Showing posts with label acting. Show all posts
Showing posts with label acting. Show all posts

Monday, June 11, 2012

Music Monday ~ Hugh Laurie

Hugh Laurie is perhaps a surprising choice to feature on Music Monday, he's not known primarily for musical talent - except perhaps among his most avid fans. Today is his birthday though - so Happy birthday to him!

I'm not an avid fan of his, I have to say. In interview he seems like a nice enough guy, witty, self-depracating, unaffected, but his acting roles have left me cold, especially Dr. House. I don't like Stephen Fry, so have avoided anything Laurie has done with him. Hugh Laurie's music is all I'll spotlight in today's post - and brief notes about his natal chart.

In an interview on NPR at the time of release of his debut CD album Let Them Talk Laurie explained how he came to fall in love with the musical genre he obviously adores: the blues.
"I was not born in Alabama in the 1890s. You may as well know this now. I’ve never eaten grits, cropped a share, or ridden a boxcar. No gypsy woman said anything to my mother when I was born and there’s no hellhound on my trail, as far as I can judge. Let this record show that I am a white, middle-class Englishman, openly trespassing on the music and myth of the American south.

If that weren’t bad enough, I’m also an actor: one of those pampered ninnies who hasn’t bought a loaf of bread in a decade and can’t find his way through an airport without a babysitter. I wouldn’t be surprised to find that I’ve got some Chinese characters tattooed on my arse. Or elbow. Same thing.................. If you care about provenance and genealogy, then you should try elsewhere, because I have nothing in your size. "

He goes on to tell of early piano lessons, from age 6, which he hated. But one day on the radio he heard something inspiring:
"I’m pretty sure it was I Can’t Quit You Baby by Willie Dixon – and my whole life changed. A wormhole opened between the minor and major third, and I stepped through into Wonderland. Since then, the blues have made me laugh, weep, dance… well, this is a family record, and I can’t tell you all the things the blues can make me do...............New Orleans was my Jerusalem. (The question of why a soft-handed English schoolboy should be touched by music born of slavery and oppression in another city, on another continent, in another century, is for a thousand others to answer before me: from Korner to Clapton, the Rolling Stones to the Joolsing Hollands. Let’s just say it happens.)"
He then for many years studied the work of the blues greats: pianists, guitarists, vocalists.
"I tended to favour the piano over the guitar because it stays in one place, which is what I like to do. Guitars appeal to the footloose, the restless. I like sitting a lot." Even so he plays guitar, drums, harmonica and saxophone as well as piano.

So that's how a rather posh English actor came to release an album of blues music. He says music is liberating. After a day of work — "shouting, limping and pulling faces" — he goes straight to the piano, where he can sit for "10 minutes or five hours."

Wikipedia states that
Laurie has struggled with severe clinical depression, and continues to receive regular treatment from a psychotherapist. Blues music perhaps proves helpful in trying to disperse his darknesses, as it did decades ago for its creators.

Sources:
NPRand
hughlaurieblues.com

ASTROLOGY

I have a vague memory from long ago that skeptic James Randi (legend in his own lunchtime) had one of his frequent stabs at wounding astrology in an exhibition using two astrologers, Jonathan Cainer and A.T. Mann. I recall they were asked to describe Hugh Laurie's personality from his date of birth, while being unaware of his identity - I think that was how it went. There was then, and still is, no indication of what time of day Laurie was born. Therefore any interpretation of the natal chart would have to be fairly skimpy, due to the crucial missing ingredient. This happens often in the case of Brits; their times of birth are not routinely recorded. It's still possible to work from planetary positions in signs, and to hazard a guess at Moon's position. Which is all I can do here, and all that's really necessary to illuminate the two things predominant in the career of Hugh Laurie. Of course, it's easy for me because I know who I'm writing about - the two astrologers didn't.

Gemini Sun and Mercury = his versatility as an actor and musician,and his quick wit.

Leo Venus/Mars, Uranus and Moon (degree of Moon in Leo uncertain)= his draw to acting and show-biz.

Venus (planet of the arts) conjunct Mars(energy) can produce a charismatic individual who appeals equally to both males and females (not a terribly common trait by the way). Interestingly two other musician/actors have this conjunction in common: Kris Kristofferson and Sting, not necessarily in the same sign as Laurie, but Gemini and Leo are involved in all cases.

Saturn from early Capricorn is opposing Mercury in the last degree of Gemini - I wonder could this be a dampening factor reflecting his occasional depressions?

Tuesday, August 04, 2009

ALAN RICKMAN

We saw the newest Harry Potter movie last week. It's okay - not mind-shatteringly good but engaging enough. The brightest spark for me, in Harry Potter tales, is Alan Rickman. He may not be on screen very often, for for long, but you can't ignore him - he's the focus of all attention no matter who else shares the screen. It has always been this way for Alan Rickman.





The first time I was aware of him, and have never forgotten, was his role as Sheriff of Nottingham to Kevin Costner's rather effete Robin Hood, Prince of Thieves. He "owns" the screen whenever he appears, whatever the plot, however minor his character. It's a gift few possess. I wonder whether it can be traced in a natal chart?

I'm not going to waffle on about all the many, many roles Rickman has played. Tiscali's biography, one of the best on-line, can fill in the detail. The quotes below come from this source (linked below the post).

Alan Rickman was born in Hammersmith, London, UK on 21 February 1946. Time of birth not known, so in the chart below the rising sign isn't accurate. Exact placement of the Moon would be between late Libra, if born before 6am, and early Scorpio for a later birthtime.




When I first looked at this natal chart I thought, I bet this guy can draw and paint. Sun and two closest personal planets, Mercury and Venus (planet of the arts), all in Pisces (ruled by Neptune planet of creativity and imagination). As it happens I was right! Rickman started out as a graphic artist.

As a child, he was bright, and artistic, capable of excellent calligraphy and watercolour painting..........

Rickman loved acting, but his other artistic talents led him towards graphic design - certainly a safer occupation. "Drama school," he says "wasn't considered the sensible thing to do at 18". So he enrolled at the Chelsea College Of Art And Design, later spending a year at the Royal College Of Art. It was at Chelsea that he met Rima Horton, still his partner today.

Acting came to the fore a little later, and the rest (to use a well-worn cliche) is history.

But why is it that the roles Rickman is asked to play seem to follow a particular pattern? These are almost always dark, sinister, and threatening at worst, sarcastic and sneering at best. Liam Neeson, another wonderful actor, who I think shares a similar facial look, doesn't usually get offered that kind of role.



Where is the darkness in Rickman's natal chart - or rather the ability to portray the sinister characters so convincingly? By all accounts, in real life, Rickman isn't in the least threatening or sinister.
First of all, anyone with prominent Pisces will have the most vivid of imaginations - first step to being able to portray what they can imagine. This Rickman has. But in addition, and importantly, there's a Yod (Finger of Fate) with its apex pointing to the Sun, Mercury and Venus in Pisces, the sextile at its base links Neptune (planet of creativity and ruler of Pisces) and Pluto (planet of power and darkness) to the personal planets via two quincunx aspects.This type of formation is said to channel the natures of the sextiled planets through those at the apex. In this case via Pisces' vivid imagination and acting, Pluto's sinister side can be seen.

A look at Rickman's filmography convinces me that he's a hard worker - Saturn conjunct Mars in his natal chart underlines this. Energy and a rigid self discipline are both fairly foreign to Pisces, so in Rickman's case his Mars/Saturn conjunction provides a useful balance to his more dreamy, artistic side. These two planets are in Cancer another Water sign and harmonious with Pisces, so although they bring a different facet to his nature, there's no conflict.



When approaching the chart of an actor, I usually expect to see some prominent Leo. Here there's only Pluto - the generational planet in Leo, but it's always possible that Leo was rising. Otherwise, in Rickman's case, although he loves the stage and the screen, and they both love him, I suspect the source of his skill is his imaginative core, deriving from a good helping of Pisces.

It's been said that Rickman is an actor with "the perfect voice". That's a subjective assessment. Sam Elliott's voice makes my toes curl, but I have to admit that Alan Rickman, reciting this short poem for peace, gave me goosebumps. Oh yes, and he's a keen supporter of left-wing politics, for which he deserves my Gold Star!



TISCALI Bio of Alan Rickman

Photographs from the top: The real Alan Rickman; as Severus Snape, Professor of Potions in Harry Potter movies; as Sheriff of Nottingham in "Robin Hood, Prince of Thieves"; as Judge Turpin in "Sweeney Todd the Demon Barber"; as Hans Gruber in "Die Hard".