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Sherlock

Benedict Cumberbatch is a highly talented working actor. Since 2004 alone, he has played roles in just about every medium imaginable: stage, radio, television, film, even audio CD. His roles include some impressive names: Dr. Frankenstein, the Creature, Sherlock Holmes, Vincent Van Gogh, T.S. Eliot, William Pitt, Stephen Hawking.


He is also about to be cast, against type, as an international celebrity, possibly his trickiest role to date.


An Impressive Body of Work


Cumberbatch’s work has earned him quite the professional reputation, as well as a measure of fame. In 2004, he was nominated for a BAFTA and won a Monte Carlo TV Award for the miniseries Hawking. In 2006, he won the London Critics Circle’s British Breakthrough award for playing William Pitt in the film, Amazing Grace. In 2008 he was nominated for a Satellite Award for his performance in The Last Enemy.


And then there’s Sherlock, probably Cumberbatch’s only role with which most Americans are familiar—if they tuned in to PBS or picked up the TV series’ DVDs in the past few months. Americans quite possibly learned more about the series and actor as a result of Sherlock’s massive online publicity. Print and video reviews, interviews, and red carpet highlights showcased the series and its leads, Cumberbatch and Martin Freeman (as John Watson).


During mid-March’s Royal Television Society Awards, Sherlock received recognition as best drama series. In late March, the British Press Guild recognized Cumberbatch’s talent by presenting him the best actor award. Since the series’ debut on BBC in July 2010, Sherlock, and the actor playing the title role, have continued to earn nominations or awards just as steadily as the series has conquered international entertainment markets. (By March 2011, the first season, consisting only of three 90-minute episodes, had been broadcast in more than 30 countries.) Almost everyone in the media seems to be a fan.


Recent publicity for Sherlock has been matched only by the volume of press surrounding Danny Boyle’s direction of the National Theatre’s Frankenstein. In Nick Dear’s adaptation, Cumberbatch and Jonny Lee Miller alternate playing Dr. Frankenstein and his Creature, roles in which both actors have wowed the majority of critics, and fans queue for hours for coveted day tickets to the sold-out performances.


By the conclusion of the play’s run in early May, Cumberbatch also will have completed more episodes of BBC Radio 4’s Cabin Pressure. Then filming begins on the next block of three movie-length Sherlock episodes, and undoubtedly the press will begin the next round of interviews. For Cumberbatch, these projects and their publicity will mean greater acclaim, fame, and opportunities for more high-profile (and presumably higher-paycheck) roles.


The actor already has completed roles in films that seem certain to gain widespread attention later this year:  Steven Spielberg’s War Horse and a remake of John le Carré’s Tinker, Tailor, Soldier, Spy. Cumberbatch previously has been seen in such big films as Atonement and The Other Boleyn Girl, as well as independent films Four Lions and the about-to-be-released Third Star. Nevertheless, these films pale in comparison to the publicity surrounding a Spielberg film, especially one scheduled for release during the holidays and Academy Award nomination season.


Cumberbatch’s body of work is indeed impressive. So what has previously prevented his transformation from a highly talented, sought-after actor to bona fide international celebrity?


Required for Celebrity: An Impressive Body, Not Necessarily of Work


A January 2011 Independent article described the actor as one who “doesn’t possess the obvious, symmetrical looks of a star,” nevertheless adding that “it’s about time” for the 34-year-old actor to become the “Next Big Thing”. Cumberbatch himself commented in a 2010 Esquire interview that his face is “very period… I’m a bit of an oddity in a modern context… But I’ve tried very hard not to be typecast as the posh character in a period drama.” In that interview he also wondered what it would be like to be an actor with the face of, say, a Jake Gyllenhaal.


Whatever the actor or critics may say to or about his face, fans have been duly impressed with not only the physicality of his performance as the Creature in Frankenstein, but with his physique, so much so that Boyle ensured his actors were suitably covered during the National Theatre Live’s globally broadcast performance. Well aware of Internet fandom and interest in seeing the Creature up close and personal, the National Theatre did not want to limit the choice of camera angles during the play’s extended nude scene. The nature of NTL broadcasts makes the policing of illegal recordings impossible.


As the Creature, Cumberbatch’s body is on display, but the performance transforms the actor into an entirely new being.  The actor’s body is an instrument used in service of a role. Even so, some fan galleries display nude shots not only from the current play but screen caps from previous films or series in which Cumberbatch has bared all.


No role has inspired fangirl lust more than Sherlock. His lean body and striking cheekbones have captivated Cumberbatch’s fans, many who identify themselves as “Cumberbitches”. In addition to the tamer fan sites full of testimonials of those lucky enough to meet the actor in person, sexually explicit fan fiction and art adorn many a web site frequented by the actor’s increasing number of fans.


The actor is well aware of his growing fame and joked about the strangeness of fandom on Alan Carr’s Chatty Man television show. The fact that one Sherlock fan sent him a riding crop (a prop used in the series’ opening scene) made the actor chuckle at the fan’s cleverness and novelty. In the brave new world of celebrity, such gifts are to be expected.


The Unnatural Nature of Celebrity


“Celebrity” has become a cornerstone of popular culture, but who and where one achieves that designation often supersedes the reason behind being labeled as a celebrity. As Cumberbatch’s more frequent appearance on British talk or quiz shows indicates, he already is a celebrity in the UK. Global celebrity, however, most often is reserved for those who also achieve notoriety or fame in the US—a very ethnocentric notion about Americans as the determiners of international celebrity. However, there is a growing split between what is considered celebrity worthy and what, especially outside the US, is deemed artistically meritorious.


The notion of “celebrity” as defined in the US may be losing its luster, even as more people want to become celebrities and gain television or Internet fame. For example, if a Snooki is considered a “celebrity” because of a reality television show, the label no longer seems as exclusive as it was when only the highest paid movie stars primarily were celebrated as famous and had earned the right to be celebrities. Perhaps the discrepancy between art and celebrity became glaringly apparent with the recent selection of and payment for a “celebrity” guest speaker at Rutgers. The speaker fee promised to Jersey Shore’s Snooki was higher than that given to renowned author Toni Morrison. In the US in this decade, reality-television celebrity trumps traditional definitions of talent or career achievement.


Frankenstein

Frankenstein


Although the UK has its share of tabloid “celebrities”, the nature of celebrity is often more clearly demarcated from talent or artistic merit. Benedict Cumberbatch is a case in point. His work is well known (at least in the UK), and he has gained critical acclaim and international recognition for outstanding performances. However, because Cumberbatch’s primary claim to fame in the US is Sherlock, his value as “celebrity” is much lower in the US than abroad.


In the US he is largely unknown, except by a large Internet fandom who shares personal and professional information about the actor on fan sites like Benedict Cumberbatch Online, Benedict Cumberbatch Fan, or Cumberbatchweb. Fans in the UK who have greater access to the actor himself as well as his performances post blogs and tweet; they share links to British newspaper or magazine interviews and YouTube videos of UK talk and award shows. Although the National Theatre Live broadcasts and the popularity of Sherlock are helping Americans get to know Cumberbatch, Internet fandom provides a wealth of information that Americans are otherwise unable to receive.

Lynnette Porter is the author of Tarnished Heroes, Charming Villains, and Modern Monsters: Science Fiction in Shades of Gray on 21st Century Television (McFarland, 2010), LOST's Buried Treasures (Sourcebooks, 2010), and other books and chapters about television or film. Forthcoming books include The Hobbits: The Many Lives of Bilbo, Frodo, Sam, Merry, and Pippin (Tauris) and, from McFarland, Doctor Who in America and Sherlock Holmes in the 21st Century (working titles). All three should be published in 2012. Dr. Porter is a professor in the Humanities and Social Sciences Department at Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University in Daytona Beach, Florida.


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