Interviews

5 minutes with: Ben Batt – 'If I hadn't broken my leg, I may not have become an actor'

We chat to the ”Shameless” actor who will be playing Stanley in Tennessee Williams’ ”A Streetcar Named Desire” opposite Maxine Peake at Royal Exchange, Manchester

Will Longman

Will Longman

| |

7 September 2016

Ben Batt will play Stanley in A Streetcar Named Desire at the Royal Exchange, Manchester
Ben Batt will play Stanley in A Streetcar Named Desire at the Royal Exchange, Manchester
© Dan Wooller for WhatsOnStage

It's easy for some actors to say: "it’s what I’ve always wanted to do" – but that certainly isn’t the case with me. When I was younger I played a lot of rugby, I was an alright student, and I started thinking about acting when I was in sixth form. My dad was selling a house for a drama teacher who said: "why don't you bring your son to me and see if he's inspired by it?" And I was. At about the same time, I broke my leg quite badly – in three places – while I was playing rugby, and was told I wouldn't be able to play at the standard I wanted to. It probably forced my hand a bit and I was lucky enough to get into Guildhall to study acting. It's all been okay ever since.

I think Shameless is what people know me for. I did a couple of odd episodes on TV but then I got a two-year contract on Shameless and moved back up north from London. The show had always brought great actors to the public’s attention, and I met my fiancée doing it too, which always helped. I could put bread on the table; it really was a turning point. David Threlfall was like a father figure in acting for me. He taught me that it was okay to be a nothern lad and a bit rough around the edges.

A Streetcar Named Desire is considered one of the best plays ever written. Tennessee Williams is a wonderful playwright. When you’re doing a play as popular as this, you’re sometimes a little overwhelmed by the history of it, and the people who have played the parts before you. Our director [Sarah Frankcom] has done a good job of telling us "no one is ever going to do our version again".

There are a lot of high-profile actors who have played Stanley. I think I was quite naïve about it. I read an article about how many people feel like they have to turn it down because it’s a real challenge. If I knew then what I know now then I would’ve thought about it a little longer. It’s a wonderfully written part but it’s so easy to concentrate on his anger. Before you know it you’ve turned him into a pantomime villain and I don’t think that’s what Williams was doing.

I'm not sure if I'd be shit scared of it, but I'd like to try playing Iago. I wasn’t the biggest theatregoer until I moved to London. Since then, it was really Iago that made me think "yeah, I’d like to give that a go". But I think as soon as I started doing it, I would immediately regret my decision.


A Streetcar Named Desire runs at the Royal Exchange Manchester from 13 September.

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