'King's Speech' Wins 13th Honor: Stuttering Foundation Gives It 'A Hero's Welcome'
The Stuttering Foundation hails the 12-time Oscar-nominated The King's Speech for combating cinematic stutterer abuse -- and screenwriter David Seidler explains how it took him 30 years to turn his own pain into art.
"The Stuttering Foundation gives a hero's welcome to The King's Speech," says spokesperson Jane Fraser, vp of London's Association for Research into Stammering in Childhood, Michael Palin Centre. (Palin's superb character in A Fish Called Wanda was inspired by his father, who suffered from stuttering, as did Winston Churchill, James Earl Jones, Rowan Atkinson and Jonathan Miller.) "There are few, if any, more accurate portrayals of the anguish faced by people who stutter, or of the hardship it places on family and friends, than in this movie. Stuttering is most often the province of comic relief, and never of the hero."
Oscar-nominated writer Seidler, who's overcome stuttering, waited 30 years to make the picture because King Bertie's mother asked him to, but it wasn't just her painful memories he was sparing. "I don't know if I could've written it as well 30 years ago," says Seidler. "I don't know if I would have been able to go back into the pain. It's like going to the dentist -- once it doesn't hurt any more, once you get over it, the relief is so profound that the last thing you want to do is dwell on it." Did the 30-year wait make the film better? "I really do think it did."
Seidler also credits his former writing partner Jacqueline Feather. "She said I was seduced by cinematic technique, so why not as a writing exercise try writing it as a play? If you get the tentpole, the relationship of the two men, right, then you can hang the rest of the story on it like Christmas tree ornaments." What had to go was the "cinematic" character based on Seidler himself. "There was this whole B-plot of a little boy who stuttered." The ghost of himself? "Oh, absolutely. It didn't really belong in this movie. It was Colin Firth's movie. It wasn't David Seidler's movie." There will be a David Seidler play, too. "It will be a stage play in all probability in the West End in London, in all probability next fall."
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Scott Feinberg
Lead Awards Blogger & Analyst
Scott, whose THR coverage appears both in print and online, is one of the film industry's most experienced and trusted awards analysts, and possesses one of the strongest track records at forecasting the Oscars. His best showings came in 2006 (when he called 21 of 24 winners) and 2004 (when he called 20 of 24 winners); he was also the only pundit to project long-shot best picture nominations for The Reader (2008), The Blind Side (2009) and Extremely Loud and Incredibly Close (2011). An alumnus of Brandeis University, he previously ran "The Feinberg Files" blog for the Los Angeles Times. He is now a voting member of both the Broadcast Film Critics Association and the Broadcast Television Journalists Association, and is writing a book about film history for young people for which he has interviewed more than 350 high-profile Hollywood figures.
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Gregg Kilday
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Gregg contributes awards news, features online, and "The Race" column in print.
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Tim Appelo
Film Reporter
Tim contributes awards news and features, both in print and online.

