Jeremy Irons
Listen now
Description
Jeremy Irons had already made a name for himself on the London stage when international audiences got their first look at him in the television miniseries Brideshead Revisited. Although Irons made his reputation as a romantic leading man in films such as The French Lieutenant's Woman, he has never shied from unusual or unsympathetic roles. He amazed audiences with his performance in the French language film Swann in Love, and as psychotic identical twins in Dead Ringers. He played a spine-tingling villain in Die Hard: With a Vengeance, a dying artist in Bernardo Bertolucci's Stealing Beauty and the tormented Humbert in the second screen version of Vladimir Nabokov's Lolita. After seeing Irons' portrayal of Claus von Bulow in Reversal of Fortune, von Bülow's real life attorney, Alan Dershowitz, declared that "Jeremy Irons is a better Claus von Bulow than Claus von Bulow." The Motion Picture Academy agreed and gave Irons an Oscar for Best Actor. As familiar as Irons' face may be to adult moviegoers, even more children know his voice as the villainous Scar in The Lion King. Audiences of all ages can be grateful that he has lent his face and voice to an extraordinary variety of roles in some of the most memorable films of the last 30 years. He remains a commanding presence in film, on the New York and London stages and on television productions such as the Showtime miniseries The Borgias. In this podcast, recorded at the 2002 International Achievement Summit in Dublin, Ireland, Jeremy Irons speaks to the Academy's student delegates about the relevance of the arts in the world today. He notes the particular potential of motion pictures to bridge cultural differences.
More Episodes
"If somebody gave me a hundred feet of film, I made a movie out of it." When George Lucas was attending USC Film School he didn't even need a hundred feet. While still a student, he turned 32 feet of 16 millimeter film into a one-minute animated short that not only won awards at festivals...
Published 03/24/15
"If somebody gave me a hundred feet of film, I made a movie out of it." When George Lucas was attending USC Film School he didn't even need a hundred feet. While still a student, he turned 32 feet of 16 millimeter film into a one-minute animated short that not only won awards at festivals...
Published 03/24/15
Greg Marshall is a scientist, inventor, and filmmaker who has dedicated the last 25 years to studying, exploring, and documenting life in the oceans.
 Beginning in 1986, he developed a revolutionary research tool to record images, sound, and data from an animal's perspective. Today that tool is...
Published 10/25/12