LONDON, Feb. 28, 2007

Critics: Harry Potter Actor Works Magic

But Anti-Smoking Groups Are Upset Over Daniel Radcliffe's On-Stage Puffing

  • Play CBS Video Video Potter Actor Sheds His Cloak

    The star of "Harry Potter," Daniel Radcliffe, is shedding more than his film persona on Britain's West End. Richard Roth reports on what critics are saying about "Equus" and Radcliffe's nude scene.

  • Video Harry Potter, All Grown Up

    Daniel Radcliffe, the British actor best known as Harry Potter, is causing a sensation on the London stage. He reveals himself in a very adult play in the West End. Charlie D'Agata reports.

  • Video Harry Potter Star On New Film

    It's year four at the Hogwarts School and Harry is facing the problems that any teenage wizard might face. Actor Daniel Radcliffe discussed the eagerly awaited "Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire."

  • Daniel Radcliffe in a publicity shot for the London production of

    Daniel Radcliffe in a publicity shot for the London production of "Equus."  (Uli Weber/www.equustheplay.com)

(CBS)  Actor Daniel Radcliffe said he took a risk when he shed his wizard's robe and Harry Potter eyeglassses, along with everything else, for his West End stage debut as a troubled stable boy in Peter Shaffer's "Equus."

Today, critics are saying the risk was worth it, reports CBS News correspondent Richard Roth from London.

Says Quentin Lett, critic for The Daily Mail, "This, if you like, is Harry Potter in the raw. In the physical sense but much much more than that, it's in the raw psychological and he gives a tidy performance. "

Writes Michael Billington in The Guardian: "Forget all the prurient press speculation about Harry Potter's private parts," referring to a scene at the end where Radcliffe is nude. "The revelation in this revival is that Daniel Radcliffe really can act."

Even before Tuesday's opening night at the Gielgud Theatre, the Internet was awash with anticipation and outrage. In the play, Radcliffe strips naked. He simulates sex. He smokes.

Radcliffe, 17, said taking on the role of Alan Strang, a disturbed young man whose obsession drives him to blind horses with a metal spike, "was a risk but it was an exciting one. But if you never took a risk it would just be diabolical and boring all the time."

Although the play, with its nudity, has been controversial for decades, Radcliffe said, "The nudity for me was just something that came with the character, it wasn't something that attracted me to the part or repelled me, it was just a thing."

He added that he took the role partly from a desire "to shake up people's perception of me."

On those grounds, the play was a success before it opened. Hundreds of Potter fans have swarmed the theater during previews. Canny marketing — including carefully cropped publicity photos of Radcliffe's naked torso — has helped the production sell $3.1 million worth of tickets in advance. Ticket prices range from about $100 to $38.

But not everyone is happy.

The anti-smoking group ASH said Radcliffe's onstage cigarette was "regrettable." The group said it feared Radcliffe's status as a role model might encourage young people to start smoking. Warner Bros., the studio behind the Harry Potter movies, issued a statement denying reports that it was unhappy with Radcliffe's edgy new image. The studio said it considered Radcliffe a "great collaborator" and supported the "artistic choices he makes as an actor."

Radcliffe said he saw the stage nudity that comes with the role as "a rite of passage."

"That iconic scene is the physical and emotional climax of the play," he was quoted as saying by The Daily Telegraph newspaper. "So if I do that with pants on, it would be crap."

He said he took the part in a bid to move beyond Harry and assert his acting credentials. "With this, they can say I'm good or terrible, but the one thing they can't say is I haven't challenged myself."

"Equus" opened in 1973 at London's National Theatre, before a successful run on Broadway starring Anthony Hopkins. Richard Burton and Peter Firth starred in a 1977 film version.

The new production co-stars Richard Griffiths — Harry's dastardly Uncle Vernon in the Potter movies and a Tony Award winner last year for "The History Boys" — as a psychiatrist who interviews the troubled youth.

This nudity doesn't seem to have put off his Harry Potter fans. "I thought he was a bit hot before...as well, " one young woman told CBS, laughing. "Yeah, yeah, he's cool." A young French fan said, " I think its nice for him. He can't stay Harry Potter forever."

But Radcliffe will have to remain as Harry Potter for a while longer. He returns as the teenage wizard in "Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix," slated for release July 13. The sixth Potter film, "Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince," is due to start filming this summer, after the run of "Equus" ends in June.


© MMVII, CBS Interactive Inc. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. The Associated Press contributed to this report.
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by jimbo505 February 28, 2007 7:05 PM EST
test
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by jimbo505 February 28, 2007 7:05 PM EST
test
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by plutonia67 February 28, 2007 6:43 PM EST
He had to grow up eventually!
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by plutonia67 February 28, 2007 6:05 PM EST
We all grow up sometime
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by plutonia67 February 28, 2007 5:04 PM EST
We all grow up at some point!
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by margosnow February 28, 2007 12:23 PM EST
***Quit*** ***relying*** ***on*** ***other*** ***people*** (***really*** ***what*** ***you*** ***want*** ***are*** ***censors***) ***and*** ***television*** ***to*** ***raise*** ***your*** ***children*** ***and*** ***raise*** ***them*** ***yourselves***, ***with*** ***whatever*** ***morals*** ***you*** ***approve*** ***of***. ***Stay*** ***away*** ***from*** ***anything*** ***that*** ***doesn***'***t*** ***fit*** ***your*** ***ideas*** ***of*** &***quot***;***good*** ***morals***&***quot***;.

***This*** ***kid*** ***has*** ***worked*** ***hard*** ***and*** ***deserves*** ***to*** ***grow*** ***beyond*** ***the*** ***children***'***s*** ***character*** ***he*** ***played***.

***The*** ***comparison*** ***with*** ***Britney*** ***Spears*** ***is*** ***absurd***. ***She***'***s*** ***a*** ***singer***; ***he***'***s*** ***an*** ***actor***.

***Remember***, ***too***, ***that*** ***anti***-***smoking*** ***orgs*** ***have*** ***to*** ***put*** ***out*** ***statements*** ***like*** ***this*** ***to*** ***prove*** ***their*** ***relevancy***. ***And*** ***re*** ***Stezzer***'***s*** ***comment***, ***we*** ***have*** ***plenty*** ***of*** ***anti***-***smoking*** ***laws*** ***over*** ***here***--***in*** ***fact***, ***if*** ***they*** ***bring*** ***it*** ***to*** ***Broadway***, ***they*** ***aren***'***t*** ***allowed*** ***to*** ***have*** ***him*** ***smoke*** ***on*** ***stage*** ***unless*** ***they*** ***get*** ***a*** ***permit***! ***We***'***re*** ***heavily*** ***regulated*** ***too***....

***dgshiner*** ***is*** ***right***--***YOU*** ***should*** ***be*** ***your*** ***kid***'***s*** ***hero***.
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by anopinion1 February 28, 2007 12:21 PM EST
***remember*** ***makuly*** ***kulkin*** ***however*** ***you*** ***spell*** ***it***

***he*** ***will*** ***end*** ***up*** ***the*** ***same*** ***way***
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by margosnow February 28, 2007 12:18 PM EST
Quit relying on other people (really what you want are censors) and television to raise your children and raise them yourselves, with whatever morals you approve of. Stay away from anything that doesn't fit your ideas of "good morals".

This kid has worked hard and deserves to grow beyond the children's character he played.

The comparison with Britney Spears is absurd. She's a singer; he's an actor.

Remember, too, that anti-smoking orgs have to put out statements like this to prove their relevancy. And re Stezzer's comment, we have plenty of anti-smoking laws over here--in fact, if they bring it to Broadway, they aren't allowed to have him smoke on stage unless they get a permit! We're heavily regulated too....

dgshiner is right--YOU should be your kid's hero.
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by thickredhair February 28, 2007 11:00 AM EST
Its art, though I am kinda suprised that he is only 17, but i guess things are a little different on the other side of the pond
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by stezzer February 27, 2007 11:15 PM EST
I'm sick and tired of people pointing fingers and telling others how to live their lives.

I wish wrist slapping morons would just do what they want and leave the rest of us to make our own decisions.

Young actor smokes on stage, so of course someone has to poke their nose in. America, don't get like us in the UK. We have so many "experts" and rules and regulations we can't breath.

Make sure you stay the land of the free. Please.

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