Hi Guys ,
Thanks for the posts ,. now as I have a couple of hours let go reviewing ............................
First though lets have a look at the actor
Pete Postlethwaite , his life and his work and then the character and subject of our model that he portrays in the TV series .
He was born Peter William Postlethwaite in 1946 and grew up in Lancashire, England amid middle-class surroundings. He went to college and while completing his studies developed an interest in theatre, to the chagrin of his family. His father, a labourer, wanted him to find a more secure position in life.
A drama teacher initially, he decided to follow his acting instincts full-time and gradually built up an impressive array of classical stage credits via repertory, including the Bristol Old Vic Drama School, and in stints with Liverpool Everyman, Machester Royal Exchange and the Royal Shakespeare Company.
His highly distinctive features were subsequently put to good use in a number of versatile roles, usually menacing but sometimes humble, and most frequently as working-class types.
By 1993 he had crossed over into Hollywood parts and earned his first Oscar nomination for his superb role in
The Name of the Father(1993). Other quality roles came his way with
The Usual Suspects (1995),
Brassed Off (1996), and
Amistad (1997). Television work included
Sharpe's Company (1994) ,
Lost for Words (1999) and
The Sins (2000). Working equally both in the UK and abroad he avoided the public limelight for the most part and lived quietly in England.
He was awarded OBE (Officer of the Order of the British Empire) in the 2004 New Year's Honors List for his services to drama.
He continued in films till 2010 and was married and the father of two, this great character actor sadly died on January 2, 2011, at age 64, following a recurrence of the cancer he had battled two decades earlier.
He was an actor who once said :
"At the end of the day, acting is all about telling lies. We are professional imposters and the audience accept that. We've made this deal that we tell you a tale and a pack of lies, but there will be a truth in it. You may enjoy it, or it will disturb you."
It's all in the cheekbones, this career of mine. They are quite whopping, aren't they? Who was it that said, 'He looks like he's got a clavicle stuck in his mouth?'
A great loss to the profession he so loved .
Among his many characters was
Obidiah Hakeswill so lets have a bit about Obidiah :
Hakeswill's early history is related in every novel in which he appears. He was raised by his mother, Biddy, in an unknown town in England. His mother died when he was eleven and a year later he assaulted a parson's daughter. To protect the girl's reputation he was charged and convicted of stealing a sheep and sentenced to hang . On the day of his execution the hangman hoisted the numerous victims into the air to die by strangulation, for the amusement of the crowd, and paid little attention to the small boy struggling at the far end of the scaffold. When a heavy rainstorm scattered both executioner and crowd, Hakeswill's uncle was able to cut the boy from the scaffold "for his mother's sake". Hakeswill fled south and enlisted in the 33rd Regt as a drummer .
As a result of this close encounter with death, Hakeswill was convinced that he was unkillable, and protected by God and the spirit of his mother. He extended this reverence to mothers in general, "Mothers were sacred...
The hanging left him with a thick dark scar around his neck, and uncontrollable facial tics.
Hakeswill is promoted to Sgt by brutalising the lower ranks and pandering to the whims and vanity of less experienced officers. Outwardly he is punctilious in his military routine and obsequious towards officers, who find him very useful for keeping order among their soldiers.
After several unsavory incidents he was sentenced to death by Firing squad , refusing a blindfold he survived the initial shots and was finished off by an officers pistol .
To sum the character up who better than Major Sharpe played by Sean Bean from the TV series :
Obadiah Hakeswell, a “liar, a thief, a rapist, and a murderer–that’s not a man, take it away”
What better way to pay homage to both the actor and the character than to have a model sculpted .
Continued in next post:
Nap