MOVIES
Michael Gambon's Dumbledore is one tough headmaster
BY DENISE MARTIN
Los Angeles Times Service
Michael Gambon has played Hogwarts headmaster Albus Dumbledore for five years, but he hasn't been setting a good example for his students when it comes to finishing their homework: The beloved old wizard hasn't cracked a single one of J.K. Rowling's Harry Potter novels.
The choice not to read Rowling's book series, he explains, is deliberate, and he says that co-stars Ralph Fiennes and Alan Rickman haven't taken up the books either.
``You'd get upset about all the scenes it's missing from the book, wouldn't you?'' Gambon says. ``No point in reading the books because you're playing with [screenwriter] Steve Kloves' words.''
INTENSE CHARACTER
And Kloves, along with director David Yates, has demanded an intense Dumbledore, who in the fourth film shook Harry when the boy wizard's name wound up in the Goblet of Fire. Such a characterization isn't as pronounced in the book -- Dumbledore doesn't yank and jostle his star student, for starters -- and it upset many Potter fans.
In fact, many riled-up muggles also took to the Internet after the third film to complain that Gambon didn't have the same kindly grandfather aura that they came to expect in the books and in the first two films when the role was portrayed by the late Richard Harris.
Since joining the Potter cast in the third movie, Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban, Gambon has fashioned Dumbledore into a tougher patriarch, an urgent and mysterious force in the midst of impending war. Less cuddly, this Dumbledore is clearly presented as a formidable opponent to Potter's snake-faced nemesis, Voldemort.
And though Harris (who died in London at 72 in 2002) had a twinkling gentleness, Gambon's Dumbledore is a wry observer with crackling wit when it comes to the misadventures of his pupils.
In the just-released sixth installment, Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince, for instance, Ron Weasley's girlfriend Lavender Brown goes wailing past the headmaster after she loses her red-headed beau to Hermione Granger. The old wizard, with a smirking tone, muses, ``Oh, to be young and to feel love's keen sting.''
The 68-year-old Irish actor, with an illustrious 40-year stage career and credits in more than five dozen films, is deeply respected by the young cast members, a fact that helps with their on-screen relationship.
``He's got to be a bit scary,'' Gambon says of his Dumbledore. ``All headmasters should be a bit scary, shouldn't they? A top wizard like him would be intimidating. And ultimately, he's protecting Harry. Essentially, I play myself. A little Irish, a little scary. That's what I'm like in real life.''
BIG RECEPTION
The actor says the enormity of the Potter phenomenon hit him again recently at the London premiere of Half-Blood Prince, where more than 4,000 youngsters turned up to get a glimpse of the magical cast. Gambon called the reception heartwarming and bittersweet.
``I was really moved by the number of children there. It was raining, and everyone was drenched. Some of them had been there for hours. You feel responsible for them in a way. All their books and pieces of paper for autographs were all wet. The pens wouldn't work. It was so sad. It makes you realize how big this thing is.''
The filming of the final Harry Potter movies, the two-part Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows, is underway, but Gambon's contributions aren't scheduled until February.
He says the delay makes it seem as if the end is still far away for him, but he has already begun to reflect on the experience.
``It's been,'' he says, ``a real privilege.''
Watching stars Daniel Radcliffe, Emma Watson and Rupert Grint grow up has been especially fun. ``They've become worldly, wise and strong actors. That's been nice to see. You can say things to them now that you couldn't say to them then.''
Like what? ``Oh, I don't know. I dare not say,'' Gambon says, chuckling. Should we assume the worst? ``Yes,'' he answers with a cryptic bit of sass. How terribly Dumbledore.
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