skip to main content

You Are Here: Home / Learning / History and the Arts / The Arts / Interview with Janet McTeer (Evil Angel) and Tanya Moodie (Good Angel)
 
The arts
 

Interview with Janet McTeer (Evil Angel) and Tanya Moodie (Good Angel)

 
Three actors in studio
Tanya Moodie (Good Angel), Paterson Joseph (Faustus) and Janet McTeer (Evil Angel)

Taking to the air

How do you go about adapting a stage play for the very different medium of radio? Follow Faustus from stage to studio.

Talk about writing

Share your thoughts about all matters literary and join the debate.

Janet McTeer and Tanya Moodie talk about their roles of the evil and good angels in Dr Faustus

Listen

Save this mp3 file to your computer

Save this mp3 file to your computer

You need the Flash Player (version 7 or higher) to use our mp3 player - download Flash.

Save this mp3 file to your computer

Read

Janet McTeer
I’m playing the evil angel. I suppose there’s two things really, one is that you’re part of a double act in the way that you’d normally get a comedy act so you’re working off the other actor. Whatever it is that they’re doing, you’re trying to do something opposite so you’re working on that, so in a sense you’re all one person. And the other thing I suppose in terms of trying to make it real is that you’re basically playing an obsessive, somebody who’s just absolutely obsessed with getting another person to do what I believe, and I have to fight that person to get this person to do what I want, not what she wants. So whatever manipulative tactics she uses I’m going to use the opposite, or I’m going to use whatever I think is his weakness at any given moment to get him to do what I want. I’m just playing an obsessive. What do you think?

Tanya Moodie
Yeah, I think in a very painterly way I think I kind of start layering. I think if I’m given a character to play that’s very abstract, like a good angel or a duchess with no other particular character hints, I start off with the verse and the rhythm, and if I read it to myself and hug the rhythm of the verse I get an idea of who I am, what my intention is. And then I’m playing the good angel, for example, so immediately I think as a painter if I was to think about good I would want to put light colours in or very light things.

But then there’s something about as an actor I always think that well, if I’m going for the lighter vocal quality to play good, for me it’s almost a little bit too obvious, there’s something in me that always wants to play against that. But then sometimes it’s better to go with the obvious. When I first met Janet and I heard our voices together, we have very similar vocal qualities normally, we both have quite deep, smoky voices in a way, so then as Janet said it’s then I start to think well what’s my intention, what am I trying to do, what am I trying to get this person to feel. That accompanied with the rhythm of the iambic, then something comes out on its own accord and then I sort of just go with that.

Content last updated: 06/08/2007

 

Bookmark with:

  • del.icio.us
  • Digg
  • Facebook
  • Newsvine
  • NowPublic
  • Reddit
  • Stumbleupon
Please wait while loading. You must have JavaScript enabled to view star ratings.
 

Comments

Please wait while loading. You must have JavaScript enabled to view comments.
 
 

Explore Open2

Penguin

Two members of the Life team go in search of penguins in their natural environment. See what they find on Deception Island.

Basilica of Our Lady of Guadalupe

Would you say you're a Christian? Share your views, and learn about the views of others, in our new Christianity survey.

Breaking news, 1940s style

Keep up to date with our Twitterfeeds of latest news from Open2 and alerts of OU programmes on the BBC.

 
 

Site info and help