翻訳と辞書
Words near each other
・ Anne-Marie Helder
・ Anne-Marie Huby
・ Anne-Marie Hurst
・ Anne-Marie Idrac
・ Anne-Marie Imafidon
・ Anne-Marie Irving
・ Anne-Marie Javouhey
・ Anne-Marie Johnson
・ Anne-Marie Kantengwa
・ Anne-Marie Krumpholtz
・ Anne-Marie LeFrançois
・ Anne-Marie Lemieux
・ Anne-Marie Lizin
・ Anne-Marie Loriot
・ Anne-Marie Losique
Anne-Marie Mallik
・ Anne-Marie Marchand
・ Anne-Marie Martin
・ Anne-Marie Mastraccio
・ Anne-Marie McAleese
・ Anne-Marie McDermott
・ Anne-Marie McDonald
・ Anne-Marie Mediwake
・ Anne-Marie Mineur
・ Anne-Marie Minhall
・ Anne-Marie Miéville
・ Anne-Marie Mueschke
・ Anne-Marie Nielsen
・ Anne-Marie Nzié
・ Anne-Marie O'Connor


Dictionary Lists
翻訳と辞書 辞書検索 [ 開発暫定版 ]
スポンサード リンク

Anne-Marie Mallik : ウィキペディア英語版
Anne-Marie Mallik
Anne-Marie Mallik (born Barbara Anne-Marie Mallik in Fordingbridge, Hampshire, on 10 September 1952〔http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0540020/〕), later Mrs. Anne-Marie Huxstep,〔''Arena'', BBC 2, 31 March 2012〕 was a British child who played the title role in Jonathan Miller’s production for BBC television of ''Alice in Wonderland'' that was broadcast as a ''Wednesday Play'' on 28 December 1966.
==Mallik as Alice==
Mallik was the daughter of a barrister.〔Philip Kemp, sleeve notes for BFI DVD, 2003〕 Alice, whom she played when she was thirteen, was her only known professional role, although Miller's adaptation of Lewis Carroll’s mid-19th century fantasy, with its star-studded cast and gothic and bohemian overtones, created quite a stir at the time.〔See, for example, the diametrically opposed opinions of Leslie Halliwell and Philip Purser in ''Halliwell's Television Companion'' (3rd ed. 1986). In addition, the press was quick to seize on the irony of the BBC's decision that the production was unsuitable for children: Kemp, ''loc.cit.''〕 Miller had envisaged an Alice "with no stage experience, not very pretty but curiously plain, sallow and a bit priggish"〔Quoted by Philip Kemp, ''loc.cit.''〕 After advertising the part, he cast Mallik within twenty minutes of meeting her, having asked her (as Mallik recalled) to recite the poem "You Are Old, Father William" which Alice performs for the Caterpillar. Miller's first impression of her was of a "rather extraordinary, solemn child" who proved to be "naturally expressive" and "not amused by anything (was ) surrounded by".〔Jonathan Miller and Anne-Marie Huxstep, ''Arena'', 31 March 2012〕 In similar, though less complimentary, vein, the biographer of Peter Cook, who played the Mad Hatter, has described Mallik's Alice as "a sullen, pouting, pubescent with no sense of bewilderment", noting also that, in his view, "the whole piece was strangely lacking in either humour or fear".〔Harry Thompson (1997) ''Peter Cook: a Biography''〕
Mallik's return to obscurity after ''Alice'' was such that, in 1986, the BBC had difficulty tracking her down to pay a repeat fee.〔''Alice'' was shown again as part of a season to mark the 50th anniversary of BBC television.〕 She was, by then, a naval wife, living in Southsea, and was located only after a newspaper reader recognised a photograph of her.〔''The Times'', 31 October 1986〕 A DVD of ''Alice'' was released by the British Film Institute in 2003〔BFIVD519 (2003)〕 and, in 2012, Mallik appeared in conversation with Miller (their first meeting since 1966) in a BBC ''Arena'' programme about Miller’s life and work. Among other things, Mallik recalled that, making ''Alice'', she was not awed by the distinguished cast because she had been used to mingling with friends of her "much older" parents who had achieved distinction in their careers.〔''Arena'', 31 March 2012〕

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
ウィキペディアで「Anne-Marie Mallik」の詳細全文を読む



スポンサード リンク
翻訳と辞書 : 翻訳のためのインターネットリソース

Copyright(C) kotoba.ne.jp 1997-2016. All Rights Reserved.