Portrait of an artist
February, 2020, West London Film Studios. Total Film is hovering outside a bedroom as Helen Mirren, in 1960s garb, carefully rifles through a desk until she happens upon a photograph of a young woman. It stops her in her tracks, overcome by emotion. Then, Mirren shifts her attention to a cupboard, this time uncovering a manuscript entitled The Girl On The Bicycle. Again the emotion swells up, but is interrupted by Fionn Whitehead appearing at the bedroom door.
“Cut!” calls the First AD, and producer Nicky Bentham uses the reset time to explain just what is going on. “Helen is playing Dorothy Bunton and that room is the writing space of Kempton, her husband, played by Jim Broadbent,” she says. “She’s having a fish around as she has a sneaking suspicion that he might be up to no good. And she finds, in the drawer, a beautiful portrait of their daughter, who’s died. She’s] know there’s a Goya painting in the cupboard, in a back panel. But she doesn’t find the painting at this point. She sees a stack of his manuscripts, and goes to start reading one when she gets interrupted by Jackie, her son.” Bentham laughs. “So there’s a lot going on in this scene!”
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