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Gyllenhaal attributes conquering fear to Oscar winning doc

By , on August 16, 2019


Gyllenhaal admits that nervousness extended to the rehearsal room. But then he found confidence in an unlikely place. (File Photo: jakegyllenhaal/Instagram)

NEW YORK ⁠⁠— Few performances are as daunting as the one-person play.

That’s why Jake Gyllenhaal had to find a way to conquer that fear when he took on the role of Abe in the second half of ⁠⁠”Sea Wall/A Life.⁠⁠”

⁠⁠”Before I did it, I was terrified,⁠⁠” Gyllenhaal said of ⁠⁠”A Life,⁠⁠” after the play’s Broadway opening. Tom Sturridge stars in ⁠⁠”Sea Wall,⁠⁠” the other half of the pair of one-act monologues.

Gyllenhaal admits that nervousness extended to the rehearsal room. But then he found confidence in an unlikely place. The story of Alex Honnold’s 3,000-foot (914-meter) climb of the El Capitan rock formation at Yosemite National Park.

⁠⁠”I was sort of quaking in my boots thinking about it. Then I saw ‘Free Solo,’ that documentary about the free climber Alex Honnold that won the Academy Award. Amazing, amazing documentary, and I thought to myself, if he can do that without any rope I can do a monologue. And then that was it,⁠⁠” Gyllenhaal said.

From then on, it was smooth sailing.

It was a little different for Sturridge. ⁠⁠”I feel like weirdly – like before I walk on stage I feel fear. But I feel safest on the stage,⁠⁠” Sturridge said.

Both actors say the lack of an onstage partner to play off of can add to the stress; there isn’t a safety net if you blow a line. But Sturridge uses the audience.

⁠⁠”Normally when you’re on stage you’re pretending to be in a room and pretending like you’re in Russia and 1920s and you’re pretending the audience don’t exist. But with this, I’m having a conversation with real people who are different every night. And if I blow a line, then we just change the conversation,⁠⁠” Sturridge said.

⁠⁠”Sea Wall/A Life,⁠⁠” a pair of plays written by Nick Payne and Simon Stephens, respectively are tragic comedies that deal with love and loss.

Gyllenhaal says the emotional value shifts with each audience.

⁠⁠”It’s very emotional through all of it. But it changes every night. It’s different. Sometimes I’m telling the story, I’m just telling it. Sometimes things happen. Sometimes I hear someone in the audience have an emotional response. He was laughing or crying, and it makes me feel something,⁠⁠” he said.

⁠⁠”Sea Wall/A Life⁠⁠” plays on Broadway at the Hudson Theater until Sept. 29.

 

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