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Theatre

Julian Sands in a Celebration of Harold Pinter

A tender and affectionate, if somewhat airbrushed, portrait

August 17, 2011 08:04

ByLee Levitt, Lee Levitt

2 min read

Nearly four decades after studying Pinter's plays for his 'O' levels at Lord Wandsworth College in Hampshire, the Hollywood actor Julian Sands paints a tender and affectionate, if somewhat airbrushed, portrait of the late Nobel laureate who he came to know socially and, in Pinter's twilight years, to befriend. 

At its heart are Pinter's poems. Covering love, cancer, death, politics and war, these are deeply personal, sometimes wistful, at others angry and passionate, scowling and howling in a peculiarly Pinteresque way. Sands peppers them with bits of prose and (sometimes amusing) anecdotes of the often irascible, intimidating literary behemoth to try to create a fuller understanding of the man. 

For though Pinter was acclaimed as one of the greatest British playwrights of his generation, as well as having written 29 film screenplays, when he died of liver cancer in 2008, Sands confides that "his poetry came from himself, which he denied himself in his plays", and Pinter treasured it as a repository of his innermost thoughts.

Sands has worked on the piece for a year, in several European locations, with its director, the Oscar-nominated Hollywood film star John Malkovich, whom he met in 1984 on the set of "The Killing Fields" and who was a friend of Pinter's since the 1980s. Sands got to know the poems six years ago when, with Pinter suffering from the cancer of the oesophagus with which he had been diagnosed in 2002, the writer asked the Yorkshire-born actor to stand in for him at a poetry recital in London for a homeless women's charity.