Sunday, March 29, 2015

Benedict Cumberbatch 'proud' to have read at burial of ancestor Richard III

SUNDAY EXPRESS
By CAMILLA TOMINEY
PUBLISHED: 00:01, Sun, Mar 29, 2015


GIF BY MOLLYDOBBY

The Oscar-nominated actor explained why he felt compelled to be involved in Thursday’s service of reinterment at Leicester Cathedral, where he read the poem Richard by Poet Laureate Carol Ann Duffy.

Cumberbatch, who is the king’s third cousin, 16 times removed, plays him in the forthcoming BBC series The Hollow Crown: The Wars Of The Roses.

He said: “Having just played his very different Shakespearean characterisation I was intrigued to see what the real historical event would be like and to be a part of this extraordinary moment of remembrance. Then what really sealed the deal was this beautiful poem.

“It’s an extraordinary moment to be witnessing a monarch who has been found after hundreds of years in a car park being reinterred in a cathedral hundreds of yards away. It is a very special thing to witness, let alone be asked to perform at.”



The Sherlock star, 38, revealed how he watched with amazement the Channel 4 documentary, The King In The Car Park, which showed historian Philippa Langley leading the Leicester excavation in 2012 to reveal Richard’s skeleton, 527 years after his death at the Battle of Bosworth.

He said: “As it unfolded you realised the discovery was real, the drama was unheard of in a documentary like that. It wasn’t a high profile programme but it became so because of what they discovered. There was a glorious romanticism about that.”

Cumberbatch believes the rediscovery of the much maligned monarch’s bones has changed the world’s perception of him. “I think the debate in historical and archaeological terms about the reality of him and his kingship is what’s extraordinary to witness now,” he said.


“We’ve all known the play for a long time but now it feels we’re getting to know the king better and to be living in that era is very special.”

Cumberbatch is still in two minds about the king, who remains accused of killing his cousins, Edward V and Richard, the Duke of York, the so-called Princes in the Tower. “I’ve no qualms in viewing both entities of the man in completely different categories,” he said. “The fi ctionalised Shakespearean version of him, while based on some truths, has taken huge dramatic licence. I don’t come down on one side. Both need to co-exist.









2 comments:

Unknown said...

That first gif you used belongs to the lovely Mollydobby at http://britsunited.blogspot.com/2015/03/sunday-express-by-camilla-tominey.html

You should ALWAYS credit when using someone else's work, it's just common courtesy. It has her watermark on it, not really hard to find, if you just looked for about 10 seconds.

Karen V. Wasylowski said...

I apologize for not acknowledging Mollydobby. I was under the impression that having her mark already on the gif was enough acknowledgement, certainly equal to writing her name beneath the picture. If I offended her, forgive me. I am not an evil person, I am not a professional. You seem very upset which is unfortunate. Life is too short to be so angry over nothing. Simply writing to me politely would have yielded the same result and would not have hurt anyone's feelings.