Steven Berkoff

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Steven Berkoff
Born Leslie Steven Berks
3 August 1937 (1937-08-03) (age 70)
Stepney
Years active 1959–present
Spouse(s) Shelley Lee
(August 1976; divorced)
Domestic partner(s) Clara Fisher
Official website

Steven Berkoff (born 3 August 1937) is an English actor, writer and director.

Contents

[edit] Biography

[edit] Early life

Berkoff was born Leslie Steven Berks in Stepney, in the East End of London, the son of Pauline (née Hyman) and Alfred Berks, who was a tailor.[1][2] His family is Jewish,[3] originating from Russia,[4] with their original surname, "Berkovitch", having been shortened by Berkoff's father.[5] Berkoff was educated at Hackney Downs School[6] and trained at the Webber Douglas Academy of Dramatic Art in 1958, and in 1965, at the Ecole Jacques Le Coq in Paris.[7]

[edit] Career

In Hollywood, he took villainous roles such as the corrupt art dealer Victor Maitland in Beverly Hills Cop; a gangster in The Krays, the sadistic Soviet officer Col. Podovsky in Rambo: First Blood Part II and as General Orlov in the James Bond film Octopussy. He also appeared in the 1967 Hammer film Prehistoric Women. He was cast by Stanley Kubrick as a police officer in A Clockwork Orange and a gambler nobleman (Lord Ludd) in Barry Lyndon. He appears in the independent feature Naked in London (2006).

In 1990 Berkoff appeared in the biopic on the early life of Errol Flynn entitled Flynn (also known in some territories as My Forgotten Man).

As a television actor, an early TV role was in an episode of The Avengers. An early regular role was as a Moonbase Interceptor pilot in the Gerry Anderson TV series UFO. He has also appeared in Star Trek: Deep Space Nine as Hagath in the episode Business as Usual; in the 2003 miniseries Children of Dune as Stilgar; as a gangster (Mr Wiltshire) in episode 8 of the BBC's Hotel Babylon series; as a lawyer (Freddie Eccles) in an episode of ITV's Marple entitled By the Pricking of My Thumbs and as Adolf Hitler in the mini-series War and Remembrance.

Berkoff is a playwright, actor and theatre director. In the 1970s and 1980s he wrote a series of verse plays including: East (1975), Greek (1980), Decadence (1981) and West (1983). Other plays in verse are: Sink the Belgrano! (1986)[8], a critical take on the Falklands War; Massage (1997); Sturm und Drang and The Secret Love Life of Ophelia (2001). He has made several adaptations of Kafka's work: The Metamorphosis (1969), In the Penal Colony (1969) and The Trial (1971). In the late 1980s he directed an interpretation of Salome by Oscar Wilde in the Gate Theatre, Dublin and later in the UK. He trained in mime and physical theatre alongside Jacques Lecoq in Paris and also at Webber Douglas Academy of Dramatic Art in London.

Most recently, he provided motion capture and voice alongside Andy Serkis and others for the PlayStation 3 game Heavenly Sword. He played General Flying Fox, one of the main villains in the game.

He is an exponent of the style of heightened physical theatre for which the term 'total theatre' has been coined. Along with this highly physical style of theatre he also created complex psychological plays such as "The Trial"; these works were nightmarish and created a sense of alienation. These took everyday feelings (such as the feeling that no one is listening to you) and exaggerated them, adding to the disturbing nature of the plays.

Berkoff is patron at the Nightingale Theatre,[9] home of the Prodigal Theatre Company in Brighton. He had a top 20 hit in the U.K. with dance band N-Trance called "The Mind Of The Machine" and was mentioned in the lyrics of the Brian May track "I'm Scared" from the album "Back to the Light".

[edit] Style

Drama critic Aleks Sierz describes Berkoff's distinctive modernist voice as evidenced in his plays as follows;

"the language is usually filthy, characters talk about unmentionable subjects, take their clothes off, have sex, humiliate each another, experience unpleasant emotions, become suddenly violent. At its best, this kind of theatre is so powerful, so visceral, that it forces audiences to react: either they feel like fleeing the building or they are suddenly convinced that it is the best thing they have ever seen, and want all their friends to see it too. It is the kind of theatre that inspires us to use superlatives, whether in praise or condemnation." (Aleks Sierz, In-Yer-Face Theatre).[10]

Berkoff is perhaps most notorious for "the cunt speech" in his first play, East. [11]

[edit] Libel action

In 1996 Berkoff was involved in a civil action against journalist Julie Burchill after a comment she made in The Sunday Times suggested that Mr Berkoff was "hideously ugly". The court held in his favour as Burdhill’s actions “held him to ridicule and contempt”.[12]

[edit] References

  • Robert Cross, Steven Berkoff and the Theatre of Self-Performance (Manchester University Press, 2004)
  1. ^ filmreference.com. Retrieved on 2007-06-18.
  2. ^ movies.yahoo.com. Retrieved on 2007-06-18.
  3. ^ contemporarywriters.com. Retrieved on 2007-06-18.
  4. ^ iainfisher.com. Retrieved on 2007-06-18.
  5. ^ davidaspencer.com. Retrieved on 2007-06-18.
  6. ^ Steven Berkoff: The real East Enders The Independent 04 Jan 2007 accessed 10 May 2007
  7. ^ Bio at Hollywood celebrity accessed 27 Jun 2007
  8. ^ Sink the Belgrano! premièred at the Half Moon Theatre, in Stepney on 2 Sept 1986. It was described by critic Ned Chaillett, as a diatribe in punk-Shakespearean verse, and by Berkoff himself, as even by my modest standards [it] was one of the best things I have done (Free Association 373)
  9. ^ nightingaletheatre.co.uk/. Retrieved on 2007-06-18.
  10. ^ http://www.iainfisher.com/berkoff/berkoff-study-f6.html
  11. ^ http://www.iainfisher.com/berkoff/berkoff-study-f6.html
  12. ^ Tort Law, Texts and Materials: Lunney and Oliphant 3ed p704

[edit] External links

Wikiquote has a collection of quotations related to:
Preceded by
Julian Glover
Official James Bond villain actor (with Louis Jourdan)
1983
Succeeded by
Christopher Walken and
Steven Berkoff


Persondata
NAME Berkoff, Steven
ALTERNATIVE NAMES Berks, Leslie Steven
SHORT DESCRIPTION Playwright, actor and theatre director
DATE OF BIRTH August 3, 1937
PLACE OF BIRTH Stepney
DATE OF DEATH
PLACE OF DEATH