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Sometimes You Can't Pick Just 10: Maureen Corrigan's Favorite Books Of 2014

This year, Fresh Air's book critic rejects the tyranny of the decimal system and picks 12 titles published in 2014 — all with characters, scenes and voices that linger long past the last page.

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Other segments from the episode on December 15, 2014

Fresh Air with Terry Gross, December 15, 2014: Interview with Timothy Spall; Review of Maureen Corrigan's top 12 books of 2014;

Transcript

December 15, 2014

Guest: Timothy Spall

TERRY GROSS, HOST: This is FRESH AIR. I'm Terry Gross. My guest, Timothy Spall, won best actor awards this year from the New York Film Critics Circle and the Cannes Film Festival for his performance in the film "Mr. Turner." He plays the British painter J. M. W. Turner, who's now-revered landscape and seascape paintings became increasingly radical for their time. The film follows him from his early 50s to his death in 1851 at the age of 76.

The director, Mike Leigh, described the film as about an artist who moved people to experience the profound, the sublime, the spiritual, the epic beauty and the terrifying drama of what it means to be alive on our planet. Leigh says he also wanted the film to capture a contrast between this timeless work and this very mortal man who was eccentric, anarchic, vulnerable, sometimes uncouth. Spall has appeared in four other Mike Leigh films, including "Topsy-Turvy" and "Secrets And Lies." He also played Winston Churchill in "The King's Speech" and may be best known to many Americans for his role in the Harry Potter films as Peter Pettigrew.

Timothy Spall, welcome FRESH AIR and congratulations on your New York Film Critics Circle award and, of course, the award for best actor that you won at the Cannes Film Festival.

TIMOTHY SPALL: Well, thank you very much. Yeah, it's always a delight to get, you know, prizes you didn't think you were anywhere near going to be in the running, so there you go.

GROSS: Right. Well, let's start by talking about Turner. I'm going to ask you to describe his place in art history.

SPALL: Well, Turner - J. M. W. Turner - Joseph Mallord William Turner - I suppose - born 1775, died 1851 - I suppose you would regard him as being the greatest - if not the, one of the greatest - landscape painters of all time and a unique artist because he was a master of the sublime. The sublime being - not now, which has become sort of a term for a rather charming and delicious slice of cheese cake - the sublime was a movement in art which was something that tried to capture the beauty of nature, as well as its terror and its horror. It was a movement that grew out of the romantic movement - again, a term which has come to meet a weekend in Paris, if you're lucky. And the romantic movement...

GROSS: (Laughter).

SPALL: I know. It's funny how these words lose their valued by overuse. But the romantic movement was, in a nutshell, basically the movement of art and poetry which was about recording not just what you saw, but what you felt about it, as well.

GROSS: You'd considered becoming an artist before you became an actor. And I know you studied painting for a couple of years before actually shooting "Mr. Turner," so was it your goal to learn to paint like him? And if so, like, why was that an important part of your preparation?

SPALL: Well, to be honest, the first part of that - first, accurately, when I was at school when I was 16, I was - I was in a quandary because I didn't know whether I wanted to join the army - I had this terrible desire to be a tank driver in the Royal Tank Regiment, genuinely - or whether I wanted to go to art college because half of me wanted to be in the Army and the other half of me wanted to be a surrealist.

GROSS: (Laughter).

SPALL: And they're not mutually exclusive. And then I did the school play. And my drama teacher said, after - she was taking my nose off - not my actual nose - the nose I'd been wearing is the lion in "The Wizard of Oz." She said, I think you should be an actor. It's a terrible job, and I know I've told many other pupils this before, but I think you should do it. And I'm going to help you and show you the way. Thank you very much because it worked out, Helena. Thank you.

No - and then the second part of the question was Mike Lee asked me two years before we - even before he got the money for the film, even before he knew it was going to actually, really happen - so he said, in the means time, while we're getting this together, will you do me the pleasure of going to learn how to paint? And obviously the goal was to imbue myself in all of the disciplines and all the different things that Turner would have known, but it was more that than becoming as good as Turner. That was - that's like - that's like being told to become as good as Einstein after you've - after you've done Sudoku, you know.

I mean, it was always going to be a tall order. But this brilliant guy Tim Wright did take me through all the disciplines and gave me personal fine art course on and off over two years. And he got me up to such a degree that I did - I was able to paint a full-scale copy of one of his masterpieces - the same size, in oil on canvas. And the received wisdom is it's not bad. I've got it on my wall at home. And I look at it in the morning, and I think, how the hell did I do that, because I certainly couldn't do it again.

GROSS: Let's talk about how you portray Turner. He is portrayed in the movie as a very visual, but not a very verbally oriented person, so he seeks out visual beauty and paints it. And he's very attracted to - you know, to physical beauty, but he's not very good at expressing himself as a speaker. He doesn't speak much. He does a lot of mumbling and grunting. And I want to play a short scene in which you're kind of mumbling in character and grunting a little bit. And in this scene, you're talking to your housekeeper who has been ordering your paints while you've been away, and here we go.

(SOUNDBITE OF FILM, "MR. TURNER")

DOROTHY ATKINSON: (As Hannah Danby) You know the kind.

SPALL: (As J. M. W. Turner) You send the cobalt blue?

ATKINSON: (As Hannah Danby) Put it in a jar. Rum yellow, scarlet light, lead white.

SPALL: (As J. M. W. Turner) Canvases?

ATKINSON: (As Hannah Danby) They put them downstairs for me. Two six-by-fours, three four-by-threes.

SPALL: (As J. M. W. Turner) And gilt?

ATKINSON: (As Hannah Danby) Next week.

SPALL: (As J. M. W. Turner) (Grunting).

GROSS: (Laughter) OK, so we hear this voice that you created for the character with the mumbles, the throat clears, the grunts. How did you end up doing the voice that way? Is there any evidence that Turner spoke that way?

SPALL: There is evidence that he spoke that way. Also, it's slightly misleading to say that most of it is grunting. There are moments in it where he's very, very eloquent. And he speaks...

GROSS: It's true. We'll hear some of that later.

SPALL: You know, it's not all grunting. It's because - I think what it is is that he expresses in his emotions through a series of noises. His intellect - he's very capable of talking in quite a sophisticated way. And it's a reflection of his autodidactic knowledge of growing out of his problematic intellect about what he knows. Although he's not a showoff, the reality is the grunts grew out of when we were discovering and trying to build a man who thought to a million things and felt a million things, but wasn't predisposed to express them because that was the nature - his nature. He had an implosive intellect and an implosive soul that rather than express what he was feeling, it manifests itself in a series of visceral, animalistic sounds.

GROSS: I found myself wondering that if Turner were alive today and if he was like how you depict him in the movie, would he be diagnosed as being someplace on the autism scale because he's very obsessive about his work - totally focused on it - but has so few social skills. And, I mean, for example, he has this relationship with his housekeeper or maid where he basically pays no attention to her, but he occasionally uses her sexually, almost like she was an appliance or something. Like, there's no warmth communicated to her at all, and he thinks nothing of it. He has two adult children that he fathered with his ex-mistress, and he doesn't acknowledge them in any way. Even when they come visit, uninvited, he won't talk with them. So I'm just wondering, like, do you think he'd be diagnosed today if he were alive?

SPALL: I think Turner - to a certain degree, a lot of this you've described suggests that this is just the surface of what you're seeing. I mean, there is a massive amount of subtext that goes underneath all of those things you've described. And hopefully, that is carried along in the character. You do see him being dismissive of his children, but when he finds out one of them has died, he doesn't say anything. But if you observe it carefully, you can see that he is internally in anguish.

He has this relationship with this housekeeper who remained his housekeeper and was his housekeeper for a long, long time. He'd known her since she was 14. He left her very well provided for. He did have a dismissive, slightly selfish relationship with her. But there is a odd kind of perfunctory love under that for her, although he is dismissive. How many people do you know, you know, who do have these relationships? You know, some people's lives are based on perfunctory and dismissive relationships. I don't think he's on the spectrum. I just think he is an uncompromising man who can behave like a swine, can behave dismissively. I mean, at times, he also behaves very generously. He ends up having a very loving relationship with a woman later on in his life.

GROSS: If you're just joining us, my guest is Timothy Spall. He stars in the new film "Mr. Turner," in which he plays the painter J. M. W. Turner. Let's take a short break here, then we'll talk some more. This is FRESH AIR.

(MUSIC)

GROSS: This is FRESH AIR and if you're just joining us, my guest is Timothy Spall who stars in the new Mike Leigh film "Mr. Turner" which is based on the life of the painter J. M. W. Turner. So there's one woman whose inner beauty he really sees. She's not beautiful on the outside. She's not unattractive, but she's an older woman who wears, you know, kind of a white bonnet and - and...

SPALL: She's a working-class seaside landlady. A woman of her time.

GROSS: Right.

SPALL: Uneducated, not stupid, but a very ordinary, unremarkable person apart from having a deeply warm soul, and a person who understands this very unusual man.

GROSS: Yes. So there's this scene where you can see, like, how they're relating to each other. I want to play that scene.

SPALL: Sure.

GROSS: She's a landlady in this seaside community of Margate. He's been renting a room with her because he wants to be near the sea because he's painting the sea. And he's using his middle name, Mallard, because he doesn't want people to know that he's the famous painter Turner. She's Mrs. Booth, and he's looking at her and seeing her inner beauty and is - she's kind of shocked that he sees her as beautiful. So here's the scene between her. She's sitting by the window, and you speak to her.

(SOUNDBITE OF FILM, "MR. TURNER")

SPALL: (As J. M. W. Turner) Mrs. Booth, would you be so kind as to look out the window?

MARION BAILEY: (As Sophia Booth) Sure. What am I looking at?

SPALL: (As J. M. W. Turner) The tip of your nose to the bridge, to the curve of your brow, you put me in mind of a Greek sculpture I'm familiar with of Aphrodite, goddess of love.

BAILEY: (As Sophia Booth) (Laughter) No. No one's ever said that about my nose before - this old snout. Truth to tell, my eyes aren't so good these days. So when I do look in the looking glass, I'd be glad I cannot see so well (laughter).

SPALL: (As J. M. W. Turner) When I peruse myself in a looking glass, I see a gargoyle.

BAILEY: (As Sophia Booth) Now you'll be fishing for compliments, and my own mom used to say, them what fish for compliments don't get none. Besides, it is what's within a person that do matter. I do not know you, Mr. Mallard, and I'm sure there be things about you that are beyond my understanding. But I believe you to be a man of great spirit and fine feeling.

SPALL: (As J. M. W. Turner) Mrs. Booth, you are a woman of profound beauty.

BAILEY: (As Sophia Booth) Mr. Mallard, I am lost for words.

SPALL: (As J. M. W. Turner) (Grunts).

GROSS: There's your grunt. So that was my guest, Timothy Spall, as the painter J. M. W. Turner and Marion Bailey as Mrs. Booth.

SPALL: See, I think that, you know, all the things that we've been to, up to a point are contained in that. You know, he does grunt, but when he - it's a flirtation scene. It's about two incongruous people who are just making an acquaintance and falling in love. And I'm pleased that you played that scene because it does - it does encapsulate an awful lot of his character and the warmer side of his character and the surprising side of his character because when they discovered that he'd had this relationship - he kept this relationship secret - you know, he was the leading light of the Royal Academy.

You know, he was a great mover and shaker. He wasn't a snob. He fell in love with this woman and he kept her secret. OK, he didn't - it wasn't because he was ashamed of her, he just didn't want anybody to know anything about his business. When they discovered this woman was his lover and had been for so long, they were appalled, because - some of them were, some of them weren't - that he'd chosen to be with somebody from such a lowly background, you know. But the fact that she was from the same background as him didn't occur to them. But that is a simple fact, you know.

GROSS: Something that really strikes me about that scene is that, here's this painter who is, you know, obsessed with all things visual, particularly, like, beauty and turbulence and, you know, storms. And he sees his own face as being like a gargoyle. He doesn't think he has any physical beauty and doesn't pay any attention, really, to how he looks. And I'm just interested in that - in that contrast between the physical beauty he's attracted to in others and his thoughts about his own face as being hideous or like a gargoyle.

SPALL: Yeah, well, that's based on the fact, again, you know, when he was a young boy, he had a very inverted gate and a sort of very - his character was implosive. His whole physicality is very strong but very folded in. And it's based on the fact that, as a child, he was - loathed the way he will look. He loathed the fact that he was quite strange. Mumtruck (ph) was the name to call for him, which is slightly stunted and odd and a little bit weird-looking.

And I think, when we were divining - using detective work in the research, a lot of that, also, I think came from his mother's response to him. And his mother is one of the main characters in this film who actually isn't in it it. You only get her - she's only referred to on his father's deathbed. But she's a hugely important character because, nowadays, you talk about - was he on the spectrum? His mother then was regarded as a dangerously violent lunatic. Now, she would be, of course, diagnosed as being a paranoid schizophrenic or bipolar - person with a tendency toward violent outburst.

GROSS: And she was institutionalized for several years.

SPALL: They put her away, yeah. I mean, at the point where he was at his most successful, her condition grew. It became a massive problem because she was, you know, dangerous and unpredictable.

And I think all his life he'd had this terrible fear of her, I think, to a certain degree, and fear of her unpredictability. And it's the end of a long journey about how his father had overcompensated and really looked after - his father was a barber. He grew up in a barbershop in a working-class street in London. He happened to be a barber and wig-maker. But his father, I think, not only was he protecting his son from this poor woman who had this terrible condition by keeping him down in the shop where he painted and drew all day, he also realized his son had this talent.

This talent grew and grew and grew, and some of his customers were artists. And so this boy was growing in this working-class environment, but with all of these unusual mixtures of people. You know, he could go out on the street there would be a group of prostitutes, or there would be a group of costermongers. There would be a group thieves. Or there might be gentleman coming from the opera - the Royal Opera House. So he grew up in this cornucopia of tapestry of a late-Georgian London. And, you know, I think his character is formed very much by that and formed by his mother and his father's cosseting of him because of his mother's influence over him. Now, only in a Mike Leigh film would you be able to say that a character that isn't in it is one of the leading roles because you spend months and months and months creating a whole parallel universe that you exist in to try and - you grow a sort of Turner world.

GROSS: So after all this period of preparation, in which you're learning about people who aren't even going to be in the film, like learning about Turner's mother, just so you have that - just so you can react as if you had that mother, even though we're not going to see her - so after all that, do you finally get an actual script that you are expected to follow?

SPALL: No. It's a very odd thing to explain, because each scene is only based on the improvisations that you've done before - more or less just before you do them. And then your job as the actors and him as the writer-director, you distill what is the essence of these scenes that can be two hours long, down into two-minute scenes. And they are never written down - only by the script supervisor who was the lady in charge of the script, and Mike is conducting you. And so they are absolutely set so they can be used - you can look at them if you need to. And then you present them to the crew, the cameramen and the soundmen, and they look at and they light it and then you shoot it. But you do it slice by slice by slice by slice by slice.

GROSS: Timothy Spall will be back in the second half of the show. He stars in the new film "Mr. Turner." I'm Terry Gross, and this is FRESH AIR.

(MUSIC)

GROSS: This is FRESH AIR. I'm Terry Gross. Let's get back to my interview with Timothy Spall, who stars in the new film "Mr. Turner," for which he won best actor awards from the New York Film Critics Circle and the Cannes Film Festival. He plays the British landscape and seascape painter J. M. W Turner, who died in 1851 at the age of 76. The film was written and directed by Mike Leigh.

Spall has appeared in four other Mike Leigh films, including "Secrets And Lies" and "Topsy-Turvy." He played Peter Pettigrew in several Harry Potter films, and was Winston Churchill in "The King's Speech." "Mr. Turner" opens in New York and LA this Friday and opens wider through January.

GROSS: You know, one of the great things about "Mr. Turner" is that instead of lecturing the audience about the importance of art or the place of beauty in our lives, it just kind of shows it. Like, we don't spend a lot of time seeing his paintings, but there are beautiful sunsets and storms within the movie that he will be painting or that are evocative of his paintings. And there's also some beautiful music, and he's very moved by music. There's a scene - and I can't remember if it's in a church or in somebody's home - where there's a young woman at I think it's a harpsichord - who's...

SPALL: Yeah.

GROSS: ...Singing a song by Henry Purcell's "Dido And Aeneas." And this is "Dido's Lament" that she's singing, which has this beautiful language. It's, when I am laid in earth, may my wrongs create no trouble in thy breast. Remember me, remember me, but forget my fate. And it's...

SPALL: Yeah.

GROSS: ...Such a beautiful scene, and it's such a beautiful song. I'm wondering if you were already familiar with that song before hearing it on set in "Mr. Turner."

SPALL: Yes, I was familiar with it because in fact, you said she's singing it. But what actually happens in the scene is that she's playing a piece of Beethoven. And he goes up to her and tells her that he's a big lover of Henry Purcell. And she starts to play a little bit, and they - then he starts to sing - very ineptly, but with great passion and feeling - that "Dido's Lament," which she prompts him because he can't remember all the words. So she's not singing it...

GROSS: I remember...

SPALL: He's sings it.

GROSS: ...Her singing it. Am I that crazy?

SPALL: No, no, he sings it. He sings it. She's playing a piece of Beethoven. And he goes over and mentions that he's a fan of Purcell, and she starts playing a piece of "Dido And Aeneas," and that is Dido's deathbed song just before she kills herself. And they start to - they improvise singing it together. And it's a moment of ships in the night. It's about two people and there's a lot unsaid in that scene.

And what people take away from that scene - people mention it a lot. And it doesn't explain what that scene is about. But because that song is one of the great songs from opera about someone's lamenting the fact that they're going to kill themselves and they want to be remembered and forget what bad they did - remembered for what good they did - there are resonances in that. And it grew, once again, out of an improvisation that happened - that actress, Karina, who's a brilliant musician as well as a brilliant actress - and has an incredibly strong working knowledge of the classical music. And she just in an improvisation that happened. My character went up to her when we were in character, and that scene - we played that scene out. It lasted for about an hour. And then we turned that scene with Mike Leigh's genius into that scene you see before you.

GROSS: OK, now I have to see the movie again...

SPALL: I mean, Turner was a massive lover of Purcell.

GROSS: Right, let me play the version of that from the film.

(SOUNDBITE OF FILM, "MR. TURNER")

SPALL: (As J.M.W. Turner) (Singing) May my wrongs create no sorrow... .

KARINA FERNANDEZ: (As Miss Coggins) Trouble.

SPALL: (As J.M.W. Turner) (Singing) No trouble in my breast.

FERNANDEZ: (As Miss Coggins) Thy breast.

SPALL: (As J.M.W. Turner) (Singing) In thy breast. Remember me, remember me, but ah...

FERNANDEZ: (As Miss Coggins) Forget my fate.

SPALL: (As J.M.W. Turner) (Singing) Forget my fate. Remember me, but forget my fate.

GROSS: I was reading a question-and-answer thing with you in The Guardian. And one of the questions to you was, what song would you like played at your funeral? And you mentioned "Dido's Lament." (Laughter).

SPALL: Yeah, yeah.

GROSS: But you also mentioned a musical song - a funny song - that I'm not familiar with called "Ain't It Grand To Blooming Well Dead." Would you sing some of that for us?

SPALL: (Singing) Ain't it grand to be blooming well dead. Look at the neighbors blooming well laughing. I mean, it's all about a bloke who's actually dead and watching everybody at his funeral saying what an old sod he was.

(LAUGHTER)

GROSS: We were talking earlier about your voice in this film. You're from a working-class background and, as you say, grew up with a working-class accent or dialect. Then you went to the Royal Academy of the Dramatic Arts in London. Were you trained to change how you speak?

SPALL: No. Thankfully, they stopped doing that in the early '60s. When people - if you did have a regional accent, whether it be London or Yorkshire or Irish, they tried to inculcate the fact that was an impediment to you. And they got you to speak what is otherwise called standard English or RP - received pronunciation - which is the kind of English that grew out of the BBC from the 1950s, where newsreaders used to wear dinner jackets and dressed to read the news, where everybody sounded exactly the same and no one could be divined as to what part of England they were from. They were just generally regarded as being sort of from the upper threshold of society.

Whereas now you allow - when I went to (unintelligible) if you were an ike like me from South London, as long as you were able to do other accents when you were performing them, they didn't seem to mind. That doesn't still mean that every time you open your gob in England, you don't betray your origins because you do.

GROSS: So have you done Shakespeare and did you have to do, like, a Shakespearean accent for it?

SPALL: There's no such thing as a Shakespearean accent.

GROSS: I know. But you know what I mean. Yeah.

SPALL: I have played kings. I have played princes. I have played aristocrats. I have played people from all different types of backgrounds.

GROSS: My guest is Timothy Spall. He stars in the new film "Mr. Turner." We'll talk more after a break. This is FRESH AIR.

(MUSIC)

GROSS: If you're just joining us, my guest is Timothy Spall. And he stars as the painter J. M. W. Turner in the new Mike Leigh film "Mr. Turner."

I want to ask you about a turning point in your life, which could have been the end of your life. In 1996 you were diagnosed with acute myeloid leukemia. Did you know something was wrong when you were diagnosed? Could you tell?

SPALL: Yeah. I had to sit down every three minutes, and I was covered in bruises, and I was falling asleep all the time. So I had a feeling there was something wrong with me. I wasn't in pain, and I was about to go to the Cannes Film Festival. And I thought I'd just go and see my doctor, and I got a call the following day - he took one look at me. He didn't say anything. He just took about five gallons of blood out of me and sent me away, and he said I'll let you know.

And the following day he phoned me up and said, I'm sorry, old boy, you've got leukemia. I said, I can't have leukemia. I've got a job to do. I've got to go to Cannes tomorrow. He said, no, my dear boy, you're not going to Cannes, you're going to hospital. So that was a bit of a life-changer. I went in a hospital. Mike Leigh, Brenda Blethyn, Marianne Jean-Baptiste and others went to Cannes. And "Secrets And Lies" won the Palme d'Or, and Brenda won best actress. So and the rest is history. I watched them walking down the red carpet at Cannes in 1997 with a pipe being inserted into my heart to give me the electric soup called chemo-therapy that saved my life.

GROSS: You know, this is an example of my theory that sometimes when something wonderful is happening to you professionally something horrible is going on in your personal life at the same time, like you're sick...

SPALL: Well, there's no doubt about that.

GROSS: Or a family member's sick. Yeah.

SPALL: What I'd like to - I'd like to take this occasion to say on air a tribute to my best friend who died yesterday.

GROSS: I'm so sorry.

SPALL: Well, thank you. And his name is Reynold Silver. I got an award from the New York Critics Circle, and my best friend died. And I'd like to just make this interview a tribute to him, Mr. Reynold Silver, I just thought I'd like to say that as you were saying that.

GROSS: Well, why don't you elaborate a little bit more? Tell us something about your relationship with him.

SPALL: Reynold Silver was a dear friend of mine. I was a writer with him believe it or not in 1976. So I've known him for coming on 40 years. He had the good sense of giving up acting because he couldn't take the indignity of it and devoted his time to becoming a teacher in a very unglamorous school, in a very unglamorous part of London - in Islington. Most of his school kids - well, half of them - were a lot of girls from immigrant countries who'd come in from Africa and Asia into this working-class part of London. And he devoted his time to trying to teach them about Shakespeare and poetry, and he did a very good job.

You know, he was a man, you know, one of the great heroes of life I think that people we forget. We're so used to celebrating celebrities, whatever that word means, that we forget that there are people out there like doctors and people who saved my life. And people like my dear friend, Renny, who devoted his life to teaching - not for a great deal of money - kids who really weren't expected to achieve anything academically, and he even managed to help a few into Oxford and Cambridge. So, you know, this is my tribute to you, dear Reynold.

GROSS: Was his death unexpected?

SPALL: God bless you.

He'd been ill for - he got ill about 18 months ago, but then recovered. And then in the last two weeks, he declined very rapidly and died in his sleep yesterday.

GROSS: Well, I'm very sorry for your loss.

SPALL: Well, thank you very much. And thank you for allowing me to talk about him because I loved him, and I shall miss him forevermore.

GROSS: Yeah.

So can I ask you when you were very sick, were doctors preparing you for the possibility that you might die?

SPALL: No. They didn't because they never do when you have a serious - unless you ask them. They did tell me that I had a - I think it was they said, look, things are looking good. You've got a 60-40 chance of surviving this these days. Twenty years ago, you'd have had a 70-30 chance of not surviving it. So they do point out to you that there is - because the cure is so particular, and has its massive side effects. It's a bit of a riot, I have to say - the cure for IML. Not everybody goes through it, but it does take its toll, but it works. And funny enough my friend Reynold - Renny - I remember him calling me up and saying - I'm saying to him, you know, Ren, I might die. He said, oh, don't be ridiculous. You're not going to die. You are not going to die. You're going to be fine. You're going to outlive us all, my dear. So there you go.

But, no, it did - it was a massive odyssey. It was a journey that I had to go through. And I had a growing family. I had young children and a wife. And my wife who now travels with me everywhere not because she nearly lost me, but because my kids all grow up. And my son's now a very successful actor, Rafe Spall. But no, it was a very tough period. But very, very tough period and some people don't make it. I was one of the lucky ones, I did.

GROSS: Can you think of a role that you played subsequent to your illness where you felt you were drawing on the suffering you experienced when you were sick?

SPALL: All of them. It doesn't matter as to whether you have to sublimate it or not. Whoever the character is, you know, going through it because I think, you know, your job as an actor, particularly a character actor who doesn't act to make the character fit you. My job as a character actor is to make me fit the character, to serve the character. So you have to use massive amounts of empathy. And often you're playing people that aren't very pleasant - as in the case of Mr. Turner, a man of massive contradictions.

So you need to be able to go down in your imagination, and dig deep to find out what makes people tick. And I think anything that increases your understanding of the human condition, and I do not for one second profess to be in any way, you know, special about this because I think age in life just makes you just if you're lucky think deeper. And the other thing it makes you realize is that you never stop learning, and you never lose your fear of getting it wrong because I've been around a long time. But I'm terribly aware that there's so many things I need to know, you know? There's so many things that I still - I don't think I've got it right yet, you know.

GROSS: Let's just end with this - name one or two of the movies and one of two of the actors that really inspired you.

SPALL: Oh, I think I remember sitting down at home once when I was about 8 or 9 and watching "Richard III" with Laurence Olivier playing Richard III in that famous film. And I can remember being absolutely terrified, and completely enthralled by this thing that I didn't understand. I didn't really know who he was, what it was, but I remember being exhilarated by it. It was like - you know, it was like a crack of thunder. It just made a massive imprint on my little sort of unformed brain. And then later on because I spent a hell of a lot of time being a lazy little tyke at home, I had watched a lot of television. And in them days when I was a kid there was lots of old films on. So the next person that really affected me was Charles Laughton when I saw "The Hunchback Of Notre Dame..."

GROSS: That is one of my favorite movies. And I was thinking about "The Hunchback Of Notre Dame..."

SPALL: Yeah.

GROSS: When your character says that he thinks he looks like a gargoyle because...

SPALL: Yeah.

GROSS: ...Certainly in "The Hunchback Of Notre Dame," in which the hunchback rings the bells in the cathedral of Notre Dame, he sits on the gargoyles all the time, and even says, why wasn't I made of stone like these? You've talked about how you improvise in Mike Leigh films...

SPALL: Yeah.

GROSS: And I'm wondering if the word gargoyle was yours when Turner in "Mr. Turner" compares himself to a gargoyle. Was that your wording that - were you thinking of Charles Laughton in "The Hunchback Of Notre Dame" when you said that?

SPALL: Well, it did grow out of an organic moment, and I did come up with it in an improvisation. But as to whether I was directly thinking about him, I don't know. But it was more based on my research about what I knew Turner felt about how he looked. As to whether it was a little thing that popped out of my admiration and my love of someone like Charles Laughton, it could be, who knows? All these things, you know, any port in a storm - you just hope when you're trying to create something out of the blue with the use of your imagination, you'll take anything, wherever it came from.

GROSS: Right. Timothy Spall, it's been great to talk with you. Thank you so much.

SPALL: My pleasure. Nice to talk to you. Thank you for listening.

GROSS: Timothy Spall recorded last week. He stars in the new movie "Mr. Turner," for which he won best actor awards from the New York Film Critics Circle and at the Cannes Film Festival. "Mr. Turner" opens in New York and LA this Friday, and opens wider through January. Coming up our book critic Maureen Corrigan runs through her list of the best books of the year. This is FRESH AIR.

TERRY GROSS, HOST: This is FRESH AIR. Our book critic Maureen Corrigan has put together her list of the best books of the year. Here's the list.

MAUREEN CORRIGAN, BYLINE: For this year's best books of the year list, I reject the tyranny of the decimal system. Some years, it's more than 10. Here, then, are my top 12 books of 2014. "The Dept. of Speculation" by Jenny Offill is a slim novel whose lingering after-effects belie its size. It follows a young woman as she haltingly moves through marriage and a motherhood rattled by colic, only to be slammed to a full stop by her husband's infidelity. Offill's departures from traditional form make this old story feel painfully fresh again. For instance, a chapter entitled "How Are You" is followed by these two words repeated by our betrayed heroine for page and a half - so scared, so scared, so scared.

Brian Morton also experiments with form in his witty and affecting short novel "Florence Gordon," about a 75-year-old icon of the second-wave women's movement who's cranky enough to walk out on her own surprise birthday party just because she wants to get back to writing her memoirs.

Humor is also a big selling point of Julie Schumacher's "Dear Committee Members." This epistolary novel is composed of a year's worth of recommendation letters written by a weary professor. The gem of a law school recommendation letter this professor writes for a cut-throat undergrad whom he's known for all of 11 minutes is alone worth the price of Schumacher's smart and ultimately moving book.

One more novel that upends conventional form is Ben Lerner's "10:04," a language drunk tale of a young writer in New York which he calls the sinking city. That's because "10:04" is book-ended by two historic hurricanes that threaten New York - Hurricane Irene and Hurricane Sandy.

Sandy also looms large in the four wry and melancholy stories in Richard Ford's "Let Me Be Frank With You," which marked the return of his New Jersey everyman hero, Frank Bascombe. Ron Rash's beautiful short story collection "Something Rich And Strange" focuses on everyman and everywoman figures in Appalachia. These stories roam from the Civil War through the Great Depression and into a present where moonshine stills have been replaced by home-grown meth labs.

Even though it takes place in France and Germany during the harsh rigors of World War II, Anthony Doerr's magical adventure novel "All The Light We Cannot See" is far, far away from the stripped-down realities of Rash's world. A blind French girl and her father become the hapless custodians of the Sea of Flames, a rare diamond that Hitler desires for his treasure trove. Doerr refers to the work of Jules Vern and Alexandre Dumas, and his own sweeping plot and sumptuous language place Doerr in the same category as those master storytellers.

Sarah Waters spins a pretty wild yarn herself in "The Paying Guests," an eerie tale of a genteel mother and daughter forced to take in lodgers after World War I. Eerie is also the word for Tana French's mystery "The Secret Place," the fifth in her superb Dublin murder squad series. "The Secret Place" pries opened the hermetically sealed world of a girls' prep school and lets readers peer into the toxic stew of hormones and homicidal rivalries roiling within.

Now onto nonfiction - Roz Chast's "Can't We Talk About Something More Pleasant?" is a brilliant graphic memoir of Chast's own adventures in caring for her two elderly parents. Chast captures the whole megillah of elder care, from the exhaustion and looniness of clearing out her parents Brooklyn apartment, stuffed with old bank books and toasters, to the final moments of their lives. Hector Tobar's triumph of a tale of extreme endurance "Deep Down Dark" recounts the ordeal of the 33 Chilean miners buried alive for 69 days under a mountain of fallen rock.

And finally, here's my nominee for book of the year. It's a work of nonfiction, even though I think this was a stronger year for fiction. Greg Grandin's "The Empire Of Necessity" describes the real-life slave revolt in 1805 on a ship called the Trial, anchored off the coast of Chile. That revolt inspired Herman Melville's 1855 floating Gothic masterpiece of a short novel "Benito Cereno." In Grandin's previous book, the much-acclaimed Fordlandia, he chronicled how Henry Ford tried to establish a utopian version of small-town America in the middle of the Brazilian rainforest. In "The Empire Of Necessity," Grandin takes readers on a tour of the hell of the slave trade in the Americas. I read the "Empire Of Necessity" way back in January, and it's haunted me ever since. In fact, all of these disparate books on my best of the year list contain characters, scenes or voices that linger long past the last page of their stories.

GROSS: Maureen Corrigan teaches literature at Georgetown University and is the author of the new book "So We Read On: How The Great Gatsby Came To Be And Why It Endures." You'll find her best books of the year list, as well as 200 more book recommendations from NPR staff and critics, on our website, freshair.npr.org.

Transcripts are created on a rush deadline, and accuracy and availability may vary. This text may not be in its final form and may be updated or revised in the future. Please be aware that the authoritative record of Fresh Air interviews and reviews are the audio recordings of each segment.

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