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Heath Ledger Remembered



Well, we certainly didn’t see that one coming.

When news filtered through at about 10pm last night that the Australian actor Heath Ledger had died at the obscenely early age of 28, it was with a numbing sense of shock. While the world’s media continue on their crusade to chronicle Britney Spears or Amy Winehouse’s spiralling decline into an early grave, Ledger wasn’t known as a party animal. Instead, those who knew him described him as a quiet, introspective man, uncomfortable with the trappings of fame and happy to completely immerse himself in a character.

When Ledger first burst onto the screen with a witty, charismatic performance in the superior teen flick 10 Things I Hate About You, he could easily have taken the heart-throb role to success. Instead, he began carving out a career similar to that of Johnny Depp – one of character actor, unafraid to take roles that less brave figures in Hollywood would run screaming from.

Impressive work in films like Monster’s Ball, Ned Kelly and The Brothers Grimm followed, before the film that was to secure his reputation – Brokeback Mountain. It seems ridiculous that two straight actors playing gay characters could cause such a controversy in the apparently liberal and accepting 21st century, but Ang Lee’s epic was one of the most talked about films of the year for that very reason. That, and the sheer excellence of the film itself, of course.

Jake Gyllenhaal may have had the more showy role, but Ledger had the more difficult work, playing the repressed, initially reluctant Ennis Del Mar. It was one of those rare performances where years of hurt and regret could be conveyed just by Ledger’s eyes and was justly rewarded by the Academy with his first, and as it turned out, only Oscar nomination.

Ledger’s premature death is all the more sorrowful as 2008 would have no doubt seen his stock skyrocket. His perfomance as The Joker in the forthcoming Batman film The Dark Knight has astonished those who have seen preview clips. It takes quite an actor to reclaim Jack Nicholson’s iconic image and make the character his own, but that’s exactly what Ledger appears to have done. Christopher Nolan’s film is due for release this July, but it will be impossible to watch without a very real sense of poignancy. What happens to Terry Gilliam’s The Imaginarium of Doctor Parnassus, which Ledger had just begun filming at the time of his death, is anybody’s guess.

Given the nature of Ledger’s death, there are already whisperings and speculation about whether the actor was suicidal or battling a drugs habit. Yet this isn’t the place for such gossip and tittle-tattle – instead let us remember an extremely talented actor who has died long before his star could really shine.heathledger


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  • http://www.musicOMH.com Michael Hubbard

    “It was one of those rare performances where years of hurt and regret could be conveyed just by Ledger’s eyes and was justly rewarded by the Academy with his first, and as it turned out, only Oscar nomination.”
    He does have two more films coming out – one in which he takes on the role of the Joker in The Dark Knight, already one of the most anticipated movies of the year (and not just for Batman fans). Maybe the Academy will like him in that come 2009. I’ve not seen it – so I dunno…

  • http://www.musicOMH.com Michael Hubbard

    (Obviously I read the end of your piece and wasn’t contradicting your comments about The Dark Knight. Re-reading my post, it might look that way.)
    One more thing:
    “There ain’t no reigns on this one.”
    *schniff*

  • http://www.musicOMH.com Michael Hubbard

    “reigns” = reins.
    Sheesh. *goes to bed*

  • John Murphy

    Yep, he could well be honoured posthumously next year for the Joker, but it’s rare for the Academy to award little gold men for ‘comic book’ films. But you never know, may well happen this time.
    Was really looking forward to his new film with Gilliam as well. New reports suggest it may well be scrapped – poor old Terry, after Don Quixote and now this, it’s like there’s a curse on him.

  • Jane Hammond

    He actually first came to my attention in an obscure little australian film called Two Hands – it’s brilliant. I think he was also in the film adaptation of the novel Black Rock.
    I had to watch Broke Back Mountain again last night……made me sad, it did.

  • Silvy

    I’m very, very sad and sorry, he was so brilliant, I coudn’t believe, so young!

  • Steve B

    He was absolutely brilliant in every film he made, always so down-to-earth in putting himself in the shoes of completely different characters from time to time. And I can’t wait to see his “Joker”.
    What a pity!