PETER O'TOOLE'S YARDSTICK
BY ANNE CONSTABLE, TIME, 6 Feb 1989, pp. 63.
In a London restaurant, Peter O'Toole, 56, speared an oyster
and reflected nearly three decades back, to the time when a little-known
Irish actor was cast as Lawrence of Arabia. ''These were events
that altered my entire life,'' he told TIME correspondent Anne
Constable.
''It became a yardstick by which to measure practically anything
-- even simple things like human endurance.'' Stepping into the
130 degrees F Jordanian sun on the first day of shooting, he recalls,
''it was so hot it hurt. But within a month I adjusted. I knew
itwould be as much an adventure as a film, and it was my business
tosee it through to the end.''
For O'Toole, director Lean was an inspiring teacher. ''David
doesn't play God,'' he says, ''or if he does, he shares his godship.
There wasn't a setup that he didn't invite me to look at through
the camera. When he was editing, I'd sit on the cutting-room floor,
watching.'' And at the end of the adventure, ''we were shooting
the last scene, and I was sitting in the jeep with my feet in
a bucket of ice because it was so hot. David just shot it and
shot it and shot it. He was amazingly reluctant to let go.''
The two men reunited last April when O'Toole joined Alec Guinness
to dub parts of the restored film under Lean's direction. ''It
could have been macabre,'' he acknowledges, ''but it wasn't. It
was fun. For one thing, David and I could see Lawrence in a different
light. We were more detached, and the way to capture those moments
seemed clearer. It's the old story: actors play Hamlet in their
late 20s and then realize in their mid-50s that they now know
how to do it.''
O'Toole likes to say his life has been ''either a wedding or
a wake.'' The decades since Lawrence have given him opportunities
for both: some scintillating screen achievements (Lord Jim, The
Ruling Class, My Favorite Year) and the squiffy, self-parodying
grandeur of so many talk-show turns and his West End Macbeth.
But age does lend perspective, especially to a son of Connemara.
''There's always a hunger, when you're young, to go from peak
to peak and avoid the valleys. I had a pretty hilariously gloomy
few years in the '70s. But today I'm quite at home wandering
those valleys and occasionally climbing a peak.'' So does he regret
anything? ''No.'' An actor's delicious pause. ''Well, sure. I'm
not a French singer.''