The eulogies are already in for Bob Hoskins, so I won’t add to them.
Here, I’d like to offer a film review I wrote for a local
magazine in 2006. The film is a little gem and earned Hoskins three award
nominations. In his career from 1972, he won over a dozen awards; he was one of
a kind.
Mrs Henderson Presents
(2005)
Rich new widow Mrs Henderson (Judi Dench) is urged by her
friend Lady Conway (superb Thelma Barlow) to ‘buy things’ to make her widowhood
bearable. So Mrs Henderson buys a theatre, the Windmill. As she has no experience with theatres, she
hires the abrasive perfectionist Vivian Van Damm (Bob Hoskins). The partnership, surprisingly, is a success
and when they put on non-stop shows, they do very well indeed. That is, until
other theatres copy the idea and then their takings plummet.
Not willing to be beaten by the competition, Mrs Henderson
then suggests they put on nude shows, like the Moulin Rouge. However, theatres are the province of the
Lord Chamberlain, Lord Cromer (Christopher Guest) and he would never
countenance nudity on stage. As Lord Cromer is a family friend, Mrs Henderson
corners him and gets a grudging agreement that the unclothed ladies would be
permissible if they did not move, as if they were works of art in a museum. A
tall order and there are several amusing moments over this, not least when Van
Damm and everyone else in the theatre is coaxed by the actresses to take off
their clothes. The ‘life tableaux’
actually work, however, drawing the crowds.
Singers and dancers perform in front of the still nude ladies who are
artistically lit. Nothing salacious – it’s just the celebration of the female
body.
Will Young is the lead male singer and he was a revelation as
an actor too. We also learn about some
of the girls, such as Maureen (Kelly Reilly) who seems ill-fated where romance
is concerned. The camaraderie of the time shines through, especially during the
air-raids. The Windmill was below street level so served as a shelter. The performers were brave, carrying on as the
building shook to the detonation of nearby bombs. The poignant reason for Mrs
Henderson’s insistence about continuing her nude production is revealed in a
climactic scene. Dench was nominated for an Oscar. An entertaining light comedy
and a great tribute to these true characters of theatre-land.
A companion article/blog about windmills can be found here
R.I.P. Bob Hoskins.
No comments:
Post a Comment