Sunday, August 17, 2008

A Conversation with Malcolm McDowell

By Lauren Wissot

When I first contacted the Film Society of Lincoln Center about interviewing Malcolm McDowell (in town to support his and Mike Kaplan’s film Never Apologize, a walk-down-memory-lane tribute to Lindsay Anderson that is screening concurrently with the “Lindsay Anderson: Revolutionary Romantic” series), I didn’t honestly believe I would get the chance to sit down and chat with the man who scarred me for life at the age of ten. (O.K., in all fairness it was my father who made the monolithic mistake of taking me and my sister to see A Clockwork Orange at the local university.) I just figured, as the New York State lottery ad goes, “Hey, you never know.”

So it was a bit surreal sitting in front of this snow white-haired, otherworldly blue-eyed acting legend in a closed restaurant across from Manhattan's Mandarin Hotel, hearing him hold forth on everything from the exact moment (my patron director saint) Stanley Kubrick made the gut instinct casting decision that would anchor his masterpiece to the feeling of bearing witness to Olivier onstage; from British-schooled African dictators and film biz shysters to why England is the land of wonderful losers; and—oh yes—why he never allows himself the luxury to dream of working with any artist so as to avoid potential disappointment. Well, Mr. McDowell, I am most grateful and honored that you shared such an insightful half-hour of your time with myself and The House Next Door and, if I may so humbly point out, the following interview is definitive proof that sometimes it does indeed pay to dream.

Podcast is embedded after the break. Any problems it can also be found here as a downloadable mp3 file.

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Podcast



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Transcript

COMING SOON!

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Brooklyn-based writer Lauren Wissot is the publisher of the blog Beyond the Green Door, the author of the memoir Under My Master's Wings, and a contributor to The Reeler.

2 comments:

www.alt-flix.co.uk said...

Great interview. Never Apologize is a brilliant film anbout a brilliant director.
It would be great to see Malcolm McDowell devote a whole one man show to Stanley Kubrick - I bet he has got some truly great stories about him too.

Dean Treadway said...

I, too, got to meet Mr. McDowell at Lincoln Center and so enjoyed our 15 minutes together, where we talked mostly about O LUCKY MAN! (since I felt I knew many details about his work with and relationship with Kubrick). I loved your interview! I'm sure you'll agree, Malcolm is a kind and generous man, and a delightful wit (as NEVER APOLOGIZE further proves).