WENHAM, DAVID: The Boys
WENHAM DOES VENOM
It's often been said that both the stage and
screen versions of The Boys were loosely based on the infamous Anita Cobby murder. Not true, David Wenham tells PAUL FISCHER.
"The play was written nine years ago as a workshop at a Playwrights'
Conference in Canberra, then a year later there was a workshop that I was involved with for the Griffin Theatre Company, then
a year after that, we went into production. By the time we'd gone into production, it wasn't too far removed from that particular
case, so people IMMEDIATELY assumed that that's what the play was about." Wenham adds that the play was written "in response
to a series of crimes that occurred all around Australia over a long period of time. In fact it was more based on a family
that lived next door to the playwright in the outer suburbs of Perth. So I guess it was either fortunate or unfortunate that
the Cobby thing happened, and it's fine, but when we did the stage production, it was soon after that particular crime, and
the media circus was huge, so they couldn't see past that."
"I've come
across many people like Brett."
Ultimately, however, the role of the unnervingly
venomous Brett was a defining moment in the life and career of David Wenham, and a role that immediately brought some exciting
new challenges for the young actor. "I could see that he was an extremely complex individual, and the danger with playing
something like this is to portray him as two-dimensional Mr Evil, which I don't think is the case. The depths within the character
are far greater than just that, and the reasons behind some of the events that unfold in the story are extremely complicated.
His emotional range is HUGE, possibly greater than the average person, which I suppose is what makes him a fascinating individual."
"He is extremely charismatic, and capable,
on the one hand of intense love, and on the other hand, of the most tremendous violence. So it's the balance between the two
extremes within the individual that makes him fascinating." Wenham found it easy to identify with this character. "I've come
across many people like Brett."
Since the success of the play, Wenham has
always believed that there was a film waiting to emerge, and stuck with the project through it's metamorphosis from stage
to screen, to the point where he now serves as the film's associate producer. "That was always going to happen, because I
was always convinced that it would make a great film, as long as we added a certain cinematic depth to the material, which
I believe we have."
"The film
was never about THE CRIME, but the events leading up to it."
The film explores various aspects of family
behaviour, of the fragmented family unit, torn asunder over the years. In some ways, Wenham argues, Brett retains an idealised
sense of family duty, which ultimately has darker consequences. "I suppose that everything that he does is an attempt to bring
this family together as a unit, and in an attempt to create order, he actually goes through a method of creating chaos." Though
the film explores what it is that can lead to atrocious violence, one of the strengths of the film, is that the ultimate violent
act perpetuated by the brothers is never shown on screen, nor was there ever a temptation to do so. "The film was never about
THE CRIME, but the events leading up to it. It was a search, on our part, for understanding. We don't come up with any solutions."
Despite Wenham playing such a dark and chilling
character, there's no danger of the actor being typecast; after he all, he recently played a nerdy scientist in Peter Duncan's
A Little Bit of Soul. Wenham is riding high now, first co-starring opposite Sigrid Thornton in the new ABC tv series, Sea
Change, which he describes "as an awful lot of fun". Next it's off to Hawaii, to work with Peter O'Toole in the new Paul Cox
film.