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Interview: Henry Goodman

I don’t need to go into therapy — I’m an actor

April 30, 2009 10:16
Henry Goodman plays a psychiatrist in the play, Duet for One.  He has his own experience of mental illness — his father was a schizophrenic

By

John Nathan,

John Nathan

5 min read

‘I thought film wasn’t really going to happen for me,” says Henry Goodman, sitting behind a cappuccino at the National Theatre. A private man, Goodman does not do interviews at his south London home. So the National Theatre is his chosen meeting place. “But it’s a great role,” he says of the Ang Lee movie Taking Woodstock, which opens later this year. It might at last make Goodman, if not a Hollywood star, a Hollywood character actor.

On stage, Goodman is a performer whose range is unsurpassed. He has a versatility that is greater than the much more famous McKellens and Stotts of this world. Ten years ago he gave National Theatre audiences the greatest Shylock of modern times; he was later an acclaimed Richard III for the Royal Shakespeare Company; and while everyone gushes about Peter Capaldi’s spin doctor in the new movie In the Loop, most have forgotten that it was Goodman who blazed the Alistair Campbell role-playing-trail in the satire Feelgood. Next week, he opens in the West End opposite Juliet Stevenson in a revival of Tom Kempinski’s psychiatry play Duet for One.

As at home in Restoration comedy as he is in musical theatre — Goodman’s oleaginous Billy Flynn in Chicago was so smooth you could ski down him, and his recent Tevye in Fiddler on the Roof so lovable you wanted to hug him. And now at 58, looking fit, trim and with a rucksack slung over his shoulder like a student, Goodman may be reaching the top of his game.

He can currently be seen in cinemas as the Leeds United football club chairman Manny Cussins in the Brian Clough film The Damned United. But the role he is talking about between sips of cappuccino is in Taking Woodstock, in which the East End-born actor plays an old-school Jewish motel owner in the Catskill mountains whose son, Elliot Tiber (played by American comedian Demetri Martin), was the lad who in 1969 staged the most famous music festival on the planet.