A Minute With: Gary Oldman on 'Mank', Streaming and Revisiting Smiley

Gary Oldman. (AP)
Gary Oldman. (AP)
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A Minute With: Gary Oldman on 'Mank', Streaming and Revisiting Smiley

Gary Oldman. (AP)
Gary Oldman. (AP)

Oscar winner Gary Oldman goes back to 1930s Hollywood in Netflix film “Mank”, playing screenwriter Herman J. Mankiewicz as he pens “Citizen Kane”.

David Fincher, whose late father Jack wrote the script, directed the black-and-white movie, which is garnering awards buzz.

Oldman, known for playing Winston Churchill in “Darkest Hour” and spy catcher George Smiley in “Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy” spoke to Reuters about the role, watching the film on the small screen and the rise of streaming.

Below are excerpts edited for clarity and length.

Q: Do you think the character Mank will resonate with audiences?

A: “It’s certain snapshots of Herman’s life and you meet those people really through Herman, much the same way, I think, in ‘Citizen Kane’ ... there’s that detective work of actually who was this guy ... Foster Kane.

“David really wanted to take you back to another era ... there are moments in it where you think you might be watching a film actually made in 1940. So it’s sad in a way that people are not going to experience it in a community of people sitting in the dark watching it on a big screen. But I hope there’s enough in it that it can reach many people.”

Q: Does the dominance of streaming giants during lockdown mean the end of cinema going as we know it?

A: “I come from a different generation. I know how a comedy plays sitting at home, watching it on my computer compared to what it’s like in a packed movie theater. The experience is very different.

“But we’re just heading in a new way ... You could be a grump and complain about it and lament the loss of celluloid in the movie houses, or you can just pull your socks up and get on the train with the rest of them.”

“Q: Is there anyone else you would like to play in a biopic?

A: “Well, it’s not a biopic, actually, but I’d like another go at Smiley ... Maybe Churchill down the line, who knows? Another crack at him. But I’ve had my fair share of biopics. I’ve got enough in the bank.”



Loni Anderson, Who Played Smart Against Stereotype on 'WKRP in Cincinnati,' Dead at 79

Loni Anderson, attends Stars From "It's A Wonderful Lifetime" Honor Blue Star Families Military Spouses, Who Will Receive The Gift Of A Lifetime at The Maybourne Beverly Hills on November 28, 2023 in Beverly Hills, California. (Getty Images/AFP)
Loni Anderson, attends Stars From "It's A Wonderful Lifetime" Honor Blue Star Families Military Spouses, Who Will Receive The Gift Of A Lifetime at The Maybourne Beverly Hills on November 28, 2023 in Beverly Hills, California. (Getty Images/AFP)
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Loni Anderson, Who Played Smart Against Stereotype on 'WKRP in Cincinnati,' Dead at 79

Loni Anderson, attends Stars From "It's A Wonderful Lifetime" Honor Blue Star Families Military Spouses, Who Will Receive The Gift Of A Lifetime at The Maybourne Beverly Hills on November 28, 2023 in Beverly Hills, California. (Getty Images/AFP)
Loni Anderson, attends Stars From "It's A Wonderful Lifetime" Honor Blue Star Families Military Spouses, Who Will Receive The Gift Of A Lifetime at The Maybourne Beverly Hills on November 28, 2023 in Beverly Hills, California. (Getty Images/AFP)

Actress Loni Anderson, who won acclaim for her US television sitcom role as the brainy, glamorous radio station receptionist defying workplace stereotypes on "WKRP in Cincinnati," died on Sunday at age 79, according to her publicist.

Anderson, also remembered for her much-publicized storybook marriage to actor Burt Reynolds in 1988 and their tabloid-fixated divorce six years later, died at a Los Angeles hospital "following an acute prolonged illness," her family said.

"We are heartbroken to announce the passing of our dear wife, mother and grandmother," the family said in a statement, adding that she was surrounded by loved ones.

Anderson, a native of St. Paul, Minnesota, and natural brunette who competed in local beauty pageants and got her showbiz start in community theater, dyed her hair platinum blonde after moving to Los Angeles in the mid-1970s.

A flurry of television work followed, with appearances on such prime-time series as "The Bob Newhart Show,Police Story,The Incredible Hulk", "The Love Boat" and "Three's Company."

She had auditioned for the role of one of the two female lead characters, Chrissie, on "Three's Company," but the part ultimately went to Suzanne Somers.

Anderson's big break came soon after when she landed the co-starring role of Jennifer Marlowe on "WKRP in Cincinnati," persuading the show's producers to let her play the part against the stereotype of a bubble-headed blonde.

Instead, her character was written as the deceptively shrewd receptionist who refused to take dictation or fetch coffee but turns out to be the smartest person in the room, keeping the fictional Ohio radio station afloat despite the shortcomings of male bosses.

The show ran four seasons, 1978-1982, on the CBS network, and earned Anderson two prime-time Emmy nominations.

She also played two real-life, ill-fated sex sirens of earlier Hollywood eras in a pair of made-for-TV-movies - "The Jayne Mansfield Story," co-starring Arnold Schwarzenegger as her bodybuilder husband during the 1950s, and "The Mysterious Murder of Thelma Todd," set in the 1930s.

In all, Anderson starred in six television series, seven feature films, 19 television movies and two mini-series during a four-decade career she chronicled in her best-selling autobiography, "My Life in High Heels."

She and Reynolds first met in 1981 as guests on a television talk show, began dating a year later and co-starred in the 1983 race car-themed romantic comedy film "Stroker Ace." They wed in 1988, she for the third time, he for the second.

Anderson is survived by her adopted son, Quinton Anderson Reynolds, and her fourth husband, Bob Flick, a member of the 1950s-60s folk-singing group the Brothers Four.