Frank Langella has shared stages, screens and beds with an illustrious array of actors, intimately essayed in his memoirs, Dropped Names: Famous Men and Women as I Knew Them.
Langellas latest co-star has no name to drop. It is neither man nor woman. It is a robot, asexual and therefore immune to the 74-year-old actors still-considerable charm.
This odd coupling occurs in the coincidentally titled Robot & Frank, a low-tech fantasy set in a near-future – some would say now – when books and personal connections are obsolete.
The film, which opens today, has a Fort Wayne connection. It was executive produced by White Hat Entertainment, a division of North River Capital LLC. North River Capital LLC is a privately held equity capital firm in Fort Wayne.
Daniel Rifkin, a founding partner of North River Capital, said this year that the decision to invest in an independent film was a natural consequence of the companys other business.
In the film, Langellas Frank is an ex-jewel thief grappling with dementia, whose son distances himself by installing a caretaker robot that the old man doesnt want. Man and machine bond through Franks larcenous instincts, with the robot (voiced by Peter Sarsgaard) serving as accomplice and gradually something deeper.
In a performance stirring awards buzz, Langella creates another late-career portrait of an aging man in a changing world, after playing a disgraced U.S. president in Frost/Nixon, an authors last stand in Starting Late in the Evening and an honest stockbroker in Wall Street: Money Never Sleeps.
Each role is slower, grayer than the dashing rake Langella began his movie career playing in 1970s Diary of a Mad Housewife, and certainly not his Dracula (1979) that could be retitled Vlad the Seducer. He doesnt get the girl anymore, but at this stage in life, Langellas roles could be worse.
I try to resist (characters) where hes got tubes up his nose laying in a hospital bed, Langella said by telephone from New York, or the CEO standing behind a desk saying, You will not marry my daughter, or playing straight man to some TV comic making a dumb movie – those kinds of horrible parts. I just dont want to be in those kinds of pictures.
You get a script like (Robot & Frank) in which there is a charming and rather unique story; how could you say no? Its better than being told Id have to shoot a gun or be violent toward a woman or spew a lot of vulgarities, he said.
In other words, none of the indignities expected of stars in modern cinema. It was suggested to Langella that he is like his most recent role – men who remain steadfast in the past while grudgingly heading toward the future.
There is a pattern youve slightly uncovered that Ive never thought of until now, Langella said. I tend to be drawn to fighters, against aging or the system, or political correctness, or having to be like everyone else.
One reason is that you grow less tolerant of artifice – certainly I do – and more interested in honesty.
Thats obvious in Langellas first published book. Dropped Names is elegant gossip about 65 celebrities Langella knew, all dead because he didnt wish to embarrass them. Hes candid about affairs and flirtations with Hollywood temptresses Rita Hayworth, Elizabeth Taylor and Bette Davis, reveals the huge egos of Charlton Heston and Yul Brynner, and characterizes Paul Newman as dull and Richard Burton as a crashing bore.
I didnt want it to be a whitewash, Langella said. Before I wrote this book, I made myself read other memoirs. I thought: Jesus, how could you be in this business all these years and never dislike somebody, or have affairs? Thats what life is; its messy and complicated, and thats what people are.
Langella pokes, prods and occasionally eats humble pie, recounting occasions when he met his acting idols and brusquely learned how stars shouldnt act. Like the time he attended a party and Oscar winner Rex Harrison, a lion of the British stage, walked in. Langella approached Harrison, hand extended in greeting. Harrison curtly said, Thank you, and flung his coat over Langellas arm, as if he were a servant.
The sting never lessened, and the lesson was learned by Langella, who is now the venerable thespian whom aspiring actors seek out for advice or at least fleeting confirmation.
Never do I brush them off. Never am I unaware that they feel it may be the only chance to talk to somebody they admire. I try to give them as much time as possible, and I ask them about them: What are you doing? How long have you been an actor?
I always leave them by saying: Never give up, never give in. And they beam a big smile, like somebodys telling them the opposite of what their mothers are telling them, which is: Go out and get a job, or Marry that girl and settle down.
Actors like to hear – and should hear – they should never give up their dreams.