"Your pain is the breaking of the shell that encloses your understanding!" Kahlil Gibran.

Friday, April 16, 2010

Sherlock Holmes....



At a dinner at a friend's place the other day, the topic of old television serials came up. All of us distinctly remembered a serial which was a british production, named the "Sherlock Holmes"!

The friend mentioned that the actor who played Sherlock Holmes became mentally ill in the later years due to over obsession with the character he played.

"Oh...I was ignorant of this fact all these years." I felt extremely curious as to what happened to this suave actor who made the name Sherlock Holmes synonymous with his own being".

I have been a fan of the Scottish author Sir Arthur Connon Doyle who created this indestructible sleuth called Sherlock Holmes way back in the 19th century.
"Extreme Intelligence, reasoning created by observation and the deductive skills and the bohemian ways of living were the most striking qualities of this ever so popular character named Sherlock Holmes".

Obviously enough, the role must have posed intimidating challenge to the actor who was to play it.
"Jeremy Brett", born "Peter Jeremy William Huggins" was the man who played the role ever so convincingly on television that one could not separate him from Sherlock Holmes, the fictional character. I vividly remember how I adored this six feet tall, sharp featured Holmes and his eccentric manners while investigating a case at hand.

I saw the television series first and then read all the books written by Sir Arthur and therefore, I always visualised Jeremy Brett as the Holmes I was reading about.
Coming from a wealthy family, Brett was a popular theatre actor who had earlier played Dr. Watson opposite another actor as Sherlock Holmes in a stage play.
When he accepted the role of the detective for a television series, he was bent on portraying the character impeccably so that his Holmes would be remembered forever by the world. He conducted extensive research on the character as well as its author. He maintained a valuable 77 pages file containing everything from Holmes's mannerisms, his eating and drinking habits and so on. He was so obsessed with the fictional Holmes and his manners that he once said,
"some actors are becomers - they try to become their characters. When it works, the actor is like a sponge, squeezing himself dry to remove his own personality, then absorbing the character's like a liquid".

Personal grief and the professional commitment led to tremendous stress on this actor at a point of time in his life. His obsession of understanding Holmes went beyond his limits and that in turn led to mental illness in the form of manic depression. The illness made deep impact on his personality which was evident on the sets of Sherlock Holmes series which was being shot after his discharge from the rehabilitation centre.
At the age of 59, Brett died of a heart failure at his home in England.

What an irony of life! The person who played the legendary detective, known for his intellectual prowess and analytical skills, should succumb to a mental illness in the later years of life.

Brett's dedication and committment to create a world famous Holmes did not let him realise the fact that it was making him ill. He once said that "many actors fear that if they played Holmes for a very long run, the character will steal their soul, leave no corner for the original inhabitant".
If only had he realised then that the other actors's fear had actually become his reality.

No wonder Brett once quoted that,
"Holmes is the hardest part I have ever played - harder than Hamlet or Macbeth. Holmes has become the dark side of the moon for me. He is moody and solitary and underneath I am really sociable and gregarious. It has all got too dangerous".

Salut to this great actor!


14 comments:

  1. Khup chaan, abhyaspurna ani rochak lekh! ashich lihiti raha.....

    -Harshada

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  2. Nice article Sharvari....I do remember reading the Sherlock Holmes series and was always in awe of the super intelligent character.

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  3. This comes as a pleasent surprise really. I had always admired your histrionics on TV - your talent stood out amidst the growing mediocrity that plagues the Marathi mainstream milieu...but I never knew you have a way with words too. The real-life pathos of a reel-life genius has been captured succintly.

    Well done lady, keep writing.

    Warm regards
    Sudhir Raikar
    www.coastaldelights.blogspot.com

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  4. Jeremy Brett was a very thorough actor and the kind of preparation that he must have made is immense. The kind of impression that JB had on the viewers is so stark that it is difficult,nay impossible for me to imagine anyone else as Sherlock. sorry Robert Downey jr. you may be a good actor but JB is the only sherlock i know.. nice post sharvari-looking forward for your next one

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  5. hiii Neha, Sudhir n vinod, thank u sooo much! I really appreciate ur feedback.

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  6. i! A very good article indeed! Portraying a complex character like Holmes is just not a piece of cake. No wonder Jeremy Brett did a lot of homework to "get into the character".

    A similar case had recently come up..that of late Heath Ledger who acted "The Joker" in "The Dark Knight". It was heard that he stayed alone in a hotel room for a month to study the character. In the end he was so engulfed by the character itself that he faced a tragic death due to depression.

    No doubt they both were great actors, but their characters themselves were so powerful that they couldn't help but befriend madness. After all, Heath Ledger himself had said, "Madness is like gravity, all you need is just a push!"

    Thanks so much for this article again!
    Rgds,
    Mihir Bhagwat :-)

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  7. Hey Sharvari, very interesting article.
    I have already read some of the 'Sherlock Holmes' books. Now after reading this bolg, I'm planning to see the series. thanks for article and all d best for ur acting career.

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  8. thnks rohit...do keep reading my blog..feedback is very imp to me...

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  9. Thanks for writing about my favorite character and actor.

    At one point Jeremy Brett started thinking of himself as Holmes, after which he landed in hospital.

    Brett was not alone. Vishnupant Pagnis who played Tukaram never recovered till death.

    Jakovlev played the role of prince Myshkin in Dostoevsky's idiot. Only the first half of the film ever got released. The "idiot" became insane and was hospitalised. For thirty years after that, nobody dared to make idiot in any form.

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  11. Nice write up. U being an actor urself, know wht it takes to BE that character and not let it go off set.

    Nice.

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  12. Hi Sharvari,
    me and my friends used to watch this serial together.. and there used to be a competition after the show got over..
    who can smile like Jeremy?

    That curt, lasting-for-a-fraction-of-a-second smile :)

    nice article, btw..
    vidu

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