pen & brush

Thursday, April 03, 2008

PHYSICAL INCONGRUITIES ON STAGE AND SCREEN !


The physique and the role




In my younger days the top two heroes in Tamil films were M.K.Thiagaraja Baghavathar (MKT) and P.U.Chinnappa (PUC). Both of them sang beautifully. But that is about all that could be said for them. MKT had a delicate physique, and so when he was made to fight successfully against thugs, it was rather difficult to believe.

Too fat


PUC was really fat. His cheeks bulged out and his middle seemed to have broken many a belt, and one had the uneasy feeling that it may burst any moment. He certainly was not a picture of male beauty. But the heroine generally took one look at him and wondered: “Who is that handsome guy?” (Yaar andha sundara purushan?) causing guffaws in the audience.

Sivaji Ganesan, in the later part of his career developed an enormous paunch, and sought to conceal it by wearing a loose coat unbuttoned in the front so that it blocked the view from the side. But still the protuberance could be spotted, which was incongruous in a “young” hero. Towards the end of his career Sivaji lost a couple of teeth, and looked really old and haggard. But he was asked to play a medical student, and he agreed. According to film gossip in magazines, he was asked by the producer to set his teeth, but he refused to do so since he wanted it fixed only in Singapore. And so he appeared sans teeth in his role as a college student. And the heroine who looks young enough to be his daughter takes one look at the ‘sundara purushan’ and falls like a ton of bricks for him. All this strains the audience’s willing suspension of disbelief considerably. Laughter abounded in the theatre even when the scene on screen did not warrant it.

This incongruity between the physique of the actor and the role he played was a common thing even in the West, particularly on stage. In ‘Romeo and Juliet’ the audience expects the actors to be slim and elegant in keeping with Shakespeare’s tribute to youthful love. Sometimes we are faced with fat Juliets or ageing Romeos. In one such pairing, Madam Suzanne Lagier, who was a good actress but extremely stout, and Pierre Tallade, a lean actor were paired. Romeo found it extremely difficult to carry Juliet, which he was called on to do in a scene. He tried with all his might to lift the obese heroine, but although she helped him by standing on tiptoe in the usual trick of the trade, he was unable to move her an inch. At this juncture a boy cried out from the audience, “Take what you can, and come back for the rest!” And the audience broke out into laughter ill-suited for a tragedy.


Too tall



Another kind of incongruity is when the actress is taller than the actor. Raj Kapoor, when he first met his new heroine, Vyjayanthimala, was dismayed to find that she was taller than him. “Don’t tell me I’ll have to use a step-ladder in the love scenes” he said. But they did act together using set tricks like slightly raised surfaces and camera ruses. The film ‘Sangam’ was a hit.

When the great Hollywood actress Katherine Hepburn first met the seasoned actor Spencer Tracy in the audition for their first film together, she said “I am afraid I am too tall for you, Mr.Tracy” And he said “Don’t worry Miss.Hepburn, I’ll soon cut you down to my size.” And they went on to become a very popular pair with several films together. And it was also the beginning of one of the most famous of Hollywood romances.

One of the fattest Hamlets was the actor Edmund Tearle who looked like an elephant in tights. So when he pronounced the famous lines “O, that this too, too solid flesh would melt, thaw, or resolve itself into a dew” the audience burst into laughter spoiling the soliloquy. And a fat Portia (The Merchant of Venice) equalled him as a provoker of laughter when she complained “My little body is a-weary of this world”.

The physiques of the actor and actress can cause unscheduled merriment, which is part of the fun in the theatre.

4 Comments:

Blogger தருமி said...

i was thinking it was only Sivaji who never bothered to keep fit. never seen a movie of PUC. i think all other actors in our tamil cinema took care of their physique. but still seeing danush shouting 'ஏய்!' at the top of his voice looks so hillarious.

10:21 pm  
Blogger Prabhakar said...

Sir, The flip side is they do less harm as actors than politicians! Very amusing piece.

6:59 am  
Blogger Jay said...

who cares.. they are legends!

2:44 am  
Blogger jvasanthan said...

welcome, Mayooresan.

Anyway, legends or not they were really ridiculous.

9:06 am  

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