
are international anyway.
I always felt that
whenever I was attempting
to go too far away from my
kind of speech pattern,
then I lost the picture of
what I was trying to do,
so I made an early
decision not to do that.
In
your latest film, Playing
By Heart, you play a
married man who confesses
to a long-gone affair.
There
was nothing
autobiographical about
that. I'm not as
articulate as that
character in real life.
I'm also not as smart, so
I wouldn't have thought of
it. But I took that role
because I fancied
something different. It's
unusual to see a movie
about two old-age
pensioners who've had a
40-year relationship; it's
not a concept that easily
lends itself to the normal
kind of American movie. It
shows that life is a
dance, as it were. It
shows that intimacy and
romance don't end when you
reach a certain age.
Some
reviewers have said that
it's "too
romantic", but how
can a movie be too
romantic? It says
something about where we
are, I suppose. Most
people assume that, after
the age of 40, you sort of
drift into dementia or
whatever and kind of
disappear.
Finally
the inevitable...Would you
ever consider playing Bond
again?
There
is talk about this at the
moment, but I'm not
initiating it. Sony has
the rights to remake a
version of Thunderball,
but certainly not with me
playing Bond. But there's
no way I would be playing
James Bond again -it's
finished for me. If there
was an offer, of course I
would entertain it like
any other offer. I doubt
if they could afford me,
but I'd be willing to
listen.
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