Jack Davenport Is Making a ‘Smash’ in His Broadway Debut

Date: April 30, 2018

Broadway On Stage Performers TDF Stages

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The TV and film actor returns to his theatrical roots in Saint Joan

No singing is involved in his role as a nobleman who conspires with clergymen to bring down Joan of Arc, the 15th-century peasant girl who led the French army to victory over the English and challenged the supremacy of the Church. But Davenport’s droll performance does have its near showstopping moments.

“Warwick is pretty much a nonbeliever so he’s not hugely respectful of the men in robes,” he says. “We live in a much more secular world now and I think it probably doesn’t hurt to have a character floating about who’s a bit less enamored with the priests.”

Davenport’s Warwick is particularly winning in a scene opposite the Bishop of Beauvais (played by Tony-winning director Walter Bobbie in a rare return to acting) in which the erstwhile enemies discuss their rationalizations for getting rid of Joan (portrayed by three-time Tony nominee Condola Rashad).

“I became sort of fascinated with this very wordy, dense scene which appeared to be about the deathless subject of feudalism versus theocracy,” says Davenport. “I was intrigued as to how on earth one could make this entertaining, because it’s a part of the play which doesn’t really advance the plot particularly, but it absolutely underpins the entire philosophical reasons for the action. You can’t really tell the story without it.”

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But Tony-winning director Daniel Sullivan also credits Davenport with making the character so engaging. “Jack is totally connected to the actors he’s performing with,” Sullivan explains via email. “That and great intelligence and a lively sense of humor complete the admirable picture.”

Davenport says his Saint Joan experience has reminded him of how much he enjoys doing theatre, from the camaraderie of the 19 cast members to the long preview period that allowed them to hone their performances. “There are things about doing a play, which if you’ve done a lot of film and TV for a while, become hugely appealing — like rehearsing,” he says.

In fact, he credits the rehearsal room scenes in Smash, which was about the behind-the-scenes drama of putting together a musical, with whetting his appetite for the real thing. “The thing I most loved about it was I would sit in fake rehearsal rooms all day watching these incredibly talented young people do something that was very difficult and make it look really easy and be just astonishingly bravura in the process,” he says. The same could be said about what Davenport does in Saint Joan.

TDF MEMBERS: At press time, discount tickets were available for Saint Joan. Go here to browse our current offers.

Janice C. Simpson writes the blog ..

Top image: Jack Davenport in Saint Joan. Photos by Joan Marcus.

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