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Interview: Allan Corduner

No longer scared to play Jewish

January 22, 2009 10:23
Allan Corduner: “The older I get, the more I understand I have some unspoken bond with Judaism and its history”

By

John Nathan,

John Nathan

3 min read

Maybe there should be a self-help group for British actors who worry that their Jewishness is a handicap when it comes to being cast in non-Jewish roles.

The latest actor to speak about this syndrome — yet to be recognised by the acting or medical professions — is Allan Corduner, who is appearing in the first West End revival in 13 years of Arthur Miller’s A View from the Bridge.

In Lindsay Posner’s production, Ken Stott plays Eddie Carbone, the dockworker whose love for his niece Catherine (Hayley Atwell) is something more than paternal, and the Oscar-nominated American film and stage actress Mary Elizabeth Mastrantonio is Eddie’s wife, Beatrice.

But it is Corduner’s narrator Alfieri, who is pivotal — the Italian family’s wise friend who warns Eddie and the audience of approaching tragedy. “You know what’s going to happen because he tells you,” says Corduner. “It’s inexorable. There’s nothing you can do to stop it. You can see it coming like a huge boulder.”