Friday 31 December 2010
David Tennant Treat 4 Today for Friday 31st December 2010
Thursday 30 December 2010
David Tennant Treat 4 Today for Thursday 30th December 2010
Wednesday 29 December 2010
David Tennant Treat 4 Today for Wednesday 29th December 2010
Tuesday 28 December 2010
David Tennant Treat 4 Today for Tuesday 28th December 2010
In The Rivals, one critic wrote that he "is blessed with the most eloquent left eyebrow since Roger Moore's". Another said of him in The Comedy of Errors: "Tennant's ingenuity and understated comedy are the production's making. His face speaks volumes and is as changeable as a weather-vane." And a third: "The best performance comes from David Tennant... rapidly establishing himself as one of the most endearing comic actors in the business."
Not that you dare quote any of these to "the skinny Scot frae Paisley". There is no time for reading reviews, he says, as we race down the stairs behind the scenes at the theatre and rush across to the Union Club, the RSC's version of the Groucho Club-on-Avon for company members, to dive into steak and kidney pie and coffee cake. He will read all his notices at the end of the season, when he will have played 97 performances as Jack Absolute, slid down the banisters as Antipholus 72 times and fallen in doomed love with Juliet 45 times. There have been two matinees every week, as well as six evening shows since The Rivals started previewing in March. "I don't want to know the total number," he says, as I prepare to quote the statistics. "I haven't dared count them. It's too terrifying, although once Romeo and Juliet opens I'll just be doing eight shows a week and getting days off, because I won't be rehearsing."
Tennant reckons he gets his first Monday off in August. "But to make up for it, we then do three matinees. I get a very short break in September, I think. It's quite full on, but it's that or you don't do the parts.
"He is perfect casting for Romeo, because of the intensity he brings to his work," Michael Boyd says. While Tennant's great friend and former landlady, the comic performer and author of Does My Bum Look Big in This?, Arabella Weir, says: "He's astonishingly focused for his age and amazingly straightforward and honest. He's trustworthy and he's honourable." Tennant lodged with her for five years when he "very trepidatiously" moved to London. Weir, whom he met on Takin' Over the Asylum, led him astray, he jokes. "She would shock me with the things she would say, but she finds it harder to shock me now. She probably corrupted me, but I probably needed corrupting a little bit. It sounds like we were lovers or something. We weren't. It was more she led me into the murky world of London. I think I was quite green when I left Scotland - I was blessed with a very good upbringing, because my parents are very moral, Christian people, but without all the brimstone and thunder nonsense."
There is still something uncynical and unspoilt about him, though. He confesses that being with the RSC can be scary. "Not only because you are in the home of 'world class classical theatre' (as all the brochures tell you), but these big Shakespearean roles come with a lot of historical baggage attached. People tell you how romantic Ian McKellen was as Romeo, or how masculine Sean Bean was, or how marvellous Laurence Olivier was. You feel the weight of all those ghosts, those performances that have taken on a mystical resonance. And because it's Shakespeare, you feel it's hard to make it believable, because it is so beautiful. "With this play, everyone has so many ideas about it, that you almost want to play against the beauty. We did the balcony scene the other day and I was doing: 'But, soft! What light through yonder window breaks? It is the east, and Juliet is the sun!' And I was going: 'How can I say that?' It is beyond parody, but all you can do is be personal with it and make it your own, if that doesn't sound too pretentious. I know that's how Alex [who plays Juliet] feels about famous lines like, 'Parting is such sweet sorrow'."
Rehearsals carry on into the evening, although Tennant has to dash off to a warm-up, then strut his stuff in The Rivals. The last "Bravo!" is still echoing in his ears as he flies out of the stage door, clutching his shopping. "The milk and the orange juice will be curdled. They have been in my dressing-room all day," he says gloomily. There is not even time for a post-show pint in the actors' local, the Dirty Duck. He has, he notes, only been there twice since January. "I'll make up for it once Romeo's up and running," he promises.
After the show, which finishes at 10.30pm, he drives the mile-and-a-bit to his flat, watches TV for half an hour to unwind, and then goes to bed with the Arden edition of "the greatest love story ever told". Then, the next morning, he's up at 8am, eats a bowl of Honey Nut Shredded Wheat - "my only concession to healthy living" - and drives back to the theatre, where he showers, goes shopping at Marks & Spencer for lunch, then starts rehearsals again at 10am. "I'm marrying Juliet this morning," he says. "Knowing Michael, it'll be something unusual and different. Swinging from the chandeliers? Probably."
The intensity of the rollercoaster he is on is overwhelming. Stratford is a gruelling, sometimes stifling, hothouse. Rehearsal followed by show, followed by rehearsal, in one long punishing schedule. After one-and-a-half hours in the rehearsal room, there is just time for a snack before voice warm-ups for the matinee of The Rivals. There, Tennant's rapier-thin young blade gets involved in sword fights and various cunning derring-do disguises, then he is off again for lunch. And back on again, for The Comedy of Errors. A short show, but a physical one, as Tennant slides down those banisters, executes pratfalls and turns in a brilliantly funny double act with Ian Hughes, who plays his manservant, Dromio. He also does the neatly witty trick of lighting two post-coital cigarettes after seducing his long lost twin's wife and then buries his head in Nina Conti's cleavage.
Later Tennant is in his dressing-room, stripped to the waist, slapping Simple moisturiser onto his face, swigging pints of mineral water, and packing up his make-up box, an old-fashioned leather bowling case. As we leave, we trip up over a bloody but unbowed Hotspur, about to go on stage and die in Henry IV, Part 1. Falstaff is plumped in the corner and wishes us a courteous good night, while various make-up girls daub elderly knights. "It's like this every night at this time," says Tennant. "You can't move for men in armour and there's blood everywhere."
There is still no time for one quick drink in the Union Club. "I've got to get those lines fixed," he says, as he climbs into his car. He pushes a taped version of Romeo and Juliet - in which he plays Mercutio and Joseph Fiennes is Romeo - into the recorder. "It'll help me with learning my lines and, hopefully, Joe might have come up with something new that I can nick for my performance." And he drives off into the Warwickshire night.
Romeo and Juliet runs until October 7, in the Royal Shakespeare Theatre at Stratford-upon-Avon. The Comedy of Errors runs until October 6 and The Rivals is in the Swan Theatre until October 7. "
Monday 27 December 2010
David Tennant Treat 4 Today for Monday 27th December 2010
"Charles Dickens's A Christmas Carol has been widely adapted and dramatised but never quite like this before.
An all-star cast gathers to bring the timeless allegory to life in Marley Was Dead, a piece of spoof radio. It is Christmas Eve and listeners are about to hear a starry cast performance of A Christmas Carol from St Martin in the Fields, introduced by Jonathan Dimbleby. At least, they think they are...
Jonathan Dimbleby, speaking from the balcony, introduces the production and the stellar cast: Sir Ian McKellen as Scrooge; Sir Patrick Stewart as the Narrator; David Tennant as Bob Cratchit and so forth. Sir Simon Rattle conducts. But a few seconds into the play itself - just after listeners hear the famous opening lines "Marley was dead", things take an unexpected turn for the worse. What follows next is screwball comedy in the finest tradition."
Although the press release said that David Tennant would be playing Bob Cratchit it continued that Javier Marzan was also playing the character so it was obviously a spoof but despite that several people tweeted it to us and one website even declared that David was involved in the programme!
Click here to listen to the first 3 minutes of the programme which is the David Tennant Treat 4 Today (and includes the David Tennant mention).
The full hour long programme can be downloaded from this link for the next 4 days.
Sunday 26 December 2010
David Tennant Treat 4 Today for Sunday 26th December 2010
Saturday 25 December 2010
David Tennant Treat 4 Today for Saturday 25th December 2010
Friday 24 December 2010
David Tennant Treat 4 Today for Friday 24th December 2010
Thursday 23 December 2010
David Tennant Treat 4 Today for Thursday 23rd December 2010
The video is a clip from Secret Smile and the person who has chosen it says that it is their favourite production that they have seen David Tennant appearing in.
This clip is from the climax of the drama and David plays psychotic Brendon Block.
Wednesday 22 December 2010
David Tennant Treat 4 Today for
The RSC have a policy of making a generic poster for each production which is usually prepared before rehearsals start so the company does not always know which costume the actor will wear. That's why David is wearing this coat which he didn't actually wear on stage.
David's picture was in the style of Caspar David Friedrich's painting The Wanderer Above The Mists but the original version released (reproduced below) clearly showed David standing on a step! This was airbrushed out of later versions of the poster.
However most fans preferred the poster from the same shoot which was placed outside the upstairs ladies loo at The Courtyard Theatre!
Tuesday 21 December 2010
David Tennant Treat 4 Today for Tuesday 21st November 2010
Monday 20 December 2010
David Tennant Treat 4 Today for Monday 20th December 2010
Sunday 19 December 2010
David Tennant Treat 4 Today for Sunday 19th December 2010
Saturday 18 December 2010
David Tennant Treat 4 Today for Saturday 18th December 2010
Friday 17 December 2010
David Tennant Treat 4 Today for Friday 17th December 2010
Thursday 16 December 2010
David Tennant Treat 4 Today for Thursday 16th December 2010
Wednesday 15 December 2010
David Tennant Treat 4 Today for Wednesday 15th December 2010
Tuesday 14 December 2010
David Tennant Treat 4 Today for Tuesday 14th December 2010
Monday 13 December 2010
David Tennant Treat 4 Today for Monday 13th December 2010
Sunday 12 December 2010
David Tennant Treat 4 Today for Sunday 12th December 2010
David has fans who are a lot braver than I am!
Saturday 11 December 2010
David Tennant Treat 4 Today for Saturday 11th December 2010
Friday 10 December 2010
David Tennant Treat 4 Today for Friday 10th December 2010
Thursday 9 December 2010
David Tennant Treat 4 Today for Thursday 9th December 2010
Wednesday 8 December 2010
David Tennant Treat 4 Today for Wednesday 8th December 2010
Click here to watch the video.
Tuesday 7 December 2010
David Tennant Treat 4 Today for Tuesday 7th December 2010
Monday 6 December 2010
David Tennant Treat 4 Today for Monday 6th December 2010
Sunday 5 December 2010
David Tennant Treat 4 Today for Sunday 5th December 2010
Saturday 4 December 2010
David Tennant Treat 4 Today for Saturday 4th December 2010
Friday 3 December 2010
David Tennant Treat 4 Today for Friday 3rd December 2010
Thursday 2 December 2010
David Tennant Treat 4 Today for Thursday 2nd December 2010
Wednesday 1 December 2010
David Tennant Treat 4 Today for Wednesday 1st December 2010
The David Tennant Treat 4 Today is guaranteed to put a smile on your face as you go to sleep!
It's a MP3 from David Tennant's visit to Absolute Radio on Thursday 7th October to promote Single Father.
This clip is really light-hearted and shows what a great rapport David and Christian O'Connell share. They discuss The Emmy's, David's Peter Vincent costume for Fright Night, Rex Is Not Your Lawyer, Decoy Bride and St Trinian's 2.
Click here to listen to the clip which lasts about six minutes.