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Theatre

He wanted to be a rabbi, now he's playing King Lear

What changed?

March 25, 2010 10:48
Greg Hicks, whose parents were founder members of Leicester’s Progressive Congregation.

ByAnonymous, Anonymous

4 min read

'I used to be a little bit disarmed when people said: 'Oh you're playing Lear - you're far too young.' But now I'm much more cavalier about it," declares Greg Hicks. "I'll give what I know about life and whatever abilities I have as an actor a whirl." Judging by the reviews he has had for his King Lear in the current Royal Shakespeare Company production in Stratford-upon-Avon, the strategy is paying dividends.

"Anyway, the part wasn't written for an old man," he continues. "It was written for a 38-year-old."

Hicks's saturnine good looks are if anything enhanced now that he has grown a beard for the role. Grey runs through it so his playing age is hardly 38. He decides he will not tell how old he really is but will admit to being fiftysomething. And he concedes that Lear is generally played as an octogenarian. "I am young to plumb the depths of an 80-year-old's suffering" he says. It turns out, though, that he has found one role model for Lear who is a good deal older than 80.

"My father will be 100 by the time we hit New York in eighteen months' time, he's nearly ninety-nine now," he tells me. "And there's a tenacious quality about my father that is very suitable for Lear. He's survived many things in his life. He was a flight engineer in the Lancaster Squadron during the Second World War. He's seen a few things and his ability to bounce back after major obstacles is quite extraordinary. And I think Lear has that tenacious and fierce ability to suffer."