Ian
McKellen
From the Beginning
Ian Murray McKellen was born at 20.30 Greenwich Mean Time,
on 25 May 1939, in the general hospital of Burnley, the northern English milltown where
his father Denis Murray was a civil engineer. He and Margery Lois (nee Sutcliffe) already
had a 5 year old daughter Jean. Just before the outbreak of the Second World War, the
family moved to Wigan (population 80,000) a coal-mining town in south Lancashire. In his
earliest years, Ian slept under the iron bomb-proof table in the dining-room. Overcoming
diphtheria when he was 3, he was shortly after attending the nursery school attached to the
Dicconson Street Wesleyan Primary School in the centre of the town. He walked to school,
from the family 4-bedroomed semi-detached house (circa 1929) opposite Mesnes Park and
backing onto Wigan Cricket Club's grounds. On Sundays he attended morning service at Hope
Street Congregational Church and afternoon Sunday School. By 11, he was at Wigan Grammar
School for Boys but a year later transferred to Bolton School (Boys' Division), when his
father was made Borough Engineer and Surveyor of Bolton (population 120,000).
An early fascination with theatre was encouraged by his
parents, who took him on a family outing to "Peter Pan" at Manchester Opera
House when he was 3. When he was 7, his main Christmas present was a wood and bakelite,
fold-away Victorian Theatre from Pollocks Toy Theatres, with cardboard scenery and wires
to push on the cut-outs of Cinderella and of Olivier's Hamlet. His sister took him to his
first Shakespeare, "Twelfth Night," by the amateurs of Wigan's Little Theatre,
shortly followed by their "Macbeth" and Wigan High School for Girls' production
of "A Midsummer Night's Dream" with music by Mendelssohn and Bottom by Jean
McKellen. (Now a grandmother and a retired deputy headteacher, Jean still acts, directs,
and produces amateur theatre.)
At all his schools he acted, most crucially for Frank
Greene, the senior English master who directed the annual, spring-term Bolton School
classical play in the main hall, seating 800 people. Bolton School, where McKellen was a
scholar, further encouraged the tyro actor at the Hopefield Miniature Theatre. This
converted Edwardian house had an auditorium for 50 adoring parents and a tiny stage for
puppetry, one-act entertainments in French or translated from the Greek or written
especially by the masters. In one of these latter, Sir Ian made the first of very few
appearances in drag, as a Bolton mill-girl who cheats her way to the finale of a beauty
contest ("The Beauty Contest " by Leonard Roe.) His first Shakespeare
performance was at Hopefield, as a 13 year old Malvolio in the letter scene from
"Twelfth Night."
Each summer, he attended the school's camp to
Stratford-upon-Avon: under canvas in Bell tents in a field upstream in Tiddington,
half-an-hour to the Royal Shakespeare Theatre by punt. In the evening, he saw Laurence
Olivier and Vivien Leigh, Charles Laughton, Edith Evans, Peggy Ashcroft, John Gielgud,
Paul Robeson in Shakespeare and, round the camp-stove, learnt to express why not all the
productions were good.
As it was, he won an exhibition to read English at St.
Catharine's College, Cambridge under the tutorship of Tom Henn, the Shakespeare and Yeats
scholar. This honour was withdrawn after two years, as his academic progress had been
overtaken by the 21 undergraduate productions he acted in. He began to be noted by the
national press: "I regret the Marlowe Society's tradition of not naming its actors,
because in the case of this quite brilliant Justice Shallow, his might well become a name
to remember." This production of the two parts of Shakespeare's "Henry 4th"
was directed by the junior don John Barton (ever since eminence gris of the Royal
Shakespeare Company), with Derek Jacobi as Prince Hal (like Sir Ian, now knighted for his
services to the performing arts). Others at Cambridge planning show business careers, were
David Frost (with Sir Ian in Nigel Dennis's "Cards of Identity"); Trevor Nunn (in Marlowe's "Dr. Faustus" at the
open-air theatre of Stratford-upon-Avon 1960); Margaret Drabble (in Shakespeare's
"Cymbeline" and Richard Cottrell's first play "Deutsches Haus" at the
Arts Theatre, his first appearance on the London stage).
When he graduated Bachelor Arts (2.2) in 1961, he had
decided to become an actor ("I wasn't fit for anything else!") and without going
to drama school made his first performance as Roper in the Belgrade Theatre, Coventry's
production of "A Man for All Seasons". Three years later, he was living in
London with two Scottish terriers and his lover Brian Taylor, a history schoolteacher from
Bolton at 25, Earl's Terrace in Kensington. When that relationship changed in 1972,
McKellen bought his first house at 17, Camberwell Grove, where he lived alone for 8 years.
During this time, without any contact with the burgeoning gay rights movement, he was
openly gay at home and at work. He was, however, closeted in not being honest with his
blood family nor with the media ("neither of whom showed much interest in my
sexuality, whatever it might have been. Probably because for most people in England, sex
is a tricky topic.")
From the proceeds of a year on Broadway as Salieri in
Peter Shaffer's "Amadeus," he bought a riverside terraced house in Limehouse,
within sight of both Canary Wharf and Tower Bridge. For 8 years he lived there with his
lover Sean Mathias, with whom Sir Ian tries regularly to work (recently in the film
version of "Bent."). He still lives in
Limehouse, using the London Light Docklands Railways to access the Underground system.
Locally he drinks late nights at the gay pub "The White Swan" and is patron of
the St. Paul's Arts Centre on the Isle of Dogs, where he has given benefit peformances of
his latest solo show "A Knight Out".
Sir Ian has often held establishment appointments: Head
Boy of Bolton School (1957-58); President of the Marlowe Society (1960-61); elected to
Council of British Actors' Equity (1971); served on Drama and Dance Panel advising the
British Council; Development Council raising funds for the Royal National Theatre
(1991-96); Cameron Mackintosh Profesor of Contemporary Theatre at Oxford (1990); currently
patron of English Touring Theatre. As well as his score of awards
for acting, Sir Ian has honours from Nottingham and Aberdeen Universities, gay
organisations in UK, USA and South Africa. He was named "Commander of the British
Empire" in 1979, followed by his Knighthood of the British Empire for services to the
performing arts in the Queen's New Year Honours of 1990. He is one of the very few
openly-gay knights.
In 1988, he publicly came out as a gay man during a BBC
Radio 4 discussion about the Thatcher government's infamous "Section 28" of the
Local Government Act, making illegal the public "promotion of homosexuality." He
overnight became an active member of the movement to change those UK laws which
discriminate against lesbians and gay men. He is a co-founder of "Stonewall"
which works for social and legal equality and he annually directs its principle source of
funding "The Equality Show" at the Royal Albert Hall.
In 1998 he was appointed to the board of the Royal
National Theatre Company.
These days, Sir Ian is happy to answer any enquiry from
the media but is reluctant to talk about details of his private life which involves other
people. Although a vegetarian, a New Labour Party supporter, and a donator to numerous
charities, ("I prefer to restrict my public views to what I know best - acting and
activism".) |
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TIME
LINE
"In my case, it was my father
and not my mother who played the piano. My childhood was wrapped in a blanket of melodies
by Chopin, Liszt and Tchaikowsky, as Dad tried not to get his huge fingers stuck between
the keys of our upright piano, that stood behind the door of our little lounge, directly
below my even smaller bedroom, where I was trying to get to sleep. I inherited the hands
but not the musicianship."
Ian
McKellen, remembering his early childhood in an excerpt from his one-man show "A
Knight Out" 1969
Ian McKellen creates sensation at the Edinburgh Festival in dual roles as Richard
II and Edward II (Right, with Robert Eddison as Lightborn)
On his first theatre experience,
"Peter Pan":
"I wasn't over-impressed. For
one thing it wasn't a real crocodile and I could see the wires."
On performing in the main hall at
Bolton School:
"This required experimenting
with being audible above the constant squeal of 800 bottoms shifting on 800 rush-bottomed
chairs. Frank Greene was right: if you can't be heard, you can't act onstage."
On summer camp at Stratford:
"I was also convinced that the
divinity of Peggy Ashcroft's Imogen for example, bore no relation to my own flat-footed
amateur acting and started in my teens to think I might train as a chef or a
journalist."
On his long-running relationship
with Sean Mathias:
"It was important to us both
that our friendship should survive the split. Sean is one of the three most helpful
directors I've worked with - alongside Trevor Nunn and Tyrone
Guthrie."
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