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Theatre

Henry Goodman: I wanted to play this Jew-hater

The acclaimed actor explains his decision to take the role of antisemitic painter Edgar Degas

November 19, 2009 11:14
Henry Goodman as Edgar Degas in Timberlake Wertenbaker’s play The Line. “I’m aware of the dangers of making him sympathetic,” says the actor

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Anonymous,

Anonymous

3 min read

I am appearing in a new play by Timberlake Wertenbaker called The Line. It is about the famous 19th-century French painter Edgar Degas, whom I try to bring to life.

Although the play, which opened in London on Wednesday, focuses on Degas’s relationship with the painter Suzanne Valadon, it also exposes the complexity of the man himself. And among his prime characteristics, Degas was unquestionably anti-Jewish.

From the moment I worked on the play with acting students at RADA last spring, I felt attracted to this opinionated maître with his fixed and rather old-fashioned views. He jumped at me, he irritated me and yet he inspired my respect. I wanted to play him, to be him. He was a man of integrity and deep sensitivity, and yet an antisemite.

And there are other contradictions which come out in his relationship with sensual young Suzanne. He is of the right in so many ways — traditional, old school, bourgeois — and yet he is the leader of the rebel intransigent artists, the independents whom we know today as the Impressionists.