STAY IN-TOUCH
 
Join RSS Feed
Join mailing list






Felicity Kendal: Being Brave with Coward
Share
Felicity Kendal: Being Brave with Coward
Date: 11 February 2008

Felicity Kendal has come a long way from the wholesomeness of The Good Life to the glittering decadence of Noël Coward. Roger Foss talks to her as she prepares to enter The Vortex in the West End.


Veiled hints of incest. Hysterical young men on dope. A confrontation between a toyboy-obsessed socialite and her wasted son that seems more like a showdown between two jealous lovers. Family breakdown. Sex and drugs and – the Charleston? Welcome to the “vortex of beastliness” stirred up by 25-year-old Noel Coward in 1924, when he burst upon the world with his first big stage hit.

The Vortex is an incredibly brave play to have written at a time when nobody ever depicted anything like that on a stage. A young man snorting coke and his mother having an affair with one of his friends? It wasn’t the done thing.” Felicity Kendal, who plays flighty Florence Lancaster, the glamorous egotist who drives her son Nicky (Dan Stevens) from the upper echelons of the social whirl to a bleak pit of despair, clears a space for me on an old settee. We’re in an unglamorous downstairs storeroom at producer Bill Kenwright’s west London office on a very chilly morning.

“I’m still wheezing a bit,” she smiles, “maybe we should jog on the spot to get you warm!” Instead, she curls up in her hooded tracksuit to tell me about her latest West End venture, a slight vocal croak the only sign of a recent flu bug.

Good parts for women

I feel drawn to Kendal’s natural warmth, mixed with that familiar brand of earthy intelligence and elfin-faced femininity which, in her time, has seen her described as “the nation’s sweetheart” and voted “Rear of the Year” in 1981, all of which went with the sex symbol image she exuded after shooting to sitcom fame in 1975 as dungaree-clad Barbara Good in The Good Life. “Well, of course, all that kookiness wasn’t me at all, it was just acting,” she says while running a hand through her blonde hair and focussing her thoughts on Coward and how he changed the face of British theatre in the Twenties with The Vortex in the same way that John Osborne did in the Fifties. “This was dark and disturbing – in tune with the post-Second World War generation – and he could create scandalous characters like Florence Lancaster when women were just coming out of their corsets and leading openly sexual lives.”

We’re both warming to the subject. I’m also making a mental note that I’ve resolved not to ask the two obvious personal questions that usually get thrown at Kendal. She’s reading my mind. “I’m always asked two questions: did The Good Life hold you back and why aren’t there any good parts for older women today? Well the answers are: no, it didn’t, and yes, there are lots of parts, especially in theatre.”

She’s not kidding. Aside from guest starring as Lady Clemency Eddison in the next Doctor Who series, Kendal has mostly confined her television acting of late to her green-fingered lady sleuth in Rosemary and Thyme. Now a ridiculously fit-looking 61-year-old grandmother (“I just do yoga, walk George, our dog, and keep myself busy”), it’s in theatre where Kendal has always taken risks, monstrous Florence being the latest in her growing gallery of flawed women of a certain age. “It’s true. In theatre I’ve got to the point where I’m more comfortable then I’ve ever felt before. I don’t know why. Maybe the roles simply match me very well.”

Indeed, in 2000 Kendal teamed up with Frances de la Tour in Coward’s Fallen Angels to play pampered middle-aged wives driven to champagne hysteria by the impending visit of their former lover. (“How gorgeously, impishly, hilariously frivolous they both turn out to be,” wrote Daily Telegraph critic Charles Spencer). A year later she was back in Shaftesbury Avenue taking over from Diana Rigg in the West End transfer of Charlotte Jones’ Humble Boy, in which she was both fragrant and acrid as Flora, a widowed mother trapped by life’s disappointments. A triumphant tour-de-force followed in 2003 when she played Winnie in Happy Days, Samuel Beckett’s babbling woman buried up to her neck in a mound of earth. Her last West End outing was yet another monstrous mother – Esmé Allen, the self-centred actress in David Hare’s Amy's View, a role originated by Judi Dench.

Career Hallmarks

“I’m loving playing different kinds of creatures and never again having to be the love interest. The fact audiences might even hate your character only adds to the fun!” says Kendal, reflecting on the distance she’s travelled as an actor since The Good Life, and from her childhood when she says she was “thrown on the stage when I was nine months old by my parents”, who were actors running a touring theatre company in India.

Collecting a clutch of awards along the way (including a CBE), much of Kendal’s theatrical journey involved creating roles in plays by the likes of former partner Tom Stoppard, Michael Frayn and Simon Gray. Her second husband, the Texan-born theatre director Michael Rudman, directed her in several productions, including Fallen Angels. But the long-distance driving force has always been Sir Peter Hall, who has guided her through Happy Days, Amy’s View and now The Vortex. Their working relationship began at the National Theatre just after The Good Life had finished: Kendal was Constanza in Amadeus opposite Paul Scofield’s Salieri and Simon Callow’s Mozart, and Desdemona to Scofield’s Othello.

“Peter has had more influence on my career than The Good Life ever did,” she reflects. “After the National, we did so much together, from Feydeau farce in the West End to The Seagull and Waste at the Old Vic. I didn’t believe in myself for years. But he’s the one who always said, ‘this is the way you should be going’."

Tall, dark & serious

“We both feel that theatre is where our roots are. Peter probably sensed that in me very early on, when it could have appeared that I was just interested in being famous on television. I always think he sees me as a tall, dark, serious actress, which is who I probably am underneath.”

Delivering Winnie’s seriously tragi-comic monologue in the Hall-directed Happy Days turned into a watershed moment. “It was the most frightening thing I’ve ever done. Beckett writes so accurately about a human brain becoming confused that it’s easy to become confused yourself. Once it clicked though, it was wonderful. I’m sure a lot of people came expecting to see me being kookie in a happy Noël Coward musical, but once they’d got over the shock, the response was tremendous. I suppose the lesson is that you should go for what you are scared of.”

So who’s afraid of Florence Lancaster in Coward’s savage portrait of a frivolous society hooked on appearance, fashion and youth? “Well she is terrifying – a woman who is not an actress but spends her entire life acting. Only at the end do you see behind the façade, her desperate fear of getting old.”

Not that getting old scares Felicity Kendal. “Not at all. I just want to continue working and being with my family,” she beams, her eyes lighting up with amusement. “Mind you, there was a moment the other day when I was coughing my guts up and didn’t want to take the dog for a walk and I thought, ‘is this what it’s like?’ Thankfully I’m not there yet!”


The Vortex starts performances at the West End’s Apollo Theatre on 26 February 2008 (previews from 20 February).

A longer version of this article appears in the February issue of What’s On Stage magazine (formerly Theatregoer), which is out now in participating theatres. Click here to thumb through our online edition. And to guarantee your copy of future print editions - and also get all the benefits of our Theatregoers’ Club - click here to subscribe now!!

Related Content






Write a Comment
Give us your opinion on this entry
Comment:
Name:
Required, will appear on website
Email:
Required, will not appear on website
Confirm: Please type in
Please enter this number > SEVENTY-EIGHT < Just the two digits only, without any spaces.


buy tickets buy tickets
buy tickets
buy tickets
buy tickets




JOIN OUR MAILING LIST
Q Why join yet another mailing list?
A Because, if you visit the theatre more than once or twice a year, we could save you hundreds of pounds.



Tickets For Tonight


Special Offers

Theatre and Meal Deals

Click here for all meal deals


© Whatsonstage 1996-2012
SITE MAP COMPANY INFORMATION

Tickets
Buy London Theatre Tickets
Theatre Ticket & Meal Deals
Discount London Theatre Tickets and Promotions
London Theatre Ticket Hotel Breaks

Content
Theatre News
Theatre Reviews
Interviews & Features
Theatre Videos
Opera News & Reviews
Off-West End News & Reviews
Regional Theatre News & Reviewsl
Whatsonstage.com Awards

Meet the Editorial Team
Add a press release to Whatsonstage.com

Community
Discussion board
Community calendar
Theatre jobs
Theatre blogs

Whatsonstage.com Theatre Club
Join the Club
Log in
Current Club benefits
How to get free theatre tickets

Group Outings
What's On Stage Magazine

Mailing Lists
Newsletter - weekly theatre news
Special Offers - discount theatre tickets direct to your inbox

Information Services
What's On - national theatre listings database

London theatre map
A-Z of London Theatres
A-Z of London Theatre Shows

London Theatre Show openings & closings
FAQ
Work for us - current vacancies
Add a press release to Whatsonstage.com
Find and Book cheap UK Hotels

Marketing Services:
Website design
Email marketing & CRM services

Content feeds
Add a press release to Whatsonstage.com

Whatsonstage.com - Discount London theatre tickets, theatre news and reviews, Theatre videos, Theatre discussion, National Theatre Listings. Covering London's West End, all of Theatreland and all UK theatre. The best for London Theatre Ticket Discounts.

Products
Whatsonstage.com
What's On Stage Magazine
Whatsonstage.com Awards
Whatsonstage.com Theatre Club
Testimonials
Contact us
Advertise with us

Terms and Conditions
Privacy Statement

Loading...

Book by Phone:
London Theatre Tickets: 0207 492 1565

Outings & Club: 020 7317 9100

Abigail's Party Tickets  |  Absent Friends Tickets  |  All New People Tickets  |  Backbeat Tickets  |  Ballet Preljocaj Tickets  |  Ballet Revolucion Tickets  |  Big Pants and Botox Tickets  |  Billy Elliot - The Musical Tickets  |  Blood Brothers Tickets  |  Chicago Tickets  |  Compania Antonio Gades Tickets  |  Coppelia Tickets  |  Cosi fan tutte Tickets  |  Crazy for You Tickets  |  Dancing to Lorca Tickets  |  Danza Contemporanea de Cuba Tickets  |  Don Giovanni Tickets  |  Dr Dee Tickets  |  Dreamboats and Petticoats Tickets  |  DV8 Physical Theatre Tickets  |  Ghost the Musical Tickets  |  Hans Klok Tickets  |  Hay Fever Tickets  |  Horrible Histories - Barmy Britain Tickets  |  I Dreamed a Dream Tickets  |  Jackie Mason Tickets  |  Jersey Boys Tickets  |  Jose Merce Tickets  |  Juno and the Paycock Tickets  |  Legally Blonde Tickets  |  Les Miserables Tickets  |  Long Day's Journey into Night Tickets  |  Mamma Mia! Tickets  |  Manuela Carrasco Tickets  |  Master Class Tickets  |  Matilda Tickets  |  Midnight Tango Tickets  |  My First Sleeping Beauty Tickets  |  Nederlands Dans Theater 2 (NDT2) Tickets  |  New Adventures Tickets  |  Noises Off Tickets  |  Olga Pericet Tickets  |  Oliver! Tickets  |  One Man, Two Guvnors Tickets  |  Pajama Men Tickets  |  Pet Shop Boys and Javier De Frutos Tickets  |  Pippin Tickets  |  Play Without Words Tickets  |  Rafael Amargo Company Tickets  |  Richard Alston Dance Company Tickets  |  Rock of Ages Tickets  |  Romeo and Juliet Tickets  |  Royal Ballet of Flanders Tickets  |  Rusalka Tickets  |  Scottish Ballet Tickets  |  Sex with a Stranger Tickets  |  She Stoops to Conquer Tickets  |  Shrek - The Musical Tickets  |  Singin' in the Rain Tickets  |  Stomp Tickets  |  Sweeney Todd Tickets  |  That Thing Friday Night Tickets  |  The 39 Steps Tickets  |  The Awkward Squad Tickets  |  The Ballet Boyz Tickets  |  The Comedy of Errors Tickets  |  The Complete World of Sports (abridged) Tickets  |  The Duchess of Malfi Tickets  |  The Importance of Being Earnest Tickets  |  The Ladykillers Tickets  |  The Leisure Society Tickets  |  The Lion King Tickets  |  The Madness of George III Tickets  |  The Marriage of Figaro (Le nozze di Figaro) Tickets  |  The Mousetrap Tickets  |  The Phantom of the Opera Tickets  |  The Phantom of the Opera Tickets  |  The Pitmen Painters Tickets  |  The Royal Ballet Tickets  |  The Sunshine Boys Tickets  |  The Tiger Who Came to Tea Tickets  |  The Wizard of Oz Tickets  |  The Woman in Black Tickets  |  Three Days in May Tickets  |  Thriller Live! Tickets  |  Top Hat Tickets  |  Travelling Light Tickets  |  Umoja - The Spirit of Togetherness Tickets  |  Wah! Wah! Girls Tickets  |  War Horse Tickets  |  Wayne McGregor/Random Dance Tickets  |  We Will Rock You Tickets  |  Wicked Tickets