logo
'Downton Abbey' star Elizabeth McGovern brings Ava Gardner's tumultuous life to the stage

'Downton Abbey' star Elizabeth McGovern brings Ava Gardner's tumultuous life to the stage

Independent2 days ago
For all of Elizabeth McGovern's acting career, someone else wrote her lines. Now it's her turn.
The 'Downton Abbey' star pivots from British aristocracy to classic Hollywood royalty this summer to portray screen legend Ava Gardner in a play she wrote.
'It's an incredible feeling to see other people embrace these things that were in your head,' she says. 'My feet haven't touched the ground since we started working on this in New York. I am just loving it so much.'
'Ava: The Secret Conversations' examines the sometimes-prickly, sometimes seductive relationship between Gardner and Peter Evans, a journalist assigned to ghostwrite her memoir in the years before her death in 1990.
Though Gardner pulled the plug on the project before its completion, Evans eventually published their conversations in 2013. That book is the basis of McGovern's play.
She says she was intrigued by the idea of 'a star on the wane of her career, sitting with a guy trying to glean from her the story of her life, and the two of them battling it out to control the narrative.'
About 'Ava: The Secret Conversations'
Directed by Tony Award-nominee Moritz von Stuelpnagel, the production co-stars Aaron Costa Ganis as Evans, who also channels Gardner's three famous husbands: actor Mickey Rooney, bandleader Artie Shaw and performer Frank Sinatra. It begins performances off-Broadway at New York City Center starting this week.
McGovern says she wasn't initially a huge fan of Gardner — famed for her green eyes, photogenic features and understated acting style — before she embarked on the project. It was more the idea of how a memoir can become a battleground for legacy and a way to explore Hollywood fame.
McGovern made her screen debut at 20 in Robert Redford's 'Ordinary People' in 1980 and went on to co-star with Hollywood's leading men, including Robert De Niro, Brad Pitt and Sean Penn. She landed an Oscar nomination for Milos Forman's 'Ragtime.' It's a career with many similarities to Gardner.
'I feel like I do have a natural affinity for who she is. I feel like we would really like each other. I don't know, I'm flattering myself, but it's possibly because I had a kind of similar trajectory in my early life,' says McGovern. "I mean, it was not on any level close to hers, but I understood the whole kind of mechanics of it.'
Gardner's reputation as a sex goddess was fully launched in 1946 film 'The Killers,' in which she co-starred with Burt Lancaster. She also starred opposite Humphrey Bogart in 'The Barefoot Contessa' and Richard Burton in Tennessee Williams' 'Night of the Iguana.'
McGovern says Gardner was caught in the impossibility of women's expectations at the time — be sexy but not sleep around. She had many lovers but also felt the shame society imposed.
'I think she was a kind of a feminist, in spite of herself, really,' says McGovern 'I hope people are inspired by that — by the fact that she just did whatever she wanted to do and lived with the consequences.'
A screen siren at the end of her life
By the end of her life and when the play is set, Gardner has been partially paralyzed after a stroke, had emphysema and lived in seclusion. She decided on a quickie memoir to keep the bills paid.
'All my life I was the Woman Men Dream About. That was the only job I ever had,' she wails in the play. 'Where does that leave me now?'
The 90-minute play, which has had previous runs in Los Angeles and London, goes to Chicago and Toronto this fall after New York.
McGovern initially took the idea to two different writers who failed to produce anything. So she turned to herself, watching movies and footage of Gardner to nail her speech patterns and reading whatever she could about the actor's inner life.
'I literally would act it out in my room to myself and then write it down. So it was natural to think of myself playing it, obviously, but then writing a part for somebody else to play, I couldn't think of a way to do it except by doing the acting of that part and then write it down.'
Costa Ganis, her co-star, says 'she's doing something very bold and very daring and very scary' and he rarely meets a playwright so adaptable. 'I think the thing that's so fun about working with her is just that she's such a collaborator,' he says.
Music helped McGovern the playwright
McGovern developed the confidence to write her first play through songwriting. She is the lead singer and an acoustic guitarist for Sadie & The Hotheads, which released their debut album in 2007 and their latest in July, 'Let's Stop Fighting.'
'It kind of embraces a lot of different styles and then ends up with something of its own,' she says of the ethereal jazz-folk the band makes, which is waiting for an audience to catch up. 'We're still waiting. It's been quite a while, but I'm fine,' she says with a laugh.
Costa Ganis hears McGovern's musicality throughout the play, an internal rhythm she understands: "So if something doesn't play right, she has a great sense of what sounds good and what moves things along."
McGovern will be nearing the end of her New York turn as Gardner when the latest 'Downton Abbey' hits movie theaters Sept. 12 — subtitled 'The Grand Finale.' She admits that she and the cast initially dreaded returning after the death of Maggie Smith, an audience favorite.
'I think everyone was afraid that without Maggie, it's daunting to keep the thing going. But surprise, surprise, I think it's our best movie,' she says. 'It just kind of clicked.'
McGovern, who like Gardner lives in London, does music, TV, and film but always finds room for theater, where the smartphones disappear and performers meet the audience.
'It's so healthy to have two hours where you only have one job and that job is basically just to be present and I really feel like it's good for the brain.'
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Shannon Sharpe makes first public appearance since ESPN firing as he presents brother with Hall of Fame jacket
Shannon Sharpe makes first public appearance since ESPN firing as he presents brother with Hall of Fame jacket

Daily Mail​

time13 minutes ago

  • Daily Mail​

Shannon Sharpe makes first public appearance since ESPN firing as he presents brother with Hall of Fame jacket

Shannon Sharpe made his first public appearance since his ESPN firing on Friday night, as he helped induct his brother into the Pro Football Hall of Fame. Sharpe was axed by ESPN on Wednesday just weeks after he reached a settlement with his ex-girlfriend, who had accused him of raping her in a $50million lawsuit. Despite the settlement, ESPN relieved Sharpe, 57, of his duties almost two years since prizing him away from rivals Fox Sports. Sharpe later broke his silence and accused the network of ignoring his request to delay the announcement until next week - with the Hall of Fame induction looming. Though they did not honor his request, Sharpe appeared in good spirits as he was seen on stage with his brother Sterling on Friday evening. The axed ESPN analyst was seen putting the prestigious gold jacket on his brother Sterling as the duo became the first set of brothers to be in the Hall of Fame. More to follow...

Not just Big Bird: Things to know about the Center for Public Broadcasting and its funding cuts
Not just Big Bird: Things to know about the Center for Public Broadcasting and its funding cuts

The Independent

timean hour ago

  • The Independent

Not just Big Bird: Things to know about the Center for Public Broadcasting and its funding cuts

The Corporation for Public Broadcasting, which helps pay for PBS, NPR, 1,500 local radio and television stations as well as programs like 'Sesame Street' and 'Finding Your Roots,' said Friday that it would close after the U.S. government withdrew funding. The organization told employees that most staff positions will end with the fiscal year on Sept. 30. A small transition team will stay until January to finish any remaining work. The private, nonprofit corporation was founded in 1968 shortly after Congress authorized its formation. It now ends nearly six decades of fueling the production of renowned educational programming, cultural content and emergency alerts about natural disasters. Here's what to know: Losing funding President Donald Trump signed a bill on July 24 canceling about $1.1 billion that had been approved for public broadcasting. The White House says the public media system is politically biased and an unnecessary expense, and conservatives have particularly directed their ire at NPR and PBS. Lawmakers with large rural constituencies voiced concern about what the cuts could mean for some local public stations in their state. They warned some stations will have to close. The Senate Appropriations Committee on Thursday reinforced the policy change by excluding funding for the corporation for the first time in more than 50 years as part of a broader spending bill. How it began Congress passed legislation creating the body in 1967, several years after then-Federal Communications Commission Chairman Newton Minow described commercial television a 'vast wasteland' and called for programming in the public interest. The corporation doesn't produce programming and it doesn't own, operate or control any public broadcasting stations. The corporation, PBS, NPR are independent of each other as are local public television and radio stations. Rural stations hit hard Roughly 70% of the corporation's money went directly to 330 PBS and 246 NPR stations across the country. The cuts are expected to weigh most heavily on smaller public media outlets away from big cities, and it's likely some won't survive. NPR's president estimated as many as 80 NPR stations may close in the next year. Mississippi Public Broadcasting has already decided to eliminate a streaming channel that airs children's programming like 'Caillou' and 'Daniel Tiger's Neighborhood' 24 hours a day. Maine's public media system is looking at a hit of $2.5 million, or about 12% of its budget, for the next fiscal year. The state's rural residents rely heavily on public media for weather updates and disaster alerts. In Kodiak, Alaska, KMXT estimated the cuts would slice 22% from its budget. Public radio stations in the sprawling, heavily rural state often provide not just news but alerts about natural disasters like tsunamis, landslides and volcanic eruptions. From Big Bird to war documentaries The first episode of 'Sesame Street' aired in 1969. Child viewers, adults and guest stars alike were instantly hooked. Over the decades, characters from Big Bird to Cookie Monster and Elmo have become household favorites Entertainer Carol Burnett appeared on that inaugural episode. She told The Associated Press she was a big fan. "I would have done anything they wanted me to do,' she said. 'I loved being exposed to all that goodness and humor.' Harvard professor Henry Louis Gates Jr. started 'Finding Your Roots' in 2006 under the title 'African American Lives.' He invited prominent Black celebrities and traced their family trees into slavery. When the paper trail ran out, they would use DNA to see which ethnic group they were from in Africa. Challenged by a viewer to open the show to non-Black celebrities, Gates agreed and the series was renamed 'Faces of America,' which had to be changed again after the name was taken. The show is PBS's most-watched program on linear TV and the most-streamed non-drama program. Season 10 reached nearly 18 million people across linear and digital platforms and also received its first Emmy nomination. Grant money from the nonprofit has also funded lesser-known food, history, music and other shows created by stations across the country. Documentarian Ken Burns, celebrated for creating the documentaries 'The Civil War,' 'Baseball' and 'The Vietnam War', told PBS NewsHour said the corporation accounted for about 20% of his films' budgets. He said he would make it up but projects receiving 50% to 75% of their funding from the organization won't. Influence of shows Children's programing in the 1960s was made up of shows like 'Captain Kangaroo,' ''Romper Room' and the violent skirmishes between 'Tom & Jerry.' "Mr. Rogers' Neighborhood' mostly taught social skills. 'Sesame Street' was designed by education professionals and child psychologists to help low-income and minority students aged 2-5 overcome some of the deficiencies they had when entering school. Social scientists had long noted white and higher income kids were often better prepared. One of the most widely cited studies about the impact of 'Sesame Street' compared households that got the show with those who didn't. It found that the children exposed to 'Sesame Street' were 14% more likely to be enrolled in the correct grade level for their age at middle and high school. Over the years, 'Finding Your Roots' showed Natalie Morales discovering she's related to one of the legendary pirates of the Caribbean and former 'Saturday Night Live' star Andy Samberg finding his biological grandmother and grandfather. It revealed that drag queen RuPaul and U.S. Sen. Cory Booker are cousins, as are actors Meryl Streep and Eva Longoria. 'The two subliminal messages of 'Finding Your Roots,' which are needed more urgently today than ever, is that what has made America great is that we're a nation of immigrants,' Gates told the AP. 'And secondly, at the level of the genome, despite our apparent physical differences, we're 99.99% the same.'

Isla Fisher opens up about her 'tough' divorce from Sacha Baron Cohen: 'I'm trying to remind myself of my new identity'
Isla Fisher opens up about her 'tough' divorce from Sacha Baron Cohen: 'I'm trying to remind myself of my new identity'

Daily Mail​

timean hour ago

  • Daily Mail​

Isla Fisher opens up about her 'tough' divorce from Sacha Baron Cohen: 'I'm trying to remind myself of my new identity'

Isla Fisher has spoken out about the 'tough' end of her decade-long marriage to Sacha Baron Cohen. The Aussie actress, 49, and Borat creator, 53, who share three children, split at the end of 2023 after 14 years of marriage. The Wedding Crashers star has now told Harper's Bazaar she suffered through 'a tough couple of years' amid their divorce, but is excited for what's to come. 'I've had a tough couple of years, but I'm making it through. I'm really excited for the next chapter,' she told the publication. 'I'm refocusing on my career, because previously I was very much focused on my kids, which I still am... [They're] my true love. But I'm enjoying tackling work again.' From A-list scandals and red carpet mishaps to exclusive pictures and viral moments, subscribe to the DailyMail's new showbiz newsletter to stay in the loop. Isla added that, aside from refocusing on her career, she was also re-establishing her identity outside of her marriage to Sacha. 'I'm trying to remind myself of my new identity as somebody outside of a partnership and to stay as buoyant as possible,' she said. It was a similar sentiment the former Home and Away star shared with Stellar in March. 'I definitely am trying to focus more on myself professionally, something that was always on the back burner,' she continued. 'I always put motherhood first but everyone's a lot older now. 'Obviously my kids are always going to come first—every parent feels that way—but it is nice to go back to work and feel of value or be able to contribute at least to the arts in a way that's meaningful to me.' Isla certainly hasn't been resting on her laurels, having recently starred in the likes of the supernatural Stan series Wolf Like Me and such big-screen fare as Dog Man, and Bridget Jones: Mad About The Boy. She also has five projects in post-production, according to IMDB, including the third instalment of the magic-tinged heist franchise Now You See Me, and Spa Weekend, which is currently in production on the Gold Coast. Isla and Sacha revealed in a joint statement in April 2024 they had 'quietly separated' the year before. 'After a long tennis match lasting over 20 years, we are finally putting our racquets down,' they told fans. Discussing the split with the Sunday Times, Isla said: 'It's the most difficult thing that I've been through and I've learnt so much about myself in the process. 'I never imagined my family being separated but we are committed and loving parents.' Isla explained her own parents separated when she was nine-years-old and admitted their peaceful arrangement was what she now strives for.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store