Thursday, October 3, 2013

MOVIE ICONS: British actress and MP Glenda Jackson

 

 
 
 
 
Glenda Jackson
CBE MP
Glenda Jackson.JPG
Glenda Jackson in 1971
Member of Parliament
for Hampstead and Kilburn
Hampstead and Highgate (1992–2010)
Incumbent
Assumed office
9 April 1992
Preceded byGeoffrey Finsberg
Majority42 (0.1%)
Personal details
Born(1936-05-09) 9 May 1936 (age 77)
Birkenhead, Wirral, Cheshire, England, UK
NationalityBritish
Political partyLabour
Spouse(s)Roy Hodges (1958–1976)
Alma materRoyal Academy of Dramatic Art
OccupationActress (1957–1994)
Politician (1992–present)
Glenda May Jackson, CBE (born 9 May 1936) is a British Labour Party politician and former actress. She first became a Member of Parliament (MP) in 1992, and currently represents Hampstead and Kilburn.
As a professional actress from the late 1950s, she spent four years as a member of the Royal Shakespeare Company from 1964, being particularly associated with the work of director Peter Brook. During her film career, she won two Academy Awards for Best Actress: for Women in Love (1970) and A Touch of Class (1973). She appeared in several other award winning performances such as Alex in the film Sunday Bloody Sunday (1971) and the BBC television serial Elizabeth R (also 1971); for the later she received an Emmy.
Before 2010, Jackson was the MP for Hampstead and Highgate, and early in the government of Tony Blair served as a Junior Transport minister from 1997 to 1999, later becoming critical of Blair. After constituency boundary changes for the 2010 general election, her majority of 42 votes was one of the closest results of the entire election.[1] She announced in 2011 that she will stand down as a MP at the next general election.

 

Early life and career

Jackson was born in Birkenhead on the Wirral, Merseyside where her father was a builder, and her mother worked in shops and as a cleaner.[2] Jackson was educated at the West Kirby County Grammar School for Girls, and performed at a YMCA drama group during her teens.[2] She worked for two years in a branch of the Boots the Chemist chain before taking up a scholarship in 1954 to study at the Royal Academy of Dramatic Art.[3]
Jackson made her professional stage debut in Terence Rattigan's Separate Tables in 1957 while at RADA.[4] and appeared in repertory for the next six years.[5] Her film debut was a bit part in This Sporting Life (1963). A member of the Royal Shakespeare Company for four years from 1964, she originally joined for director Peter Brook's 'Theatre of Cruelty' season which included Peter Weiss' Marat/Sade (1965) in which she played an inmate of an asylum portraying Charlotte Corday, the assassin of Marat.[6] The production ran on Broadway in 1965 and in Paris[5] (Jackson appeared in the 1967 film version) and as Ophelia in Peter Hall's production of Hamlet in the same year.[7] Critic Penelope Gilliatt thought Jackson was the only Ophelia she had seen who was ready to play the Prince himself.[8] The RSC's staging at the Aldwych Theatre of US (1966), a protest play against the Vietnam War, also featured Jackson, and she appeared in its film version, Tell Me Lies.[9]

From 1969 to 1980



Jackson's starring role in Ken Russell's film of Women in Love (1969) led to her winning her first Academy Award for Best Actress. Brian McFarlane, the main author of The Encyclopedia of British Film, has written: "Her blazing intelligence, sexual challenge and abrasiveness were at the service of a superbly written role in a film with a passion rare in the annals of British cinema."[10] In the process of gaining funding for The Music Lovers (1970) from United Artists, Russell explained it as "the story of a homosexual who marries a nymphomaniac",[11] the couple being the composer Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky (Richard Chamberlain) and Antonina Miliukova played by Jackson. This film received mixed reviews in the U.S.: the anonymous reviewer in Variety wrote of the two principals "Their performances are more dramatically bombastic than sympathetic, or sometimes even believable".[12] Jackson was initially interested in the role of Sister Jeanne in The Devils (1971), Russell's next film, but turned it down after script rewrites and deciding that she did not wish to play a third neurotic character in a row.[13]
In order to play Queen Elizabeth I in the BBC's serial, Elizabeth R (1971), Jackson had her head shaved. After the series was shown on PBS in the US, Jackson received two Emmy Awards for her performance. She also portrayed Queen Elizabeth in the film Mary, Queen of Scots, and gained a BAFTA for her role in John Schlesinger's Sunday Bloody Sunday (both 1971).[14] In that year British exhibitors voted her the 6th most popular star at the British box office,[15] and she appeared in a comedy sketch as Cleopatra for The Morecambe and Wise Shiow.
Filmmaker Melvin Frank saw her comedic potential and offered her the lead female role in his next project. She gained a second Academy Award for Best Actress for A Touch of Class (1973). She continued to work in the theatre, and returned to the RSC to play the lead role in Ibsen's Hedda Gabler. A later film version directed by Nunn was released as Hedda (1975) for which Jackson was nominated for an Oscar.
For her appearance on The Muppet Show she told the producers that she would perform any material they liked; this turned out to be a role where she has a delusion that she is a pirate captain who hijacks the Muppet Theatre as her ship.

Later acting career


In 1985, she appeared on Broadway as Nina Leeds in a revival of Eugene O'Neill's Strange Interlude at the Nederlander Theatre in a production which had originated in London the previous year and ran for eight weeks.[2] John Beaufort for The Christian Science Monitor wrote: "Bravura is the inevitable word for Miss Jackson's display of feminine wiles and brilliant technique."[16] Frank Rich, in The New York Times thought Jackson, "with her helmet of hair and gashed features", when Leeds is a young woman, "looks like a cubist portrait of Louise Brooks", and later when the character has aged several decades, is "mesmerizing as a Zelda Fitzgeraldesque neurotic, a rotting and spiteful middle-aged matron and, finally, a spent, sphinx-like widow happily embracing extinction."[17] Herbert Wise directed a British television version of O'Neill's drama which was first broadcast in the US as part of PBS's American Playhouse in January 1988.[18]
In 1989, Jackson appeared in Ken Russell's The Rainbow, playing Anna Brangwen, mother of Gudrun, the part which had won her her first Academy Award twenty years earlier. Also in that year she played Martha in a Los Angeles production of Edward Albee's Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf? at the Doolittle Theatre (now the Ricardo Montalbán Theatre). Directed by the playwright himself, this staging featured John Lithgow as George. Dan Sullivan in the Los Angeles Times wrote that Jackson and Lithgow performed "with the assurance of dedicated character assassins, not your hire-and-salary types" with the actors being able to display their character's capacity for antipathy.[19] Albee was disappointed with this production, pointing to Jackson whom he thought "had retreated back to the thing she can do very well, that ice cold performance. I don't know whether she got scared, but in rehearsal she was being Martha, and the closer we got to opening the less Martha she was!".[20]
She performed the lead role in Howard Barker's Scenes from an Execution as Galactia, a sixteenth century female Venetian artist, at the Almeida Theatre in 1990.[21] It was an adaptation of Barker's 1984 radio play in which Jackson had played the same role.[22]

Career in politics

Jackson retired from acting in order to stand for election to the House of Commons in the 1992 general election subsequently becoming the Labour MP for Hampstead and Highgate. Following a period as an shadow minister on transport, following the 1997 general election, she was appointed as parliamentary under secretary of state (a junior minister )in the government of Prime Minister Tony Blair,[23] with responsibility for London Transport, a post from which she resigned in 1999 before an unsuccessful attempt to be nominated as the Labour Party candidate for the election of the first Mayor of London in 2000. In the 2005 general election, she received 14,615 votes, representing 38.29% of the votes cast in the constituency.
As a high profile backbencher she became a regular critic of Blair over his plans to introduce higher education tuition fees in England, Wales and Northern Ireland. She also called for him to resign following the Judicial Enquiry by Lord Hutton in 2003 surrounding the reasons for going to war in Iraq and the death of government adviser Dr. David Kelly. Jackson was generally considered to be a traditional left-winger, often disagreeing with the dominant Blairite governing Third Way faction in the Labour Party.
By October 2005, her problems with Blair's leadership swelled to a point where she threatened to challenge the Prime Minister as a stalking horse candidate in a leadership contest if he did not stand down within a reasonable amount of time. On 31 October 2006, Jackson was one of 12 Labour MPs to back Plaid Cymru and the Scottish National Party's call for an inquiry into the Iraq War.[24]
Her constituency boundaries changed for the 2010 general election. The Gospel Oak and Highgate wards became part of Holborn & St Pancras, and the new Hampstead & Kilburn constituency switched into Brent to include Brondesbury, Kilburn and Queens Park wards (from the old Brent East and Brent South seats). On 6 May 2010, Jackson was elected as the MP for the new Hampstead and Kilburn constituency with a margin of 42 votes over Conservative Chris Philp with the Liberal Democrat candidate Edward Fordham less than a thousand votes behind them. She had the second closest result and second smallest majority of any MP in the 2010 election.
In June 2011, Jackson announced that, presuming the Parliament elected in 2010 lasts until 2015, she will not seek re-election. She explained "I will be almost 80 and by then it will be time for someone else to have a turn".[25]
In April 2013, Jackson gave a speech in parliament over discussion about the passing of Margaret Thatcher.[26] In a scathing speech criticising Thatcher's policies, she accused Thatcher of treating "vices as virtues" and stated that because of Thatcherism England was susceptible to unprecedented unemployment rates and homelessness.[27]

Personal life and honours

Jackson has a son, Dan Hodges, born in 1969 from her marriage to Roy Hodges; he is a Labour Party advisor and commentator.,[28] and a well-known political blogger who describes himself as a "Blairite cuckoo".[29] She was five months pregnant when filming on Women in Love was completed.[30] Her marriage to Hodges lasted from 1958 until their divorce in 1976.[31]
In 1978, she was awarded an CBE.

Filmography



YearTitleRoleNotes
1963This Sporting LifeSinger at partyUncredited
1967Benefit of the Doubt
1967Marat/SadeInmate portraying Charlotte Corday
1968Tell Me LiesGuest
1968Wednesday Play, TheThe Wednesday Play: Let's Murder VivaldiJulieTelevision play by David Mercer
1968NegativesVivien
1969Women in LoveGudrun Brangwen
1969ITV Saturday Night Theatre: Salve ReginaMarina PalekTelevision play
1970Play of the Month: Howard's End
1970Music Lovers, TheThe Music LoversAntonina "Nina" Milyukova
1971Sunday Bloody SundayAlex Greville
1971Boy Friend, TheThe Boy FriendRitaUncredited
1971Mary, Queen of ScotsQueen Elizabeth I
1971Elizabeth RQueen Elizabeth I
1972Triple Echo, TheThe Triple EchoAlice
1973Touch of Class, AA Touch of ClassVicki Allessio
1973Bequest to the Nation, AA Bequest to the NationLady Hamilton
1974Maids, TheThe MaidsSolange
1975Romantic Englishwoman, TheThe Romantic EnglishwomanElizabeth Fielding
1975Devil Is a Woman, TheThe Devil Is a WomanSister GeraldineItalian: Il Sorriso del grande tentatore
1975HeddaHedda Gabler
1976Incredible Sarah, TheThe Incredible SarahSarah BernhardtNominated — Golden Globe Award for Best Actress – Motion Picture Drama
1977Nasty HabitsSister Alexandra
1978House CallsAnn Atkinson
1978StevieStevie Smith
1978Class of Miss MacMichael, TheThe Class of Miss MacMichaelConor MacMichael
1979Lost and FoundTricia
1980HopscotchIsobel von Schonenberg
1980HealthIsabella Garnell
1981Patricia Neal Story, TheThe Patricia Neal StoryPatricia Neal
1982Return of the Soldier, TheThe Return of the SoldierMargaret Grey
1982Giro CitySophie
1984SakharovYelena Bonner (Sakharova)
1985Turtle DiaryNeaera DuncanAdaptation by Harold Pinter
from Russell Hoban novel
1987Beyond TherapyCharlotte
1987Business as UsualBabs Flynn
1988Strange InterludeNina LeedsTelevision version of stage production
of the Eugene O'Neill play
1988Salome's Last DanceHerodias / Lady Alice
1989Rainbow, TheThe RainbowAnna Brangwen
1989King of the WindQueen Caroline
1989DoombeachMiss
1990T-Bag's Christmas Ding DongVanity BagTelevision film
1990Real Story of Humpty Dumpty, TheThe Real Story of Humpty DumptyGlitch the Witch(voice)
1991House of Bernarda Alba, TheThe House of Bernarda AlbaBernarda AlbaTelevision film
1991Murder of Quality, AA Murder of QualityAilsa BrimleyTelevision film
1992Secret Life of Arnold Bax, TheThe Secret Life of Arnold BaxHarriet CohenTelevision film
1994Wave of Passion: The Life of Alexandra Kollontai, AA Wave of Passion: The Life of Alexandra KollontaiAlexandra KollontaiTelevision film (voice)

Awards

References



  1. Jump up ^ Andy Bloxom (7 May 2010). "General Election 2010: the 10 closest battles". The Telegraph (telegraph.co). Retrieved 2011-11-04.
  2. ^ Jump up to: a b c Andrea Chambers "With More Than a Touch of Sass and Stamina, Glenda Jackson Enjoys Her Strange Interlude Oh Broadway", People, 23:11, 18 March 1985
  3. Jump up ^ Jennifer Uglow, et al. The Macmillan Dictionary of Women's Biography. London: Macmillan, 1999, p. 276 (US: Boston: Northeastern University Press)
  4. Jump up ^ D. Keith Peacock "Jackson, Glenda [May]" in Colin Chambers (ed) The Continuum Companion to Twentieth Century Theatre, London: Continuum, 2002 [2005], p.398
  5. ^ Jump up to: a b "Glenda Jackson (1936- )", in Who's Who in the Twentieth Century, Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1999 ISBN 9780192800916
  6. Jump up ^ David Edgar "The best performance I've ever seen", The Guardian, 18 July 2010
  7. Jump up ^ "Hamlet: Past Productions: On the RSC stage - 1965", BBC
  8. Jump up ^ Penelope Gilliatt "Making Sunday Bloody Sunday", The Criterion Collection, reprint of Gilliatt's introduction to the US publication of the script (1971).
  9. Jump up ^ "Peter Brook Returns to the RSC to Host a Theatre of Protest Event", RSC, October 2011. A documentary of the stage production also exists, see Stuart Heaney "Benefit of the Doubt (1967)", BFI screenonline
  10. Jump up ^ Brian McFarlane (ed.) The Encyclopedia of British Film, London: Methuen/BFI, 2003, p.339; "Jackson, Glenda (1936-)", BFI screenonline
  11. Jump up ^ David Del Valle "Camp David June 2012: Tchiakovsky is Just Not That Into You", Films in Review, 20 June 2012
  12. Jump up ^ "Review: The Music Lovers", Variety, 31 December 1970
  13. Jump up ^ Richard Crouse Raising Hell: Ken Russell and the Unmaking of The Devils", ECW Press, 2012, p.47-48
  14. Jump up ^ "Film: Actress in 1972", BAFTA
  15. Jump up ^ Peter Waymark. "Richard Burton top draw in British cinemas." The Times [London] 30 December 1971: 2. The Times Digital Archive. Web. 11 July 2012.
  16. Jump up ^ John Beaufort "Lively revival of O'Neill's stormy Strange Interlude", Christian Science Monitor, 26 February 1985
  17. Jump up ^ Frank Rich "Theater: A Fresh Look for O'Neill's Interlude", New York Times, 22 February 1985
  18. Jump up ^ John J. O'Connor " TV Reviews; Glenda Jackson in 'Strange Interlude'", New York Times, 18 January 1988
  19. Jump up ^ Dan Sullivan "Stage Review: A Lower-Key George and Martha", Los Angeles Times, 6 October 1989
  20. Jump up ^ Stephen J. Bottoms Albee: Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2000, p.67-68
  21. Jump up ^ Matt Wolf "Theater; A New London Theater Team Is Attracting Stars", New York Times, 11 March 1990
  22. Jump up ^ Jane Milling Modern British Playwriting: The 1980s: Voices, Documents, New Interpretations, A & C Black, 2012, p.30
  23. Jump up ^ "Ms Glenda Jackson, CBE, MP Authorised Biography", Debrett's
  24. Jump up ^ "Labour MPs who rebelled on Iraq". BBC News. 31 October 2006. Retrieved 2006-10-31.
  25. Jump up ^ Graham, Georgia (23 June 2011). "Glenda Jackson won’t stand in next election". Ham & High.
  26. Jump up ^ http://www.guardian.co.uk/politics/video/2013/apr/11/glenda-jackson-margaret-thatcher-video
  27. Jump up ^ http://www.theaustralian.com.au/news/world/labour-mp-glenda-jackson-shatters-the-love-during-parliament-tributes/story-e6frg6so-1226618581749
  28. Jump up ^ Ian Hall (28 February 2003). "Profile: Dan Hodges, Freedom To Fly". PR Week (prweek.com). Retrieved 2011-11-04.
  29. Jump up ^ http://blogs.telegraph.co.uk/news/author/danhodges/
  30. Jump up ^ "Biography for Glenda Jackson". imdb.com. Retrieved 2011-11-04.
  31. Jump up ^ "Milestones". Time (Time.com). 9 February 1976. Retrieved 2011-11-04.

External links

Parliament of the United Kingdom
Preceded by
Geoffrey Finsberg
Member of Parliament for Hampstead & Highgate
19922010
Constituency abolished
New constituencyMember of Parliament for Hampstead & Kilburn
2010–present
Incumbent

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