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Theatre

Meet Ken Loach's Jewish son-in-law

Elliott Levey’s interesting home life is matched only by his varied acting career

July 22, 2010 10:23
Elliott Levey: the go-to actor for TV directors casting Jewish roles

By

John Nathan,

John Nathan

4 min read

'This place", says Elliott Levey, looking out of the window at the Thames shimmering in the summer heat. "It's just been fantastic to me." But it's not the river that has been good to Levey. It is the cubist concrete construction that sits on its south bank known as the National Theatre. It is here that he is about to play his biggest role, the French revolutionary Robespierre, in Danton's Death.

Howard Brenton's new version of Georg Buchner's 1835 play marks the keenly awaited National Theatre debut of the Donmar's hugely successful artistic director Michael Grandage. Toby Stephens plays the heart-throb libertine Danton, while Levey is the stony-hearted and much less likeable "incorruptible" figure who presided over the revolutions reign of terror.

Levey rarely plays likeable for that matter. There was a time when he was British television's off-the-shelf Jew. He was a Jewish doctor in
EastEnders, a Jewish patient in Holby City and in the throwback episode of Casualty set in 1906 he was a Yiddish-speaking anarchist. But for the last few years, the Leeds-born actor has been carving out an acting career that has seen him escape the pigeon-hole in which TV casting directors put him.

The most obvious sign that theatre was a less blinkered industry came three years ago at the Young Vic when he played the sinister role of the Swedish Customer in Brecht's anti-war How Much Is Your Iron? The play points an accusing finger at those who profited from the rise of Nazi Germany. Levey's character was a fascist, and nobody complained that the actor looked too Jewish for the part.

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