Become a Member
Film

Playing prime ministers

Londoners get a sneak preview this week of a film about an Israeli Prime Minister and a New York hustler, played by Richard Gere. Anne Joseph talked to Lior Ashkenazi, who plays the PM.

May 15, 2017 16:44
Lior Ashkenazi in Norman
3 min read

 

Acclaimed Israeli actor, Lior Ashkenazi laughs as he explains why he needed to overcome his negative opinion of politicians when prepping for his latest role as fictionalised politician, Micha Eshel, in Norman: The Moderate Rise and Tragic Fall of a New York Fixer. “They don’t have a good reputation. But I didn’t want that to be the starting point of the character so I tried as hard as I could to be human about him.”

Norman, directed by Joseph Cedar (Footnote, Beaufort), is Ashkenazi’s first major role in a US production. He co-stars alongside Richard Gere who plays Norman, a New York Jewish hustler who sets his sights on Eshel, a low level, suave and charismatic Israeli politician who unexpectedly becomes prime minister. Cedar deftly blends realism with a touch of comedy of the absurd in his reimagining of the reviled classic court Jew narrative: someone offers a favour to a powerful individual, becomes powerful himself which then creates antagonism and ripples of anti-Semitism. The film premieres in the UK later this week, as part of Seret London, the Israeli film and television festival and Ashkenazi will be participating in Q & As after both screenings.

At the start of the film, when Norman seeks him out, Eshel feels he is at a low point in his career - unsure of his future. He is flattered by Norman’s attention. “Politicians usually have a lot of ego, they don’t like to have enemies - although they have them. It’s all about people’s love,” says Ashkenzai, on the phone from his home in Israel. “In a way he wants to be seduced by Norman. Eshel is a man who loves the good things in life, so if there’s someone who compliments him and buys him a pair of expensive shoes...We have so many examples of this, [in Israel and elsewhere].”