Jeremy Irons
From his breakout roles in "The French Lieutenant's Woman" and the U.K. miniseries "Brideshead Revisited," Irons has been in more than 40 movies, at least as many plays, and has won just about every acting award" the Academy Award, the Tony, the Emmy, the Golden Globe and the SAG Awards. "I've been very lucky," he said.
By CBSNews.com senior editor David Morgan
The novel's tricky narrative and multiple endings were creatively adapted by Harold Pinter to a story of a film crew shooting a period romance, with the drama intercut between fiction and "reality."
Irons told CBS News' Tracy Smith that he was "slightly embarrassed" at the prospect of playing von Bulow, and in fact "fought off playing him for a while, because he was alive and I thought there was something tasteless about pretending to be someone who was still alive. And so I fought against it. Finally it was Glenn Close who persuaded me. She said, 'If you don't play him someone else will play him. You know, come on. Have a crack at it. It's interesting.'"
Close was right: the performance earned him the Oscar for Best Actor.
"He is a complex character," Irons told CBS News. "Any pope with 12 children would be."
"It's so nice to need to be aged still," Irons joked on "CBS This Morning." "Days will come when I won't have to be aged any longer."
"But let's not just sit here and wait and say, 'It's no good if we do anything because what about China and India?' That's not the way to live."
"I wanted to make a documentary about something which I thought was important and which was curable," he told CBS News' Tracy Smith. "It's not rocket science."
For more info:
"Trashed" (Official site)
By CBS News.com senior editor David Morgan