Sunday, May 04, 2014

From Houllebecq to Rushdie: the authors who took to the silver screen

Michel Houllebecq may be the first author to have a whole film built around him, but thespian turns by authors are by no means uncommon


John Dugdale - The Guardian


The Kidnapping Of Michel Houllebecq.
Star turn … The Kidnapping Of Michel Houllebecq.

In The Kidnapping of Michel Houellebecq, just given its US premiere at the Tribeca festival, the eponymous French novelist stars as himself. Guillaume Nicloux's film takes a real recent incident – Houellebecq's mysterious disappearance during the publicity tour for his Prix Goncourt-winning novel The Map and the Territory, in which he similarly appears as a character – and wryly purports to show what really happened: he was abducted and held captive by three brothers, who, despite his irritating ways, gradually came to respect him.

While Houellebecq may be the first novelist to have a film built around him, thespian turns by authors of his stature are by no means uncommon. One Nobel laureate, Harold Pinter racked up a long list of acting credits in film and TV (from The Servant to The Tailor of Panama), as other actor-playwrights – Alan Bennett, Sam Shepard – have done. Another, Gabriel García Márquez, played a cinema-ticket seller in the 60s Mexican film There Are No Thieves in this Town, in which the film director Luis Buñuel and the novelist Juan Rulfo were also in the cast.

Long overdue is a documentary compiling such glimpses, which have also included Thomas Pynchon voicing himself (depicted with a paper bag over his head) in The Simpsons, Graham Greene as a British insurance salesman in Truffaut's Day for Night, Martin Amis as a child star in A High Wind in Jamaica, Marshall McLuhan as himself in Annie Hall, Germaine Greer as Edina's "Dream Mother" in the sitcom Absolutely Fabulous, and – possibly the most appealing of all – Roland Barthes as Thackeray in a French film in which Isabelle Adjani, Isabelle Huppert and Marie-France Pisier played the Brontë sisters.
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