Sorry for being a bit AWOL; I've been struggling and only keeping up intermittently; it happens.
In the meantime, two bits of James Maxwell gleaned from the British Newspaper Archive, one just tonight, the other about 6 months ago, but I only posted it to tumblr.


Pic of James Maxwell in most-likely-burninated installment of a BBC play anthology, First Night, in what sounds like a very 60s JM sort of role. I love him. I pine for all the 60s JM I can't have. Burnination and withholding of 1960s TV hardly anybody else wants to watch are both CRIMES.
Also, a really great little interview with Avril Elgar, his wife, and a particularly excellent character actor (who you are unlikely to have heard of, but if you are a Brit, you will probably have seen her face somewhere). She's talking about the first time he directed her in The Corn Is Green for the Royal Exchange, Manchester:

(Manchester Evening News 5 Mar 1981): AVRIL ELGAR first met her husband James Maxwell at drama school around 30 years ago. But the Royal Exchange's production of The Corn Is Green marks a new departure in their long relationship: "It's the very first time he's directed me in a play," Avril says.
"In fact, I've not worked with him very often - it's been 18 years since we last acted together."
Avril stars as the English spinster Miss Moffat who arrives in a remote Welsh mining village to establish a school and discovers a child prodigy in the form of Morgan Evans, a miner's son.
How is she enjoying working for her husband? "I knew it would be fine, and it is," she replies. "It's absolutely an actor and director relationship. And in fact I enjoy being directed by him. Though it's something of a reversal - at home I'm the director."
Royal Exchange audiences will remember Avril in particular for her marvellous performance in The Family Reunion, with Edward Fox.
But her career has spanned most things, from her debut in Macbeth (performing one-night stands in workingmen's clubs in the North) to TV comedy roles in George and Mildred and in Rosie. She was catapulted to the West End and Broadway early in her career (1958) when Osborne's Epitaph for George Dillon transferred from the Royal Court.
"But my career has never really led on to anything, it's not been logical," Avril ponders. "On the other hand, it has meant lots of variety - it's been a series of one-off jobs.
"With some of the roles I've had, however, I've wished I was dead. But on the whole I just try to enjoy everything.
"Miss Moffat is however, a wonderful part, I'm enjoying it tremendously."
Avril and James (one of the Royal Exchange's artistic directors as well as a familiar acting "face") have two sons, one studying Mandarin Chinese and the other teaching English at Wells Cathedral School. They live in a cottage in Golders Green surrounded by a traditional English country garden which they designed.
In her spare time Avril is a notorious crossword addict - demolishing both the Times and the Guardian puzzles every day. "I love Scrabble too," she admits, "but I just can't get people to play with me."
What's on the horizon after The Corn Is Green? "Nothing at the moment," she smiles. "I'm quite idle really and I like being out of work every now and again. I will be happy sitting in the garden, for a little while at least..."
♥
In the meantime, two bits of James Maxwell gleaned from the British Newspaper Archive, one just tonight, the other about 6 months ago, but I only posted it to tumblr.
Pic of James Maxwell in most-likely-burninated installment of a BBC play anthology, First Night, in what sounds like a very 60s JM sort of role. I love him. I pine for all the 60s JM I can't have. Burnination and withholding of 1960s TV hardly anybody else wants to watch are both CRIMES.
Also, a really great little interview with Avril Elgar, his wife, and a particularly excellent character actor (who you are unlikely to have heard of, but if you are a Brit, you will probably have seen her face somewhere). She's talking about the first time he directed her in The Corn Is Green for the Royal Exchange, Manchester:
(Manchester Evening News 5 Mar 1981): AVRIL ELGAR first met her husband James Maxwell at drama school around 30 years ago. But the Royal Exchange's production of The Corn Is Green marks a new departure in their long relationship: "It's the very first time he's directed me in a play," Avril says.
"In fact, I've not worked with him very often - it's been 18 years since we last acted together."
Avril stars as the English spinster Miss Moffat who arrives in a remote Welsh mining village to establish a school and discovers a child prodigy in the form of Morgan Evans, a miner's son.
How is she enjoying working for her husband? "I knew it would be fine, and it is," she replies. "It's absolutely an actor and director relationship. And in fact I enjoy being directed by him. Though it's something of a reversal - at home I'm the director."
Royal Exchange audiences will remember Avril in particular for her marvellous performance in The Family Reunion, with Edward Fox.
But her career has spanned most things, from her debut in Macbeth (performing one-night stands in workingmen's clubs in the North) to TV comedy roles in George and Mildred and in Rosie. She was catapulted to the West End and Broadway early in her career (1958) when Osborne's Epitaph for George Dillon transferred from the Royal Court.
"But my career has never really led on to anything, it's not been logical," Avril ponders. "On the other hand, it has meant lots of variety - it's been a series of one-off jobs.
"With some of the roles I've had, however, I've wished I was dead. But on the whole I just try to enjoy everything.
"Miss Moffat is however, a wonderful part, I'm enjoying it tremendously."
Avril and James (one of the Royal Exchange's artistic directors as well as a familiar acting "face") have two sons, one studying Mandarin Chinese and the other teaching English at Wells Cathedral School. They live in a cottage in Golders Green surrounded by a traditional English country garden which they designed.
In her spare time Avril is a notorious crossword addict - demolishing both the Times and the Guardian puzzles every day. "I love Scrabble too," she admits, "but I just can't get people to play with me."
What's on the horizon after The Corn Is Green? "Nothing at the moment," she smiles. "I'm quite idle really and I like being out of work every now and again. I will be happy sitting in the garden, for a little while at least..."
♥
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Date: 2024-06-09 08:46 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2024-06-10 09:16 am (UTC)