Quantcast

Nigel Lindsay with Madeleine Potter in Broken Glass
Nigel Lindsay with Madeleine Potter in Broken Glass

Past/Present/Future for ... Nigel Lindsay

Date: 7 October 2010

Actor Nigel Lindsay, who has just opened in Arthur Miller’s Broken Glass with Antony Sher at the Tricycle Theatre, will be a familiar face to audiences of both stage and screen. He was seen most recently in Sucker Punch at the Royal Court and on screen in Christopher Morris’s film Four Lions.

Lindsay starred alongside Jim Broadbent and David Tennant in the original 2003 production of Martin McDonagh’s The Pillowman at the National Theatre, which was greeted with critical acclaim and went on to win several awards. Amongst his other stage credits are the 1995 National Theatre production of Dealer’s Choice, Tom Stoppard’s The Real Thing and The Homecoming and Awake and Singing at the Almeida Theatre, for which Lindsay was nominated for the Whatsonstage.com Award for Best Supporting Actor in a play.

In 2005 Lindsay turned his talent to musical theatre, playing Nathan Detroit in Michael Grandage’s revival of Guys and Dolls at the Piccadilly Theatre and will next year he will be returning to the West End stage to play the title role in the Broadway transfer of Shrek the Musical, reunited with his Guys and Dolls co-star Nigel Harman when it opens at the Theatre Royal Drury Lane on 7 June (previews from 1 May 2011).


PAST: A real highlight of my career was being in the original cast of The Pillowman. It was a fantastic experience all round. Sometimes the writing is brilliant or the actors are great or the director’s good, but this was universally a fantastic experience. That’s very rare. We were at the Cottesloe at the National, which is one of my favourite places to work, with Martin McDonagh’s script which is one of the most brilliant scripts I’ve ever read, and we had John Crowley directing, who is a sharp-eyed, incisive director. I got to do a double act with Jim Broadbent and torture David Tennant every night, it was just beautiful. The reaction, particularly of people in the business, was amazing. Bob Hoskins came backstage after a performance and he said to me that it was fantastic and then he started crying on my shoulder. It just provoked that reaction in people.

Another highlight was Guys and Dolls, which was my musical debut. I was up for the original cast with Ewan McGregor, but I was playing William Morris in Earthly Paradise at the Almeida at the time and I’d put on about a stone and had a massive bushy beard to look like him. They wanted me to come in and audition, but three times I couldn’t because I couldn’t get away from rehearsal. In the end I phoned them and said that I couldn’t come in. I was about 15 stone with a huge beard, and I’m not sure with the best will in the world that Michael Grandage was going to look at me and say, “that’s Nathan Detroit”. So I sort of talked myself out of it. Then they phoned me again after Earthly Paradise had finished and said they really wanted me to try it.

The great thing about Guys and Dolls is that the part of Nathan Detroit, although Sinatra played it in the movie, was originally written for a stand-up comedian called Sam Levine who couldn’t really sing, so his songs are not difficult. But then, of course, when you’ve done something like Guys and Dolls, even people in the musical industry tend to forget that that part is not a difficult singing part. I haven’t been in for many other musicals, I must admit. But it is weird that the first time I ever do a musical I’m standing on stage in the Piccadilly in front of 2,000 people.

PRESENT: Broken Glass is one of Arthur Miller’s late plays and I think it’s been overlooked. One of the reasons for that is because it’s terribly difficult to get right. It deals with some deep issues and it can be very hard to get to the bottom of them. It’s set in New York in 1938 and it’s about a woman who has read about the Kristallnacht demonstrations in Berlin and becomes paralysed from the waist down in what is known as hysterical paralysis. A local doctor is assigned to try and find out what’s wrong with her and the play is about what develops from there. Her husband, played by Antony Sher, is a very pinched, uptight man, and the doctor begins to suspect that it’s more to do with their marriage than these photographs she’s seeing, but actually everything’s linked. It’s about being frightened of being alive in so many different ways.

I’m a massive fan of Miller; I saw The Crucible when I was at school and it made me want to be an actor. Miller writes modern Greek tragedies and I just think he’s wonderful. I’m much more familiar with his earlier work, but I think Broken Glass is as powerful a piece as any of the others. I think that maybe as you get older and more courageous you begin to deal with things that are almost impossible to put down on paper and I think that’s what Miller is trying to do with this. It’s such a universal theme and the way he links the mass hysteria that was going on in Germany in 1938 with an individual family’s angst is very difficult to do and difficult to convey.

There were two reasons why I was drawn to this play. One was that Tony Sher was involved. We went to the same drama school, Webber Douglas, but he was there a long time before me. When I was doing my final play I was really struggling with it so I wrote to him asking for tips and he wrote me back a six-page letter, and I was so impressed with that. That was a lovely thing to do for a young actor – I’ve told him that about five times! I’ve been very privileged to work with some extremely good actors and actors that I’ve admired from afar. It doesn’t get any different, I still have a bit of a crush on them for the first week and then I get on with it. It’s great to work with people who are at the top of their game, it really tests you. So that’s the first reason I wanted to work here, and the second is that I was absolutely terrified of doing this play. I remember seeing an interview with Jack Lemmon once where he was asked how he chooses work and he said that if it terrifies him he says yes. I think that’s quite a good way of looking at things.

FUTURE: After Guys and Dolls, I got asked to go up for Shrek the Musical. Shrek is very different from Broken Glass, because I would look at watching the films as research. If Broken Glass was playing down the road I wouldn’t see it, it would do me in. If you see someone who’s fantastic, even if you’re thinking you could steal parts of their performance, you would still have an inferiority complex. But I need to look at the films of Shrek. This character is already established, and even if I wouldn’t personally do a certain action, I have to do the action from the film. I am the ogre from the first film.

I’m looking forward to working with Nigel Harman again. It’s hysterical; we’re obviously a double act. I’ve hardly seen Nigel since we finished Guys and Dolls but I know he’s a brilliant singer and dancer and I’m excited to work with him again. I’m also looking forward to working with Amanda Holden. I’ve never worked with her before but I’ve got two mates who have and everyone says she’s really nice. I think she gets a bit of a hard press sometimes, but she can definitely do it, there’s no question. Everyone I know who knows her says I’m going to have a great time working with her, so I’m really looking forward to meeting her.

I must admit I’m not looking forward to being green. Apparently it’s an hour-and-half in prosthetics every night, for eight shows a week. I think I’m going to have to get fit because it’s really going to take it out of me. But my kids are absolutely over the moon. Whenever I go into the school playground I get mobbed now. I did a film with Richard E Grant last year and he said the only time his daughter has ever been impressed by anything he’s done is when he did the Spice Girls movie. He said I would get the same thing with Shrek, and he’s right. My daughter’s suddenly realised that I’m an actor, it’s great.


Broken Glass opened on 6 October (previews from 30 September) at the Tricycle Theatre where it runs until 27 November 2010.

- by Andrew Girvan & Catherine Love

Related Content

Booking Tickets & Show Listings
Broken Glass Listing Page
Shrek - The Musical Listing Page
Internal Links
Shrek closes on 24 Feb, Charlie moves Chocolate Factory to Drury Lane - 31st Aug 2012 news
Shrek toppled by Charlie at Drury Lane? - 31st Aug 2012 gossip
Legally Blonde's Carley Stenson goes green as Shrek's Princess Fiona - 8th Mar 2012 news
Photos: New Shrek cast mark first performance - 1st Mar 2012 photos
Chisnall & McDermott Lead New Shrek Cast from 29 Feb - 8th Nov 2011 news
Photos: Bailey & Van Outen Make Shrek Media Night - 22nd Oct 2011 photos
Photos: Cheryl Cole & Nicola Roberts at Kimberley Walsh's First Shrek Outing - 6th Oct 2011 photos
Photos: First Pic of Kimberley Walsh as Shrek's Princess Fiona - 22nd Sep 2011 photos
Broken Glass starstarstar - 19th Sep 2011 reviews
Review Round-up: Broken Glass Moves to Vaudeville - 19th Sep 2011 roundup
Kimberley Walsh Replaces Pregnant Holden in Shrek - 24th Aug 2011 news
News of the World Shock Horror - 8th Jul 2011 blog
Top Ten: Screen-to-Stage Musicals - 21st Jun 2011 features
Sher Breaks More Glass at Tricycle & Vaudeville - 17th Jun 2011 news
Review Round-up: Fairy Tale Opening for Shrek? - 15th Jun 2011 roundup
1st Night Photos: Shrek Paints West End Green - 15th Jun 2011 photos
Shrek The Musical starstarstar - 14th Jun 2011 reviews
Photos: Lindsay & Shrek Cast Get Ogre Excited - 14th Jun 2011 photos
Opening: Shrek, Derren Brown, Tenor & Betrayal - 13th Jun 2011 news
Photos: Shrek Gala, Cast & Creatives Meet Prince - 9th Jun 2011 photos
WOS Magazine Is Shrek Green, Jun/Jul Out Now - 2nd Jun 2011 news
Photo: Holden & Shrek Cast 'Believe' on BGT Tonight - 31st May 2011 photos
Photo: First Peek of Shrek Principals in Costume - 3rd May 2011 photos
Top Five: Royal Wedding Shows - 27th Apr 2011 features
Galas: Shrek, West End Eurovision & Ghost CD - 6th Apr 2011 news
Musical Cast: David Bedella in Chicago, Shrek - 22nd Feb 2011 news
Photos: Leads Come Together for Shrek Launch - 2nd Nov 2010 photos
1st Night Photos: Sher Raises Glass at Tricycle - 7th Oct 2010 photos
Broken Glass starstarstarstar - 7th Oct 2010 reviews
Shrek Gets Major Makeover for West End??? - 10th Sep 2010 gossip
Lindsay & Harman Confirmed for West End Shrek - 3rd Sep 2010 news
Cast: Henshall Has Spirit, Donmar Ninth, Broken - 31st Aug 2010 news
Holden & Blackwood Confirmed for London Shrek - 30th Jul 2010 news
Shrek Confirms Drury Lane Opening for June 2011 - 2nd Jul 2010 news
Sher Leads Revival of Miller's Glass at Tricycle - 11th Jun 2010 news
Mendes Nabs Moore for Shrek, Gill for Wine & Roses - 15th Oct 2004 news


Reader Comments


CommentDate
Saw Nigel as Nathan Detroit with Nigel harman in guys and dolls, I was there for nigel harman but loved nigel lindsay as i had seen douglas hodge and hated him in the part. I met Nigel Harman in Dublin on saturday night at the gate theatre where he was in celebration and he talked about how much he's looking forward to working with nigel lindsay again. Cant wait to see them both working together again. - Aideen

11 Oct 10


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.

Free Newsletter

Subscribe to our free newsletter


Featured Video

Twitter

Featured Editor's Picks

Jonathan Coy, Felicity Kendal, Kara Tointon & Max Bennett. Photo: Dan Wooller1st Night Photos: Kimberley Walsh & Denise Van Outen toast Tointon in Relatively Speaking
Strictly Come Dancing stars Kimberley Walsh, Denise Van Outen and Artem Chigvintsev toasted former S...

Tom Hiddleston. Photo: Dan WoollerDonmar stages Nick Payne premiere, Wesker's Roots & Tom Hiddleston in Coriolanus
The Donmar Warehouse has announced its new season, which features the premiere of Nick Payne's new p...

Sealed with a kiss: <em>Spiderman<em>ATG acquires Broadway's largest theatre The Foxwoods, home of Spider-Man
In another significant step for transatlantic theatre relations, the UK’s biggest theatre ...

Video: Sheila Hancock shows wild side in Barking in Essex trailer
As this new trailer reveals, Sheila Hancock has had a dramatic TOWIE-style makeover for her forthcom...

Kara Tointon in Relatively Speaking Review Round-up: Critics convinced by Relatively Speaking?
Lindsay Posner's revival of Alan Ayckbourn's Relatively Speaking opened at the Wyndham's Theatre las...

Felicity Kendal. Photo: Nobby ClarkRelatively Speaking
starstarstarstar
Goodness knows why Alan Ayckbourn's debut success has had to wait 46 years for its first West End ...

Matilda on BroadwayMatilda on Broadway wins five Drama Desk Awards
The Broadway transfer of Matilda The Musical has won five gongs at the 58th Annual Drama Desk Awards...

Ayad AkhtarPulitzer winner Ayad Akhtar: Islam is 'ripe territory' for drama
Ayad Akhtar's play Disgraced, which won the 2013 Pulitzer Prize for Drama, receives its UK premiere ...

Michael Coveney: New York honours Matilda with five big awards
First blood in the New York awards contest went to Matilda last night, as the show walked off with...

Ripe for revival? The Pirate QueenTen of the Best: Theatre 'flops' ripe for reinvention
Defining a theatre 'flop' is no straightforward task. A general rule of thumb could be that it mak...
>> More Editor's Picks
>> Most Recent Stories
>> Most Popular Stories

Follow Us

Facebook Twitter Google Plus YouTube