Wednesday, May 30, 2007

Cheggers plays Shakespeare

Seeing as I have blogged about the fact that Sid Owen once played Al Pacino's son in a film, I suppose I am bound to mention this too.

Keith Chegwin appeared in Roman Polanski's 1971 film of Macbeth.

A thespian writes: It is bad luck to mention that name. Leave the dressing room and turn round three times before you come back in.

Liberal England replies: Come, come. Cheggers isn't as bad as all that.

2 comments:

  1. Keith Chegwin as Fleance, by Paul Farley

    The next rung up from extra and dogsbody
    and all the clichés are true – days waiting for
    enough light, learning card games, penny-ante,
    while fog rolls off the sea, a camera
    gets moisture in its gate, and Roman Polanski
    curses the day he chose Snowdonia.
    He picked you for your hair to play this role:
    a look had reached Bootle from Altamont
    that year. You wouldn't say you sold your soul
    but learned your line inside a beating tent
    by candlelight, the shingle dark as coal
    behind each wave, and its slight restatement.
    "A tale told by an idiot . . ." "Not your turn,
    but perhaps, with time and practice . . .", the Pole starts.
    Who's to say, behind the accent and that grin,
    what designs you had on playing a greater part?
    The crew get ready while the stars go in.
    You speak the words you'd written on your heart.

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