They are starring
in a play about a woman reluctant to age and the perils of passing time, but
veteran actors James Earl Jones and Angela Lansbury say that life in their 80s
continues to be exciting thanks to their determination to keep doing what they
love.
Jones and
Lansbury, in Australia to star in a touring production of Alfred Uhry’s
Pulitzer-Prize winning play “Driving Miss Daisy,” say the thrill of performing
has propelled them throughout their decades-long careers and gives them the
energy necessary to keep up with their often grueling schedules.
“First of all,
wake up. Wake up and try to get your bones moving,” a grinning Jones, who turns
82 this month, said Monday ahead of the cast’s first rehearsal. “And then be
enthusiastic about what you do. I’m very enthusiastic about acting still. I
love the process of creating a character.”
For 87-year-old
Lansbury, whose seven-decade career has spanned stage, film and television,
performing live gives her a rush that can’t be matched on the screen.
“You get on
stage and you really can let it out,” she said, throwing her arms wide. “You’re
not hampered by camera angles or lighting.”
Lansbury,
nominated for three Oscars and beloved for her role as amateur detective
Jessica Fletcher on the long-running TV series “Murder, She Wrote,” said it was
the stage that gave her a jolt of fresh inspiration later in life.
“Coming back to
the theater about seven years ago turned the tide for me, it really did. Because
it gave me a career after 70,” she said. “I could still work in the theater and
play great roles, but it wasn’t so easy to continue as a motion picture
actress. Which I was very glad of — I didn’t like the way we were making movies
... the kind of roles I would like to play didn’t seem to exist. But I love the
theater and, as it turned out, it was the thing to do.”
Both actors
jumped at the chance to perform in “Driving Miss Daisy,” which began as an
off-Broadway play and inspired the Oscar-winning film starring Jessica Tandy
and Morgan Freeman. The play follows the evolving friendship of Daisy and her
chauffeur Hoke in the American South over 25 years.
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