The Unofficial Chronology of Dame Judi Dench's Career
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 The Charlie Rose Show
Interview -- February, 2002 
 
Last Updated:   March 13, 2010
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Transcript from The Charlie Rose Show 


Purchased from 1-800-ALL NEWS  -- 
       unfortunately, it doesn't include the laughter -- which I will try to add later

Preview:

CHARLIE ROSE: And we spend most of the evening with Dame Judi Dench, the remarkable British actor who has gone from theater to television to films. You know her from Shakespeare in Love, the James Bond movies and now as Iris Murdoch in the film Iris, nominated for an Academy Award.

JUDI DENCH, Actor: I think if you're an actor, you-- you want-- you take what there is, and you try and add up to-- or make this-- but distill as much of this person as you can, which is all right with Queen Victoria because nobody remembers actually what she was like, but even-- and even less so with Elizabeth I. We all kind of know. But so you can kind of add things into this recipe.

With Iris Murdoch, there was nothing I could add because I was playing somebody who I'd virtually come face to face with.


Judi Dench on her Portrayal of Writer Iris Murdoch

CHARLIE ROSE: Dame Judi Dench is here.

She is certainly one of the world's greatest actors. She has played everyone from Queen Victoria to Lady Macbeth to Sally Bowles. She won an Oscar for Best Supporting Actress for her performance in Shakespeare in Love. She received two Oscar nominations for Chocolat and Mrs. Brown. And she has just been nominated for Best Actress for her portrayal of author Iris Murdoch in Iris.

[trailer from ``Iris'']

CHARLIE ROSE: I am pleased to have Dame Judi Dench here for the second time, to talk about this and many other things.

First of all, congratulations.

JUDI DENCH, Actor: Thank you.

CHARLIE ROSE: You were not surprised.

JUDI DENCH: Yeah, I was surprised.

CHARLIE ROSE: Were you really?

JUDI DENCH: Well, I think it's been-- because of the so-called "intended strike'' in June, lots of pictures were made very -- very quickly and finished by the end of June. So there's a lot of people out there.

CHARLIE ROSE: Does this mean something to you?

JUDI DENCH: Well, it means that kind of exquisite exhilaration of being nominated.

CHARLIE ROSE: Yes?

JUDI DENCH: Until you get smacked in the face when somebody else goes up.

CHARLIE ROSE: Well, you can handle that, can't you?

JUDI DENCH: Yes. You bet. I've done it twice before.

CHARLIE ROSE: You've got all the experience you need now. So now you can practice winning.

JUDI DENCH: Just -- no, sitting there and just--

CHARLIE ROSE: And enjoying it.

JUDI DENCH: Uh-huh.

CHARLIE ROSE: You'll be there, then?

JUDI DENCH: I hope so.

CHARLIE ROSE: Yeah. Oh, that's great. I guess a new building this time, and so--

JUDI DENCH: So I believe.

CHARLIE ROSE: Yeah. [crosstalk]

JUDI DENCH: --something about elephants on the stairs?

CHARLIE ROSE: Maybe.

JUDI DENCH: I think maybe so.

CHARLIE ROSE: You've exhausted my knowledge of the Oscars already.  OK, so let's talk about Iris first. You never met her.

JUDI DENCH: No, I didn't ever meet her.

CHARLIE ROSE: You're the only person, as you told me--

JUDI DENCH: In the world--

CHARLIE ROSE: --in all of the world.

JUDI DENCH: --who never-- though she was a tremendous heroine of mine because I-- when her book, A Severed Head, was adapted for the stage, I went to see that. Two friends of mine were in it, and I went to see that. And I was absolutely fascinated by the story and the writing, and the acting. But then I started to read her books, and so I was an avid reader of hers.

CHARLIE ROSE: What did you like about what she wrote?

JUDI DENCH: Well, I mean, she was a great philosopher.

CHARLIE ROSE: And was great with words.

JUDI DENCH: And was great with words, and was like a kind of fishbone writer. You know, you get-- you get onto the main stem of the fish, and you follow it. And then quite suddenly, she goes off onto a branch, and you have to go right to the end. And then eventually, she comes back and you think, "Oh, we're back to the main''-- and then she goes off-- you know, she examines every kind of-- it's very intricate and-- it's like, you know, John Fowles's writing--

CHARLIE ROSE: Right.

JUDI DENCH: --you know, boxes within boxes. It's, in a way, the same kind of construction. I love that.

CHARLIE ROSE: Yeah. And-- and when the idea to play her-- did you have any trepidation because she is a person of-- of our time?

JUDI DENCH: She is, and only died very recently.

CHARLIE ROSE: Right.

JUDI DENCH: And as we've said, so many people knew her.

CHARLIE ROSE: Any trepidation about that aspect of it, or does that make it more challenging and fun?

JUDI DENCH: It does make it more challenging and it does make it more fun. It also makes it more frightening because I think if you're an actor, you-- you want-- you take what there is, and you try and add up to-- or make this-- but distill as much of this person as you can, which is all right with Queen Victoria because nobody remembers actually what she was like, but even-- and even less so with Elizabeth I. We all kind of know. But so you can kind of add things into this recipe.  With Iris Murdoch, there was nothing I could add because I was playing somebody who I'd virtually come face to face with and whose husband is still alive.

CHARLIE ROSE: But you didn't want to talk to him.

JUDI DENCH: No, I didn't even want to meet him.

CHARLIE ROSE: You didn't want to meet him?

JUDI DENCH: No, I didn't. I met him at the premier. I didn't want to meet him because I-- I imagined, really, what I would feel like if somebody was coming-- was put in front of me who was going to play Michael, and--

CHARLIE ROSE: Your late husband.

JUDI DENCH: Yes. And I know that my face wouldn't have been the right arrangement at all. You know, there would be-- you know, I think you would have tremendous misgivings about looking at somebody.  But meeting him when it was all finished was a different thing. It was different.

CHARLIE ROSE: So your reason not to meet him was your sensitivity to him.

JUDI DENCH: I think. And--

CHARLIE ROSE: Not because it might affect your performance or anything like that.

JUDI DENCH: No, though I'm sure it would have done. But no, I think that it would have been painful, probably. I think he and Audi, his wife now, dreaded it being made, the film. In fact, I know they did because I got a letter. But I think that it's passed calmly for them. And he said it was like watching-- he watched, and it was like watching one degree removed. Which if course, it must be, by the nature of the fact that it's not her and not him.

CHARLIE ROSE: Yeah.

JUDI DENCH: But I was-- I read an article by Martin Amis, who knew her very, very well indeed.

CHARLIE ROSE: Yeah.

JUDI DENCH: And that-- once I'd read that article, I thought-- I thought, actually, I don't mind what anybody feels about it because I feel as if I've got over a hurdle, a huge hurdle, with somebody who actually did know her very well and recognized in the performance and in the film somebody he knew.

CHARLIE ROSE: What was it you wanted to capture about her? Other than her.

JUDI DENCH: Nothing other than her.

CHARLIE ROSE: Yeah.

JUDI DENCH: Just I wanted this-- it to add up to the sum of her. And I hope that anyone who-- who is not conversant with her books and-- would perhaps now read them because they-- they are remarkable books. She was also a wonderful philosopher. And so that's quite odd, when you're an actress, to play that.  But she had-- she had a strangely-- I don't think the film is about a disease. I don't think it's about Alzheimer's. I think that the film is about two extraordinary people who happened to find each other. And as somebody said to me, ``Why on earth didn't he get help when she was in an advanced state of Alzheimer's?'' But there's a line in the film where he said ``Nobody would suit us.'' And of course, it's quite true.  They were such extraordinary an unique people, and they were a matching pair.

CHARLIE ROSE: When did you shoot this?

JUDI DENCH: I shot it in April, I think-- [crosstalk]

CHARLIE ROSE: So it'd be April 2001.

JUDI DENCH: Yes. I started on The Shipping News with Lass.   I did four weeks on that in Nova Scotia. And then I flew back and the very next day started Iris and did it in five weeks, and the next day out of that, flew and rejoined The Shipping News in Newfoundland and finished that off, and then came back and did The Importance of Being Ernest two days later.

CHARLIE ROSE: All of this came within-- your husband-- your husband, Michael--

JUDI DENCH: Died in January.

CHARLIE ROSE: January, 2001.

JUDI DENCH: Yes.

CHARLIE ROSE: So you threw yourself into work.

JUDI DENCH: I did. I mean, it was lined up for me because I couldn't-- I couldn't-- I didn't want to work when he was so ill, so from-- from summer '99 until he died in 2001, we were together. And so had the films not been able to wait, they would have gone ahead, but they did. They did. They did wait. And so suddenly, they were all there. And in actual fact, although people said, you know, that-- quite a lot of people said to me that it was not facing up to things, I think on the contrary. I think it was exactly what I should have done.

CHARLIE ROSE: Because?

JUDI DENCH: Because grief produces adrenaline, and you can use it. And so whyever not use it to a good purpose? It's not to say you grieve less, but it means that you don't have an overflow of--

CHARLIE ROSE: Yeah. But at this-- this is specially poignant because it's about a great love affair and a relationship, of which one of the partners is dying.

JUDI DENCH: Yes. But strangely enough-- I mean, I suppose-- I suppose that some of me was used up in it, but I didn't feel that it was-- I didn't feel that. But I think that every emotion that you experience, you use, to some extent. That's not to say that you're cold about viewing something or looking at something or observing an emotion in another person. But I think that our job is to take a kind of quick-shutter picture of something.

CHARLIE ROSE: Yeah.

JUDI DENCH: And I don't think you're aware of it at the time. But nevertheless, that's what you have to draw on because it's your own reserves.

CHARLIE ROSE: In this case, because there was everything there with respect to Iris-- there were all kinds of material, there were all people-- all kinds of people you could talk to-- you could literally see where they lived.

JUDI DENCH: Yes.

CHARLIE ROSE: You could think-- you know, smell the place.

JUDI DENCH: Yes.

CHARLIE ROSE: Did you do all that?

JUDI DENCH: No. I went and sat outside their house in Oxford, and--

CHARLIE ROSE: Sat outside the house?

JUDI DENCH: Yes, I did, in a car. Between two locations I had to do, I went and just looked at the house.

CHARLIE ROSE: You just sat there and thought and felt and--

JUDI DENCH: Yes.

CHARLIE ROSE: --smelled and--

JUDI DENCH: And also they were away, and I thought it was interesting that a window was open and the car was in the drive, which was also unlocked. That told me something about them.

CHARLIE ROSE: That they were-- here's what it would tell me, that they were open and they weren't sort of--

JUDI DENCH: Careless about materialistic things.

CHARLIE ROSE: Yeah. A little callous, right. Careless.

JUDI DENCH: Uh-huh.

CHARLIE ROSE: You know? And not fearful of somebody--

JUDI DENCH: No.

CHARLIE ROSE: No.

JUDI DENCH: No.

CHARLIE ROSE: What else did you find out about them, in terms of this-- conversations you would have with friends?

JUDI DENCH: About the fact-- I watched two videos of her being interviewed, one of which I didn't think she liked the interviewer, and another--

CHARLIE ROSE: You can tell?

JUDI DENCH: --in which she patently did like the interviewer. Yes, because her manner was so strange, so different. And also, she was somebody who had no small talk at all. I found lots of lines between her and me. I have no small talk at all.

CHARLIE ROSE: Yeah.

JUDI DENCH: I also have an Anglo-- I had Anglo-Irish parentage. My mother was a Dubliner, and my father was born in Dorset but lived over there. She was also a communist, interested in Quakerism, and I am a Quaker. And also, the most perhaps extraordinary thing of all was that Richard Eyre said to me, not really apropos of Iris, "Do you know something called The Lark in the Clear Air?''

I said, "I do.''

I said, "I was taught that by my mother when I was a little girl.'' And so was she.

And then I read recently that she also used to sing a song called "Are You Right, Michael, Are You Right,'' which also I knew. So there were all sorts of kind of lines of communication that-- that I latched onto.

CHARLIE ROSE: How crucial was her sexuality to who she was?

JUDI DENCH: I think it was-- I think it was crucial to her, but not in a way that we perhaps would interpret it. I mean, I suppose one would call her-- I suppose one would call her--

CHARLIE ROSE: Bisexual?

JUDI DENCH: Yes, bisexual. Yes.

CHARLIE ROSE: What's the other word you were looking for?

JUDI DENCH: Free.

CHARLIE ROSE: Free.

JUDI DENCH: Sexual.

CHARLIE ROSE: Right.

JUDI DENCH: And bisexual.

CHARLIE ROSE: Right.

JUDI DENCH: But in no way was that-- she just believed if you love somebody, that it was between two people and it was-- that was just part of loving somebody and your expression of love for them. But in no way was it a betrayal to John. No way at all.

CHARLIE ROSE: He had to come to realize that.

JUDI DENCH: Yes, and I think he did. I think that's what he says in his book. But I heard him interviewed on-- "In the Psychiatrist's Chair'' with Anthony Clare, and he said that she had affairs and fell in love many times, but not since they were married, but on the contrary, that it was not an act of betrayal for her. She just believed in--

CHARLIE ROSE: Freedom.

JUDI DENCH: --and love and goodness.

CHARLIE ROSE: Expressions of--

JUDI DENCH: Yeah.

CHARLIE ROSE: --love.

JUDI DENCH: Yeah.

CHARLIE ROSE: Here is you in Iris.

[excerpt from ``Iris'']

CHARLIE ROSE: Now, while we were watching that, two, three things happened. First of all, I'm talking to you, asking about this television program, which I'd never heard of, called In the Psychiatrist's Chair. What--

JUDI DENCH: With Anthony Clare.

CHARLIE ROSE: Who is a psychiatrist?

JUDI DENCH: Yes, who is a psychiatrist.

CHARLIE ROSE: Because we hear from a lot of psychiatrists on this program, and that was a fascinating idea for a television program.

You hear out of your ear your voice, and you say, "She sounded a lot like my mother.'' Right?

JUDI DENCH: Yes. She was very aware of her own Irishness, Iris. And I didn't-- I wasn't even aware that my mother had an Irish brogue at all until the night I went to boarding school. And I went to boarding school, and I rang home that night, and I heard this voice say, "York double-4, double-5.''  I said, "Who's that?''  She said, "Who's that?'' [crosstalk]

JUDI DENCH: Yes.

CHARLIE ROSE: Yes. Your bleeping mother. "What's wrong with you?''

John Bayley said to you--

JUDI DENCH: Yes, he said-- at the premier, he said "charming stammer, you're-- you're-- you're much more in-- in-- in real life than you are in the film.'' At the end of the evening, he said, "I feel we've been married for years.''

CHARLIE ROSE: It is a little bit-- what? I mean, I don't know what the word is that describes that, to be-- for him-- you know, to be there in your presence and see the movie and--

JUDI DENCH: Yes.

CHARLIE ROSE: Someone who--

JUDI DENCH: He was charming and generous.

CHARLIE ROSE: What do you think of this notion that Kate actually looks like a younger Judi Dench?

JUDI DENCH: Well, because, you know, I should be out looking at myself-- [crosstalk] I think that that's brilliant editing and brilliant casting on Richard's--

CHARLIE ROSE: Yeah.

JUDI DENCH: --Richard Eyre's--

CHARLIE ROSE: Richard Eyre, yeah.

JUDI DENCH: --part. Yes. Because I don't think naturally you would say that. I don't think you'd say that at all, looking at the ...

CHARLIE ROSE: So he has cut it right.

JUDI DENCH: He's just edited it brilliantly.

CHARLIE ROSE: Yeah. Is he a good film director?

JUDI DENCH: Oh, he's terrific. He's terrific.

CHARLIE ROSE: But is there any difference in directing a film versus directing a--

JUDI DENCH: A play?

CHARLIE ROSE: --a play?

JUDI DENCH: Well, the process is different.

CHARLIE ROSE: I know it is. But I mean, the skill is the same or not? I mean, is it--

JUDI DENCH: The skill's the same.

CHARLIE ROSE: You've seen him as a theater director.

JUDI DENCH: I have.

CHARLIE ROSE: Have you worked for him at the National or--

JUDI DENCH: Yes, I have.

CHARLIE ROSE: Yeah.

JUDI DENCH: In Hamlet and in Amy's View.

CHARLIE ROSE: Yeah. Oh, sure.

JUDI DENCH: And on television in The Cherry Orchard. And in Iris.

CHARLIE ROSE: He never thought about anybody but you for this. I mean, there was not even a--

JUDI DENCH: I don't know. I expect--

CHARLIE ROSE: Yeah.

JUDI DENCH: --there might have been somebody else.

CHARLIE ROSE: I doubt it. I doubt it. Interesting is that Sony-- John Calley at Sony owned the property.

JUDI DENCH: I know. That's when I was--

CHARLIE ROSE: He sold it to--

JUDI DENCH: --originally asked to do it, when I was in Amy's View here--

CHARLIE ROSE: Yeah.

JUDI DENCH: --in '99. And I said yes. And there was no director then. I said, "Yes. How wonderful to play a heroine, my heroine.''

CHARLIE ROSE: ... to play your heroine.

JUDI DENCH: Uh-huh. And so I didn't-- and then I think-- and then John Calley learned that you couldn't get the money for it. And it was-- there's been a fight for-- for Richard and Charles Wood--

CHARLIE ROSE: Yeah.

JUDI DENCH: --to get the backing.

CHARLIE ROSE: Brilliantly done. It is. You know that. But I mean, not just your performance, but the way it's put together.

JUDI DENCH: The way it's put together is just spectacular, I think.

CHARLIE ROSE: Yeah. I mean-- I assume that's why they had such a hard time figuring it out, and nobody-- and they sold it back because they couldn't figure out how to do it.

JUDI DENCH: I also think--

CHARLIE ROSE: And then Richard Eyre comes along and--

JUDI DENCH: Yes--

CHARLIE ROSE: --unlocks the key.

JUDI DENCH: I know. And I also think that initially, it was seen as a film about a disease.

CHARLIE ROSE: Rather than a relationship.

JUDI DENCH: Rather than a love affair.

CHARLIE ROSE: Yeah. Can I talk about your husband, Michael Williams, for a moment?

JUDI DENCH: Of course you can.

CHARLIE ROSE: He sent you a rose every Friday.

JUDI DENCH: He did.

CHARLIE ROSE: What a great thing.

JUDI DENCH: Yes.

CHARLIE ROSE: And you said to me, because I mentioned this as we sat down, more people somehow-- it's one of those things that people take note of.

JUDI DENCH: Yes.

CHARLIE ROSE: If you read the story of Judi Dench, it sort of jumps out.

JUDI DENCH: Yes, it's true.

CHARLIE ROSE: And everybody's reaction sort of was like mine. "What a great guy.''

JUDI DENCH: You bet.

CHARLIE ROSE: To do that.

JUDI DENCH: Uh-huh.

CHARLIE ROSE: Yeah. Now, this was a wonderful relationship.

JUDI DENCH: Yes, it was.

CHARLIE ROSE: He was of the theater, too.

JUDI DENCH: Yes. We knew each other nine years before we even thought of looking twice.

CHARLIE ROSE: Is that right?

JUDI DENCH: It is.

CHARLIE ROSE: You knew each other nine years--

JUDI DENCH: I was playing in Romeo and Juliet, Franco Zeffirelli ...

CHARLIE ROSE: Yeah. Right.

JUDI DENCH: And he was in Celebration at the Duchess Theater. And we met, and we went on meeting.

CHARLIE ROSE: Yeah.

JUDI DENCH: Waving.

CHARLIE ROSE: Right.

JUDI DENCH: Both with other people.

CHARLIE ROSE: Yes.

JUDI DENCH: Not, fortunately, married to them. And then nine years after that--

CHARLIE ROSE: He says, "Let's have dinner''?

JUDI DENCH: Yes.

CHARLIE ROSE: Is that what he did?

JUDI DENCH: Sort of.

CHARLIE ROSE: Sort of? Oh, well, maybe-- is it better than that?

JUDI DENCH: He could have ...

CHARLIE ROSE: He said, "Come on over to my place.''

JUDI DENCH: Or did I say, "Come over to mine''?

CHARLIE ROSE: And you said, "Come over to my place.'' Or one or the other.

JUDI DENCH: Yes, he was in one half of the Royal Shakespeare Company, I was in the other. And I was at Stratford.

CHARLIE ROSE: Yeah.

JUDI DENCH: And he came up to-- having done his cartilage of his knee in. We met at the Dirty Duck one night.

CHARLIE ROSE: And everything was--

JUDI DENCH: And I smoked the whole evening.

CHARLIE ROSE: You did?

JUDI DENCH: I'm a total non-smoker.

CHARLIE ROSE: Yeah?

JUDI DENCH: And I smoked the whole evening.

CHARLIE ROSE: Now, what was that about?

JUDI DENCH: What was it about. You tell me.

CHARLIE ROSE: And did you not know? I mean, did you--

JUDI DENCH: No, I didn't know.

CHARLIE ROSE: You didn't.

JUDI DENCH: No.

CHARLIE ROSE: Did he?

JUDI DENCH: No, I don't think so.

CHARLIE ROSE: You don't think so. So you had to sort of even come to where--

JUDI DENCH: And then I went to Australia with the company.

CHARLIE ROSE: Yeah?

JUDI DENCH: And then he flew out.

CHARLIE ROSE: Yeah?

JUDI DENCH: To see me, unexpectedly. I didn't know he was coming.

CHARLIE ROSE: He couldn't get you out of his mind. You were adults by now, weren't you.

JUDI DENCH: I was what?

CHARLIE ROSE: You were an adult by now.

JUDI DENCH: Yes. Yes. Yes, it was good.

CHARLIE ROSE: It was.

JUDI DENCH: Yes.

CHARLIE ROSE: You said once that the thing that was magical is that you never took each other for granted.

JUDI DENCH: I think it's an unwritten law.

CHARLIE ROSE: You can't--

JUDI DENCH: The best--

CHARLIE ROSE: I do, too.

JUDI DENCH: --thing in the world, just don't-- I think that if you expect that somebody's always going to be there, I think it's a terrible mistake.

CHARLIE ROSE: And don't let it become ordinary.

JUDI DENCH: Never. Don't let it become ordinary. Always surprise.

CHARLIE ROSE: Yeah.

JUDI DENCH: But don't ever expect that the person's going to come back to you because they may well have met somebody else down the road.

CHARLIE ROSE: You need company.

JUDI DENCH: I do. I do.

CHARLIE ROSE: Not good at being alone with yourself?

JUDI DENCH: No.

CHARLIE ROSE: Why is that?

JUDI DENCH: Well, that's the way the package came.

CHARLIE ROSE: Just-- that's the genetic make-up. Your parents said--

JUDI DENCH: Yes.

CHARLIE ROSE: Oh, so your daughter moved in after he died, yes?

JUDI DENCH: Yes. And grandson.

CHARLIE ROSE: And grandson.

JUDI DENCH: Uh-huh.

CHARLIE ROSE: Yeah. You just like people around.

JUDI DENCH: I do like people around. I mean, I do make every effort to-- to be on my own sometimes because I think it's good for me.

CHARLIE ROSE: Yeah.

JUDI DENCH: But I don't enjoy it. But of necessity.

CHARLIE ROSE: Do you get bored, or you just--

JUDI DENCH: I get bored.

CHARLIE ROSE: Yeah.

JUDI DENCH: And I can't settle easily at something, no. I like the idea of somebody coming in later.

CHARLIE ROSE: Well, you're obviously very smart and you read a lot, I would assume.

JUDI DENCH: Yes.

CHARLIE ROSE: Do you paint?

JUDI DENCH: I do.

CHARLIE ROSE: You paint?

JUDI DENCH: Yes.

CHARLIE ROSE: So you've got all these things to do.

JUDI DENCH: And I sew.

CHARLIE ROSE: That's right, you do sew.

JUDI DENCH: I do.

CHARLIE ROSE: What do you mean? Like knit or what?

JUDI DENCH: No, tapestry.

CHARLIE ROSE: Sew.

JUDI DENCH: Rude cushions.

CHARLIE ROSE: Oh, that's right.

JUDI DENCH: Now you remember.

CHARLIE ROSE: Yes, I do.

JUDI DENCH: Funny that.

CHARLIE ROSE: David Hare.

JUDI DENCH: Hare. Yes, correct.

CHARLIE ROSE: You went and wrote him?

JUDI DENCH: And he asked me-- he saw me doing one and asked me to make him a cushion with something on it that when his mother came to stay she would just say, ``What a charming cushion,'' and not read what was on it. It was a very complicated-- like a swirl pattern.

CHARLIE ROSE: So his mother comes in and she looks at it.

JUDI DENCH: She says, "What a charming cushion.''

CHARLIE ROSE: Period. Period.

JUDI DENCH: And I know I'm the winner, then.

CHARLIE ROSE: That's right. Now you, at the time of grieving were going also back to do Shipping News. You grieved clearly for a while. This has been so magical for you. Kevin Spacey was helpful.

JUDI DENCH: He certainly was. He certainly was. He made me laugh a lot. He became a good friend.

CHARLIE ROSE: And now? Really?

JUDI DENCH: He's just very, very good news.

CHARLIE ROSE: That's an English expression -- he's good news. He's good news on The Shipping News.

JUDI DENCH: He was.

CHARLIE ROSE: But he was there and just made you laugh knowing that you were going through a certain kind of pain.

JUDI DENCH: Yes, but he never gave me the impression that he was consciously doing that. Not for a minute. No, not for a minute. I just thought we got on well, which we did. Because I knew that when I was doing Amy's View here and he was doing Ice-- was it Long Day's Journey or Iceman?

CHARLIE ROSE: Iceman.

JUDI DENCH: Iceman. I knew, for instance, that during Act One he had crossed the back of his stage on his scooter, when they were looked at--

CHARLIE ROSE: So he had this little thing. He used his little--

JUDI DENCH: Which he taught me to ride. And so that was--

CHARLIE ROSE: In Newfoundland?

JUDI DENCH: No, here in New York, before we came. So that was immediately, I thought, that's my man who rides a scooter across in the middle of a play is good news.  So-- but I didn't get-- I just thought, you know, I didn't get a conscious feeling that he was making an effort because I was in that state of mind at all. And also Gordon--

CHARLIE ROSE: He just made you laugh.

JUDI DENCH: He made me a laugh a lot.

CHARLIE ROSE: Shipping News. Here it is.

JUDI DENCH: Oh.

[excerpt from ``The Shipping News'']

KEVIN SPACEY: Car crashes? I can't cover those.

JUDI DENCH: Why not.

KEVIN SPACEY: You know why not.

JUDI DENCH: We face up to the things we're afraid of because we can't go around them. Car wrecks are a fact of life up here. Come winter, driving is totally damn near impossible. You could write us a book.

KEVIN SPACEY: Look, I already told you, I'm not a water person.

ACTOR: They dragged it here.

KEVIN SPACEY: What honey?

ACTOR: The house, they dragged it here.

KEVIN SPACEY: You must have had a dream, sweetheart.

JUDI DENCH: Who told you about that?

CHARLIE ROSE: Kevin -- great actor.

JUDI DENCH: You bet.

CHARLIE ROSE: As good as you know working today, probably.

JUDI DENCH: Yes.

CHARLIE ROSE: A different role for him.

JUDI DENCH: Yes. And I think thrilling because of that.

CHARLIE ROSE: Because he was willing to risk and to take--

JUDI DENCH: Absolutely. I think it was quite a challenge.

CHARLIE ROSE: Here's another clip from Iris. Take a look at this.

[excerpt from ``Iris'']

1st ACTOR: What is the name of the prime minister?

JUDI DENCH: Me? Are you asking me?

1st ACTOR: Yes, I am.

JUDI DENCH: I don't know. Ask John. Surely it doesn't matter.

1st ACTOR: OK, well, no, not really.

JUDI DENCH: I've got a lot of ideas but they won't come together. It happens all the time, forgetting names.

1st ACTOR: Well, take care.

2nd ACTOR: Goodbye, Doctor. Thank you. Iris?

JUDI DENCH: I'm sure the country won't go to the dogs. Not knowing the prime minister's name is not a capital offense.

2nd ACTOR: Absolutely.

JUDI DENCH: I know the names that matter.

2nd ACTOR: You'll be all right.

JUDI DENCH: Well, I won't be if you stop writing. You've got a book to finish. Oh, Tony Blair -- so there.

CHARLIE ROSE: That's a great scene. Why are you sad?

JUDI DENCH: No, I wasn't. You know, it's a scene in the film that when you see something you think, ``I should have said that in a different way.''

CHARLIE ROSE: Did you really say that then? As you were thinking, did you think you should have said it in a different way? How would you have said it?

JUDI DENCH: I can't tell you, but I know that I-- I know there's an alternative way to that.

CHARLIE ROSE: Is this why you don't watch your films?

JUDI DENCH: It's exactly why.

CHARLIE ROSE: Exactly.

JUDI DENCH: Because it's, you know, you just think--

CHARLIE ROSE: You don't want too much of that because it is too late, my dear.

JUDI DENCH: It's too late. It's too late, my dear. That's exactly what it is.

CHARLIE ROSE: You're still thinking about it, aren't you?

JUDI DENCH: No. I've never seen Chocolat. I might be feeling--

CHARLIE ROSE: You've never seen Chocolat?

JUDI DENCH: No. I haven't seen A Room with a View. I told you that before. I still haven't seen it. I will when time has passed.

CHARLIE ROSE: Well, with A Room with a View, time has passed.

JUDI DENCH: Yes, I know.

CHARLIE ROSE: Its time is up.

JUDI DENCH: That's years ago. That was '80-something.

CHARLIE ROSE: Yes, exactly. We're talking, you know. That's enough time to go watch it and not worry about what have been.

JUDI DENCH: I know.

CHARLIE ROSE: That was a different time, a different work, a different--

JUDI DENCH: I've forgotten now, you see. But this is so recent that I remember things that I wish that I-- you know, that I had trouble with. And certain things that you think, ``Oh, I could have-- 'It's like, you know, it's being in a forest. When you're doing it, you're in the forest. You don't recognize the trees. You know you're in a forest. You come out and you go up the hill and you look back and you say, ``Oh, it's made of-- you know, there's a core of pine or sycamore there. I didn't notice that.'' Too late.

CHARLIE ROSE: Too late. That's the great thing about the stage, too.

JUDI DENCH: Oh.

CHARLIE ROSE: The next night you can fix it.

JUDI DENCH: You can fix it. I've just done 16 weeks of Royal Family and we fixed it a lot. I mean, sometimes we fixed it in a worse way from the night before. But sometimes, odd nights, it went-- it was better.

CHARLIE ROSE: What is it-- what's the great dream now? What's the drive for you? What's the petrol that-- I mean, what fuels your ambition?

JUDI DENCH: I like working. I like doing it. I'm lucky to be in a profession that I like so much and to be employed in it.

CHARLIE ROSE: How lucky are you?

JUDI DENCH: Very lucky, I think.

CHARLIE ROSE: To have found and to be able to at your age, to get up every morning and much of your life, as much as you've lived, is still ahead of you. I mean, I think the saddest thing would be to have you life behind you, you know.

JUDI DENCH: Yes, I hope that's the case.

CHARLIE ROSE: Well, you know it's the case because you're at the top of your power. You're--

JUDI DENCH: I've got 67 more years. There's really very, very old parts, indeed, for me.

CHARLIE ROSE: You know, what's interesting -- I mean, I read this too -- when you were young they weren't giving you parts because they thought you were too young for the part. I'm think maybe of--

JUDI DENCH: Lady Bracknell.

CHARLIE ROSE: Exactly.

JUDI DENCH: Yes. I just played that this year. That's going to come out in a few months time. Now I'm too old for it.

CHARLIE ROSE: You can't do it anymore.

JUDI DENCH: You can't win, can you?

CHARLIE ROSE: You always do-- I mean, even after you went away and left the Royal Shakespeare, you came back, didn't you? You left to go away and then you--

JUDI DENCH: To Stratford.

CHARLIE ROSE: Right.

JUDI DENCH: Yes, and then came back again to Stratford. I did.

CHARLIE ROSE: Why did you do that?

JUDI DENCH: Well, I was offered a part.

CHARLIE ROSE: That's it? It's that simple?

JUDI DENCH: Yeah. Yes. It's entirely that simple.

CHARLIE ROSE: Anybody you want to work with? Anything you want to do? Any great-- Have you been looking at a performance, at a Shakespearian part and say, you know, at some point I'm going to find the perfect direct and the perfect--

JUDI DENCH: No.

CHARLIE ROSE: No?

JUDI DENCH: No. I haven't looked at any part and thought that. You just have to wait for somebody to come along and offer me something.

CHARLIE ROSE: At which part were you more yourself than anything else? Where were you more at one with a character?

JUDI DENCH: In 44 years?

CHARLIE ROSE: Yes.

JUDI DENCH: I have no idea.

CHARLIE ROSE: How about in the last five? No, but I'm serious. You don't have one part in which you said this-- this character is-- I mean, a little bit of it's in Iris. You ticked off some things in which she was like you but that had to do with biography.

JUDI DENCH: No, that I was like her.

CHARLIE ROSE: That was biography rather than sort of being intricately linked with the soul and the ambition and the drive and the--

JUDI DENCH: I don't know having come across that part yet.

CHARLIE ROSE: Really?

JUDI DENCH: Perhaps it's going to come up next.

CHARLIE ROSE: Does anything come close to it?

JUDI DENCH: If it did come up, I wouldn't want to do it.

CHARLIE ROSE: Why?

JUDI DENCH: Well, because, you know--

CHARLIE ROSE: Playing yourself.

JUDI DENCH: Yeah. Boring.

CHARLIE ROSE: Boring?

JUDI DENCH: Boring. I do think-- I do think I wouldn't want to do that. I wouldn't want to do that at all.

CHARLIE ROSE: Do directors push you or are you pretty much given the script and they--

JUDI DENCH: You mean, when I'm doing the film?

CHARLIE ROSE: Yeah.

JUDI DENCH: Oh, no, I absolutely rely 100 percent on the director.

CHARLIE ROSE: You do?

JUDI DENCH: One hundred percent.

CHARLIE ROSE: It's not just what you see on the script?

JUDI DENCH: No.

CHARLIE ROSE: You come to him for help?

JUDI DENCH: I do. I ask, yes. I ask all the time questions, like ``Are we telling a story?''

CHARLIE ROSE: You ask lots of questions, don't you?

JUDI DENCH: I do.

CHARLIE ROSE: You do. That's right. What do you want to know? I don't want to know.  Did you like directing?

JUDI DENCH: Not enough to want to do it again.

CHARLIE ROSE: Really?

JUDI DENCH: Well, it's lonely and they gang up against you.

CHARLIE ROSE: Who is ``they?''

JUDI DENCH: The company. And when you get it--

CHARLIE ROSE: The company meaning--

JUDI DENCH: Your cast.

CHARLIE ROSE: Your cast. They gang up on you?

JUDI DENCH: They do. They do gang up against-- on you.

CHARLIE ROSE: You mean, one by one?

JUDI DENCH: No, I mean it's-- the moment they have it, the play, the moment they put it in front of an audience, they behave as if it's theirs and you're nothing to do with it. You go back to give notes and they don't want to know. They simply forget your face. And I do it too, now. I mean, I've done it all my life.  "You should have seen it last night,'' is what I've said. ``Well, I'm sorry, I've been playing that and it doesn't work,'' you say. You cannot-- I cannot take--

CHARLIE ROSE: Or you say, ``Of course I've thought about that but I discarded it because it doesn't work.''

JUDI DENCH: Because it doesn't work. I've done it and it didn't work.

CHARLIE ROSE: I've tried it. You didn't see me try it?

JUDI DENCH: In the Royal Family-- That's right, you didn't happen to be in that night. Exactly what I said to Peter Hall.

CHARLIE ROSE: Is that right? To Peter Hall, one of the great British directors ever?

JUDI DENCH: Yes. He's just done The Royal Family.

CHARLIE ROSE: Yes. You said to him what?

JUDI DENCH: He said, "`There's a laugh on this line.'' So after eight weeks he came in and I said, "I'm here to tell you there is no laugh on this line. No.''

CHARLIE ROSE: He was saying that the line will generate a laugh and therefore you weren't do enough to generate the laugh.

JUDI DENCH: Well, there is no way that I could court a laugh. I've tried everything -- everything.

CHARLIE ROSE: But you knew that because you'd already tried or because once you heard it from him you went out and tried to make it generate a laugh and it didn't?

JUDI DENCH: Not once.

CHARLIE ROSE: What about the idea as a director -- let's say a film director because you can take all that you know about acting, you know, and bring it to these people and infuse them with your love of story and narrative and have all the control and all the power and all the creative opportunity.

JUDI DENCH: No, because I don't even understand what side of the screen-- when it crosses the line.

CHARLIE ROSE: You don't?

JUDI DENCH: I asked--

CHARLIE ROSE: Let me explain this to you.

JUDI DENCH: I know. You see, that's what I need on Iris. From the first assistant, Martin, I asked him to explain to me.

CHARLIE ROSE: Where I can't go?

JUDI DENCH: Where-- how do I do this? And I constantly looked through the camera, but I still don't understand about that line. I don't understand about that so I can't stop.

CHARLIE ROSE: I want to see you in one more part of Iris. Here it is, roll tape.

[excerpt from ``Iris'']

Jim B: ``Occupied in observing Mr. Wrigley's attentions to her sister, Elizabeth was far from suspecting that she was herself becoming an object of some interest in the eyes of his friend. Mr. Darcy had at first scarcely allowed her to be pretty.''

JUDI DENCH: I wrote?

Jim B: Yes, my darling, clever cat. You wrote books.

JUDI DENCH: Books? I wrote?

Jim B: You wrote novels. Wonderful novels.

JUDI DENCH: I wrote?

Jim B: Such things you wrote. Special things. Secret things.

CHARLIE ROSE: That will break your heart, that part. Right?

JUDI DENCH: Oh, I thought he was just spectacular. And many people interviewed him thinking that it was him. I mean, he and Hugh Bonneville, it seems to me to be seamless. I can't see the seam between them, you know.

CHARLIE ROSE: Tell me how you talk about that scene.

JUDI DENCH: I do that in a different way. And how, I don't think to tell you.

CHARLIE ROSE: Oh, come on. Tell me. Give me something.

JUDI DENCH: I couldn't. I couldn't begin to tell you.

CHARLIE ROSE: Do it differently? Should I assume that there are a lot of scenes in this movie you would have done differently if you had done it over?

JUDI DENCH: About three.

CHARLIE ROSE: Just three. I've seen two of them.

JUDI DENCH: Well, you're on your way.

CHARLIE ROSE: All right. So, what's next for you? What are you going to do next?

JUDI DENCH: Finish the Bond film.

CHARLIE ROSE: Why do you do the Bond films other than the fact it's-- they pay you well and it's a lot of fun?

JUDI DENCH: And Michael thought it was terrific.

CHARLIE ROSE: He did?

JUDI DENCH: He thought it was a real gas, yes.

CHARLIE ROSE: I mean, you are now the boss of all bosses.

JUDI DENCH: Yes, until someone gives me the sack.

CHARLIE ROSE: No, but Michael thought it was great fun?

JUDI DENCH: Yes, he did.

CHARLIE ROSE: For you? Because he thought it gave you--

JUDI DENCH: He was so excited.

CHARLIE ROSE: Is that right?

JUDI DENCH: Oh, they were terribly, terribly excited.

CHARLIE ROSE: Your daughter? So your daughter and your husband said, ``Oh, my God.''

JUDI DENCH: This is it.

CHARLIE ROSE: Forget Macbeth. Forget Hamlet. Forget-- Drop it. She is James Bond's boss.

JUDI DENCH: That's it.

CHARLIE ROSE: That's it.

JUDI DENCH: And it goes down very, very well with young men of about the age of 10 to 13. After that they think I ought to be tougher. But between 10 and 13--

CHARLIE ROSE: They think what?

JUDI DENCH: They think, "Phew.'' James Bond's boss carries a lot of street credit.

[excerpt from ``GoldenEye'']

CHARLIE ROSE: Finally, religion. Do you find what in being Quaker?

JUDI DENCH: I find--

CHARLIE ROSE: Comfort?

JUDI DENCH: Certainly comfort. Quietness.

CHARLIE ROSE: Quietness.

JUDI DENCH: Solace.

CHARLIE ROSE: Solace is the word. It's wonderful to have you here.

JUDI DENCH: And for me.

CHARLIE ROSE: Thank you.

Judi Dench, today nominated as we speak for an Academy Award for an extraordinary performance as Best Actress. She plays Iris Murdoch, the philosopher and English writer and novelist. I am pleased to have her on this program whenever she wants to come here.

Thank you for joining us. See you next time.

 


 

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