Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy, War Horse, Star Trek:
Into Darkness, The Hobbit trilogy, Twelve Years a Slave,
August: Osage County, The Fifth Estate; Hedda Gabler,
After the Dance, Frankenstein; Hawking, To the Ends of
the Earth, The Last Enemy, Parade's End, and, of course,
Sherlock. For most actors, these stellar cinematic,
theatrical, and television events would be the
highlights of a lifetime's work. On Benedict
Cumberbatch's résumé they are only a few of many
entries. Especially since 2010, his performances have
garnered a plethora of best actor awards, both in the
theatre (Evening Standard Theatre Award, Critics Circle
Theatre Award, and Olivier Award), by playing the dual
roles of Victor Frankenstein and the Creature in the
National Theatre's Frankenstein, and on television
(Broadcasting Press Guild Award, Critics Choice
Television Award, Crime Thriller Award, and TV Choice
Award), by starring as the titular Holmes in the BBC's
Sherlock. Add these and other recent accolades to nearly
a decade s nominations and awards (such as the Golden
Nymph as best actor in Hawking), and it's easy to see
why Benedict Cumberbatch is often hailed as the actor of
his generation. Cumberbatch's body of work further
includes indie films, radio plays and series, television
documentaries, live dramatic readings, multimedia
advertisements, and even the occasional stint as a
fashion model. He often shares an intriguing perspective
on his profession, as evidenced in sometimes
controversial interviews. He has become so much in
demand that online box offices crash when tickets for
his performances go on sale, and, before a Cheltenham
Literature Festival Q&A session, fans overwhelmed
Twitter when so many responded immediately to a call for
questions. Cumberbatch consistently is a top name on
lists ranging from sex appeal to global influence. In
2012 he beat David Beckham in the former and U.S.
President Barack Obama in the latter. Increasingly, part
of Cumberbatch's job involves the role of celebrity.
Benedict Cumberbatch is at a pivotal point in his
profession, and his career trajectory especially as
documented in entertainment media permits a closer
examination of just what it means to be a celebrity or
star in Britain or the U.S. and how an actor may be
perceived very differently in London or Hollywood. This
performance biography is an analysis of a man in
transition from working actor to multimedia star, as
well as the balance between actor and celebrity. It
looks at what makes this actor so well suited to play
one of popular culture's iconic characters, Sherlock
Holmes, and how Sherlock is so well suited to propel
Cumberbatch toward greater global fame.
|
|