Warner Bros.
Legendary actor Michael Caine recently released a new memoir titled Don’t Look Back, You’ll Trip Over: My Guide to Life, and in it, the two-time Academy Award-winning actor praised the performance of his late The Dark Knight co-star, Heath Ledger.
Heath Ledger’s performance as Joker in The Dark Knight has been hailed as one of the best performances of the 21st century ever since the film was released in 2008. As one of the film’s star, Michael Caine was one of the first people in the world to witness Ledger’s performance and seemed to immediately know it was something special.
In the memoir, Caine says that he was “terrified” of Ledger, while also mourning his loss and marveling at the actor he was and could have become.
“The smeared makeup, the weird hair, the strange voice. It was chilling. Absolutely floored me the first time I saw him in action – I was terrified… Heath was only 28 when he passed away. I hadn’t even made Zulu when I was that age. You think of what he might have gone on to achieve, it’s just heartbreaking,” Caine writes in his new memoir Don’t Look Back, You’ll Trip Over: My Guide to Life, via NME.
“We were all terribly shocked, and it made doing the publicity for The Dark Knight that summer much more intense, because all the journalists wanted to talk about his death. It still makes me sad to think of it… [it’s] a performance for the ages. Even though his career was cut short so soon, he’ll be remembered as a great actor, I believe,” the 92-year-old continued.
Caine’s genuine fear of Ledger’s performance as Joker is well-documented, as it was previously revealed that he was supposed to have a line when Joker arrives at the Harvey Dent fundraiser but he forgot to say it because he was so shaken.
In ‘The Dark Knight’ (2008), during the fundraiser scene, Alfred was supposed to have some dialogue when the Joker first shows up, but it was Michael Caine’s first time seeing Heath Ledger as the Joker and he was so scared that he forgot all of his linespic.twitter.com/CA5ZaAfqCk
— Film Facts 🎬 (@Factsonfilm) May 14, 2021
The year after his death, Ledger posthumously won the Academy Award for Best Supporting Actor for his portrayal of Joker. Furthermore, due to outrage over The Dark Knight not being nominated for Best Picture, the Academy expanded the field of contenders from 5 to up-to-10 the following year.
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