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WSWS : Arts
Review : Obituary
Heath Ledger dead at 28: a life tragically cut short
By Richard Phillips
31 January 2008
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The sudden death on January 22 in New York City of Australian
actor Heath Ledger, best known for his role as Ennis Del Mar in
Ang Lees Brokeback Mountain, has seen an outpouring
of heartfelt tributes by filmmakers, actors and movie fans around
the world.
A detailed autopsy has not yet been released but 28-year-old
Ledger is believed to have died from a toxic combination of Ambien
sleeping tablets and other prescription drugs. He was living alone
in a $23,000 per month sparsely-furnished apartment in Manhattans
SoHo district and was discovered lying face down in his bed in
the mid-afternoon.
Whatever the exact cause of Ledgers death, his passing
is a sad event and tragically ends the career of an intelligent
and naturally talented actor who had much to contribute to his
craft and the film industry.
Heath Ledger was born into a comfortable middle class family
in Western Australia in 1979. His parentsSally, a French
teacher, and Kim, a racing-car driver and mining engineernamed
him after Heathcliff from Emily Brontes Wuthering Heights.
Ledger excelled in hockey and other sports but resolved to pursue
a career in the dramatic arts and left school at 16, after sitting
for early graduation exams. He moved to Sydney in the mid-90s
and acted in some local television shows, including Sweat
and Home and Away.
In 1997 Ledger landed small parts in two Australian films,
Paws and Blackrock, and two years later starred
in Gregor Jordans black comedy Two Hands. Jordans
movie about a naïve young teenager (Ledger) on the run from
some buffoonish but dangerous Sydney gangsters was a local box
office success and secured him a lead role in the American teen
comedy 10 Things I Hate About You.
Between 2000 and 2003 Ledger starred in six featuresThe
Patriot, Monsters Ball, A Knights Tale,
The Four Feathers, Ned Kelly and The Order.
None of these were great movies, in fact, most are probably best
forgotten, but Ledgers talenthis intensity and energycaught
the eye of a range of filmmakers.
Despite an increasing number of movie offers, the young actor
refused to allow himself to be type-cast and, not having had any
formal dramatic training, decided that the only way to develop
his acting skills and emotional range was by appearing in a variety
of roles.
Attempts were made to turn the young man into a new teenage
idol. For example, after the success of A Knights Talea
silly mediaeval romp with a contemporary rock soundtrack about
a commoner pretending to be a knightColumbia Pictures tried
to groom him for the teenage movie market.
Ledger told the Sydney Morning Herald in April 2006:
They offered me ridiculous amounts of money to make franchise
movies, Spiderman to James Bond. Studios do thisfind one
person, invest a lot of money in him like a product, own and make
money off him. At the end it was, So kid, whaddya think?...
I had Amy Pascal, head of Columbia Pictures, on the phone to me
... Listen kid, hear this, your career will be over, youll
never work again, youll never live again unless you do this
for me.
To his credit, Ledger rejected these demands. I knew
I was being offered a deal with the devil, he said. I
didnt trust it, it felt short term; they werent going
to take responsibility for me if I fried. I also felt professionally
cheapenedlike, Is that all they think Im capable
of?
In early 2003 Ledger returned to Australia to promote Gregor
Jordans Ned Kelly, a movie in which he starred as
the countrys most notorious late nineteenth century outlaw.
Ledgers recitation of Kellys famous Jerilderie
Letter, an angry denunciation of the colonial government
authorities and their repression of dirt-poor small farmers, is
one of the movies better momentsbut the film was ill-conceived
and superficial.
Unlike several high-profile Australian movie stars, Ledger
refused to remain silent about the impending US-led invasion of
Iraq and used his scheduled media appearances to denounce this
war crime and Australian involvement in it. Along with Ned
Kelly co-stars Joel Edgerton and Naomi Watts, Ledger joined
antiwar demonstrations in Melbourne, telling journalists that
it was strange to be publicising a movie in the midst
of the outbreak of war.
Its surreal for me to be sitting here, talking
to you and giving an interview while theyre dropping 3,000
bombs on Baghdad, he said. Its really hard to
sit here and be happy about a movie opening, cause it just
makes you realise the insignificance of this, it means nothing
in comparison... I dont think war is the answer to anything.
Its a very, very sad day.
Artistic breakthrough
Ledgers determination to hone his acting skills bore
fruit in 2005 with Brokeback Mountain, his most powerful
role. Nominated for the Best Actor Oscar, numerous critics correctly
praised Ledgers nuanced but intense performance as Ennis
Del Mar.
Ledger seemed to have an uncanny ability to capture Enniss
passionate but socially suppressed life-long love for fellow cowboy
Jack Twist (Jake Gyllenhaal). As E. Annie Proulx, the storys
author, commented: How did this actor get inside my head
so well? He understood more about the character than I did.
Although Ledger did not win the Oscar, at 26 he was one of the
youngest actors to be nominated for the prize.
Ledger went on to star in Lasse Hallströms light
but subversive Casanova and then Neal Armfields Candy,
the harrowing Australian story of two young loversa poet
(Ledger) and an art student (Abbie Cornish)who become heroin
addicts. He also appeared as a drunken Californian skateboard
guru in Lords of Dogtown and then with Matt Damon in Terry
Gilliams comedy The Brothers Grimm.
While these films were not great commercial or artistic successes,
Ledgers performances reconfirmed his standing as a substantial
actor. Likewise his recent role in Im Not There,
the film about Bob Dylan, has been critically praised along with
his performance as the Joker in The Dark Knight, the yet
to be released Batman film.
Despite his growing profile and financial success, Ledger was
always ambivalent about his star status and unsettled
by the constant scrutiny of photographers and gossip columnists.
After falling in love with Michelle Williams, his co-star and
wife in Brokeback Mountain, the young couple moved to Sydney
and had a daughter, Matilda Rose. They hoped to raise a family
in Australia while developing their acting careers but were constantly
stalked by the local paparazzi. This harassment reached a peak
during the Australian premiere of Brokeback Mountain when
Ledger was doused with water by photographers in order to capture
and sell his angry reaction.
Ledger was deeply distressed by the event and the couple left
Sydney two days later, sold their home, and returned to the US
for good. When Ledger came back to star in Candy, he was
again harassed by Australian photographers and journalists.
Like all serious artists, Ledger was sharply critical of his
own work, constantly striving for more emotionally honest performances.
He told the media last year: I feel like Im wasting
time if I repeat myself. I cant say Im proud of my
work. Its the same with everything I do: the day I say Its
good is the day I should start doing something else.
Personal turmoil
While there has been much media speculation about whether Ledgers
death was an accident or not, his parents and other close relatives
deny that he was suicidal. Whether this is true or not, the past
12 months were personally difficult for Ledger.
Ledger split up with Williams in August last year and although
publicists said the separation was amicable, it no
doubt had a big impact on the young actor who was intensely devoted
to his wife and daughter. He was reported to be pining for his
young daughter and feared that he may be facing restricted access
to the child.
Last year Ledger told the New York Times that he was
suffering from extended bouts of insomnia and had been stressed
out over his part in Im Not There. Last
week I probably slept an average of two hours a night, he
told the newspaper. I couldnt stop thinking. My body
was exhausted, and my mind was still going. He later admitted
to the media that was having difficulty, physically and mentally,
playing the Joker in The Dark Knight, a character he described
as a psychopathic, mass-murdering, schizophrenic clown with
zero empathy.
As we go to press, the US media is alleging that Ledger had
serious drug abuse problems that precipitated his break up with
Williams. Unnamed sources quoted in a British newspaper last week
also claimed that he was suffering from a deep, dark depression
with terrible mood swings.
Without commenting on the accuracy or otherwise of these assertionsand
they have been denied by Ledgers publicistthe 28-year-olds
life had clearly reached a turning point. His personal life was
disintegrating and he was being provided with few genuinely artistic
challenges in his work. His highly-paid role in The Dark Knight
blockbuster can hardly have been satisfying, let alone provided
him with the inner strength to weather his breakup with Williams
or rise above other personal difficulties.
At his best, Heath Ledger brought genuine honesty and subtlety
to his roles and an ability to convey the most complex emotions
with few words. His death marks the end of a naturally gifted
performer.
Explaining his infatuation with cinema and the dramatic arts
he told one journalist: I love the striving, the process
of being part of something bigger than me, because it forces me
to examine myself and my own life. In contrast to an industry
which encourages complacency and self-satisfaction, Ledgers
approach and artistic contribution was refreshingly different.
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