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Editors' Blog: Skyfall & 007’s debt to theatre

Date: 2 November 2012

It can hardly have escaped the notice of any theatre fans watching new Bond film Skyfall just how many luminaries of the British stage are involved.

Already projected to be the most successful Bond film of all time, Skyfall provides a near-perfect example of the debt owed by the film industry to its theatrical ancestor.

There are no less than four leading actors in Skyfall who’ve played Hamlet to acclaim on the London stage: Rory Kinnear (National Theatre 2010), Ben Whishaw (Old Vic 2004), Ralph Fiennes (Almeida 1995) and Albert Finney (Old Vic 1975).

And that’s not counting the theatrical pedigree of Bond himself - Daniel Craig started off at the National Youth Theatre before graduating to the National and Royal Court - and, of course, the film’s grand dame Judi Dench, whose myriad theatre credits need hardly be repeated.


Rory Kinnear, Ralph Fiennes & Judi Dench in Skyfall

In fact, you can see M (Dench) and Q (Whishaw) sharing a stage together next year in Michael Grandage’s production of Peter and Alice - which is written, incidentally, by John Logan, who co-wrote Skyfall and has already been signed to script the next two Bond films.

Speaking of Grandage, he of course recently stepped down as artistic director of the Donmar Warehouse, where he succeeded its founder Sam Mendes. And what was Mendes’ most recent project? Ah yes, Skyfall.

This may seem an obvious point to make but, in the climate of cuts, it’s worth pointing out the extent to which the talent that goes into making an intelligent (and hugely profitable) blockbuster like Skyfall has been nourished by British theatre – particularly the subsidised sector.

As a longstanding fan of both theatre and Bond - I even wrote my University thesis on Goldfinger - it heartens me to see how much the latter has come to be fed by the former. Mendes has brought a touch of class and complexity to the franchise, tackling the psychology of Bond with a Shakespearean sensibility. Who else would dare to include a scene hinting that Bond has a homosexual past? Or allow M to quote Tennyson?

As Danny Boyle recently demonstrated with his stonking Olympics Opening Ceremony (not to mention his raft of hit movies), mainstream success comes not from a mythical place located somewhere in the Hollywood hills, but from a good old fashioned appreciation of storytelling and character. And there is no better school for that than the stage.

There are more direct examples of the theatre-film relationship - Skyfall is preceded by a trailer for another forthcoming British blockbuster, the long-awaited film adaptation of Les Miserables - while others are more subtle (see Alain Resnais’ recent You Ain’t Seen Nothing Yet).

But from the European refugees who created the Hollywood golden age to the Mendes, Boyles and Denches of today and tomorrow, the message is simple; the stage and the screen are as inseparable as Bond and a well shaken dry martini.

- by Theo Bosanquet


Any opinions expressed above do not represent the view of Whatsonstage.com nor any of its staff or contributors beyond the bylined author.



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Editors' Blog: Why are hymns at the heart of theatre? - 17th May 2023 blog
Editors' Blog: Theatre - the new rock'n'roll - 28th Mar 2013 blog
Editors' Blog: Is agitprop back in fashion? - 13th Feb 2013 blog
Editors' Blog: 'Sorry' really is the hardest word - 8th Jan 2013 blog
Editors' Blog: Having a Ball (& Staunton) at West End Eurovision - 27th Apr 2012 blog
Editors' Blog: A Tale of Hope Amid the Chaos of Cuts - 4th Jan 2012 blog
Editors' Blog: Theatre Squatters Go Mainstream - 7th Sep 2011 blog
Christmas Crackers or Terrible Turkeys? - Festive Northwest Picks - 27th Nov 2010 blog
 
Internal Links
Grandage Steps Down as Donmar Artistic Director - 1st Oct 2010 News
Mendes Directs Spacey in Bridge 2012 Richard III - 26th Aug 2010 News
Douglas Hodge plays Wonka in Mendes' musical Chocolate Factory - 7th Sep 2012 News
Will Daniel Craig Soon Be Spied on Stage??? - 8th Jan 2009 Gossip
Miss Saigon follows Les Mis onto big screen? - 2nd Oct 2012 Gossip


Reader Comments


CommentDate
Also, in another nod to theatre, as Bond and M leave London in the car, they pass the Playhouse Theatre, which has a production of Assassins on... Clever. - James

04 Nov 12


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