It seemed curious -- certainly unusual -- to see this morning a N.Y. Times front-page story (i.e., the front page of the web version) by executive editor Bill Keller that heartily endorses Morgan Freeman's performance as Nelson Mandela in Clint Eastwood's Invictus.

Keller knows Mandela quite well personally, having been the Times' Johannesburg bureau chief from '93 to '95, so his opinion obviously carries some weight and authority. What he's done, in effect, is to heartily endorse Freeman as a Best Actor contender in this year's Oscar race. I've heard some arguments against Freeman over the last two or three days -- his Mandela is appealing but "thin," the film gives him nothing to play, etc. -- but Keller's article could turn things around. Maybe.
"Morgan Freeman has been cast as God -- twice -- so he evidently has no trouble projecting moral authority," Keller writes. "The challenge of portraying Nelson Mandela, then, was not the size of the halo, but knowing the performance would be measured against the real, familiar Mandela, and his myth. 'If we can say any part of acting is hard, then playing someone who is living and everybody knows would be the hardest,' Mr. Freeman said in a phone interview.
"The role has defeated actors as varied as Danny Glover (the 1987 TV film Mandela), Sidney Poitier (Mandela and de Klerk, 1997, also for TV) and Dennis Haysbert (Goodbye Bafana, 2007), in vehicles that were reverential and mostly forgettable.
"But as someone who studied Mr. Mandela over the course of three years while he replaced an apartheid regime with a genuine democracy, I found Mr. Freeman's performance in the film Invictus, directed by Clint Eastwood, uncanny -- less an impersonation than an incarnation."
Keller's story is dated 12.6, so it'll be in this Sunday's print edition.
Posted by Jeffrey Wells on December 3, 2009 at 6:16 AM
comment #1
buckzollo
says ...
There may be arguments against Freeman relative to other performances in other films, but there should be no argument about his Mandela. The movie is great in unexpected and simple ways. Clint gets it done. Shudder to think what TV movie this would be without him.
Posted by buckzollo
at December 3, 2009 7:03 AM
comment #2
ElstonGunnAICN
says ...
What's more interesting is the Jason Reitman bit at the end of the story on Tom Ford.
Posted by ElstonGunnAICN
at December 3, 2009 7:23 AM
comment #3
George Prager
says ...
I want to take this opportunity to praise Morgan Freeman's performance in BRUBAKER:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=m34st7foilE
Posted by George Prager
at December 3, 2009 8:18 AM
comment #4
dave
says ...
+1 for Brubaker, Prager! Terrific, largely forgotten picture.
Posted by dave
at December 3, 2009 9:26 AM
comment #5
alan
says ...
If he hadn't won his Lifetime Achievement Oscar for MDB, you know he'd be an absolute dead-certain lock for this one. All the factors are there. I haven't seen the movie, but I'm kind of glad that isn't the case this time.
Posted by alan
at December 3, 2009 9:53 AM
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