Christopher Eccleston: Kes inspired me to smash Oxbridge ivory towers

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Christopher Eccleston
Image caption,

Eccleston has said the film changed his view of art and culture

Christopher Eccleston has said Ken Loach's Kes changed his view of "art and culture for working class people" and inspired him to take up acting to smash Oxbridge's "ivory towers".

The 59-year-old star recently read A Kestrel for a Knave, the book that inspired the 1969 film, for BBC Four.

He said Loach's film of a boy who bonds with a kestrel had been the "most important cultural event" of his life.

The Salford-born actor added that it was the "greatest British film ever".

The film, which was released a year after Barry Hines's novel, won several awards when it was first released and was later ranked seventh in the British Film Institute's list of the 100 greatest British films of the 20th Century.

Image source, Getty Images
Image caption,

Kes, which starred David Bradley in the lead role, tells the story of a working class boy who bonds with a kestrel

The former Doctor Who star, whose career has taken in films, television and the stage, told BBC North West Tonight that seeing it as a child inspired him to "smash down the ivory towers built by Oxbridge and public school and get into the arts world".

"It changed my entire view of myself, of art and culture for working class people," he said.

"It was an absolutely transformative experience."

The film tells the story of Billy Casper, a working class boy who finds hope and fulfilment when he adopts a young kestrel and begins training it.

Eccleston said he was "completely and utterly beguiled by the idea that a working class individual like myself and my brothers and my mother and father could have a wonderful skill and could have a dream to be lifted from the pit, as in Billy's case, or the factories in my mum and dad's and my case".

"I saw the film before I read the book and it changed my life entirely," he said.

Image source, Oldham Coliseum
Image caption,

Oldham Coliseum closed its doors in March

He also spoke about the closure of Oldham Coliseum, where his performance of the book was recorded.

The theatre, which was forced to shut after losing all of its funding from Arts Council England, was a training ground for a host of stars including Bernard Cribbins, Jean Alexander, Barbara Knox and William Roache.

Eccleston appeared there on its final night, performing excerpts from an adaptation of Loach's film I, Daniel Blake alongside Maxine Peake.

He said there was "now a fight going on to resurrect the Oldham Coliseum in a new building" and it was hoped the original stage could be moved to any new site.

"It's a beautiful old theatre and while the building around it is no longer fit for purpose, the idea of a Coliseum theatre in Oldham is essential," he said.

Oldham Council previously said it hoped to build a new £24m theatre on Greaves Street and a new public space to stage outdoor events as part of its cultural quarter.

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