Iceland review - 2016, Side 17

Iceland review - 2016, Side 17
ICELAND REVIEW 15 Brynhildur Guðjónsdóttir is among Iceland’s most celebrated actress- es, well known for her roles on and off stage. This year, she was named Best Actress at Gríman, the Icelandic performing arts awards, for her perfor- mance as Njáll in Njála, a play staged by The Reykjavík City Theater and Iceland Dance Company based on one of the most beloved Icelandic sagas, Njáls saga. Directed by Þorleifur Örn Arnarsson, the show was regarded as highly creative and daring, and won a total of ten awards at Gríman, including Best Play and Best Director. In 2008, Brynhildur won the Gríman awards as Best Playwright and Best Actress for her monologue Brák, based on another treasure among the Icelandic sagas: Egils saga. She has since proven her versatility as an actress by performing roles as different as that of Mexican artist Frida Kahlo and French actress and cabaret singer Édith Piaf— the latter of which showcased her singing talent. Moreover, as a recipient of the Leifur Eiríksson scholarship, she spent a year in the playwriting department of the Yale School of Drama in 2011-2012 as special research fellow, honing her writing skills. In addition to acting in Njála this year, Brynhildur performed the role of Tanya—whose carefree, spoiled character has nothing in common with Njáll—in Catherine Johnson’s global- ly-successful musical Mamma Mia, based on the songs of ABBA. Why did you choose to become an actress? At the age of 43, it’s hard to recollect what I was thinking at the age of 17. I could have ended up studying medicine. I chose to attend MR [Menntaskólinn í Reykjavík high school] and was planning to take that course of study. I was also tempted to study art, either in Paris or California, but I ended up completing a BA degree in French and Italian at the University of Iceland. I had always been very fond of English theater and looked up to actors who had studied in England. So, when working on my thesis, I trave- led to London and decided I wanted to study acting in London, where I gradu- ated from the Guildhall School of Music and Drama [in 1998]. Do you come from a family of actors? No, there’s no actor in my family. It’s a family of merchants. My mother ran a toy store for a number of years, estab- lished by my grandfather. I’m the only artist in my family. This is some kind of calling. You’re well known for your singing talent. Were you tempted to become a singer? I didn’t start singing until I was in theater school, and I found it very uncomforta- ble. But I learned that anyone can sing, and that if the connection is right, and if the voice comes from within and you know what you’re saying, then it sounds right. That’s how you can sing, because you’re constantly telling a story, or I am at least. When an actor sings, he or she is telling a story. My entrance into Icelandic theater ended up being through song, because my first role here was in the musical RENT, directed by Baltasar Kormákur [in 1999]. Why was a woman chosen to play Njáll? The issue was not whether the actor was a man or a woman. The question was who fit the role and was best able to interpret it. I happen to take a keen interest in the sagas. Njáll was a thinker who abhorred violence. He was clever and well read in the law. I suppose there is a Njáll in me. I, too, am a thinker who is very inter- ested in the law and opposes violence. Whether a woman or a man acts his role makes no difference. I had my eyes on it from the start, but not because Njáll is a man. This whole journey turned out to be the most demanding one I’ve ever taken; physically as well as mentally, but, at the same time, the most enjoyable one. The actors had to be perfectly synchro- nized, the focus 100 percent, and the script was quite demanding, including long and complicated monologues. Why should people today be intro- duced to the sagas? Their message is essential. This is our beginning. These accounts were written around 1200 about events that occurred between 850 and 1100, or so. These stories shed light on who we [Icelanders] really are and where we come from. We’re a mix of Vikings, who fled Norway because they weren’t happy with the state of affairs, and slaves, mostly women, they captured in the British Isles on their way here. They arrived here and we find out how they shared land, how society was This year, actress and playwright Brynhildur Guðjónsdóttir won Iceland’s highest acting award for her interpretation of Njáll, one of the most famous male characters of the Icelandic sagas. Vala Hafstað meets with her to discuss her career, the theater, and how she came to act the role of Njáll.
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