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Anjelica Huston has already come to terms with the fact that her first half-century will soon be behind her, but the prospect of joining the ranks of Hollywoods much-pitied unemployed middle-aged actresses has yet to make her list of immediate concerns. With three films scheduled for release this year, another one having just started production and a script shes writing to direct, Huston is now busier than she was in her early thirties. She claims that one can always find jobs in showbusiness, or create jobs if one cant find them, although she says that her turning to writing and directing certainly wasnt as a result of not getting any work. Most young actors arent being offered parts, either, so whats the point of harping on a negative when you can create something? she demands. Go to a class, learn to dance, do something with your life but dont sit complaining about what you havent got. I dont have $100m -- its too bad. But I can go and figure something that will get me my next $10m. An Academy Award winner, with three Oscar and seven Golden Globe nominations in her honours collection, Huston became a star in her own right, even when still in the shadow of her father, legendary director and actor John Huston, and Jack Nicholson, with whom she had a 17-year relationship (with three intermissions). She doesnt mind the numerous questions shes had to answer over the years about the two men because they were and are pertinent to my life -- I should be grateful for being asked about them. Today, the man in her life is Robert Graham, an award-winning sculptor, whom she married eight years ago. Its a good and solid relationship, she says, and we are good friends. Huston plans no huge celebration on July 8 -- she says she gave up lavish birthdays when she was 28. Not that turning 50 is an insignificant event (thats grown-up; its OK to do what you want at 50), but life goes on. At first you are shocked to be at that age, and then you get over it and feel rejuvenated and youthful again. When you are young, you dont have time for much. For some reason, the older you get, everything is shorter, but you seem to have more time to do things. You are not so impatient and easily bored. We meet in Santa Monica, California -- Hustons birthplace -- at one of her favourite French restaurants, where we have a room of about 10 tables all to ourselves. Six-feet-tall, dressed in an elegant black suit, with dark-chestnut hair and vast brown eyes, she fits the descriptions of most of her on-screen characters: she is majestic, handsome, sleek and a little wary. The only obvious difference is that the arching of her phenomenal eyebrows in regular conversation is not nearly as frequent as that of her heroines. As we talk longer, another contrast becomes apparent: unlike the tough, often mysterious and sometimes evil women she has played, Huston is much more down-to-earth, polite and soft-spoken. Ive actually played a few flesh-and-bone women, she points out, referring to Agnes Browne, a widowed mother of seven in working-class Dublin, in the 1999 film of the same name and the Holocaust survivor Tamara in Enemies: A Love Story (1989). But playing Morticia Addams in The Addams Family [1991] and Lilly Dillon in The Grifters [1990] pretty much sews up the audiences attention, so Im not sure people are that crazy about seeing me as a good woman. Despite film critics concerns about her having been typecast early in her career, Huston has been entrusted with rather different -- and usually difficult -- parts. Her new roles follow a similar pattern. In The Golden Bowl, a James Ivory picture based on Henry Jamess novel about a man who marries an heiress for her money but is actually in love with her friend, which opens in the US next month, she plays opposite Nick Nolte and Uma Thurman. The TNT film The Mists of Avalon tells the story of the women behind King Arthur, with Huston as his aunt Viviane. In The Man from Elysian Fields, she is a wealthy woman who hires a failed novelist (Mick Jagger) for his escort service. And in The Royal Tenenbaums, a movie about the misadventures of a family of geniuses, she co-stars with Gene Hackman and Gwyneth Paltrow. Huston is also adapting Dawn Powells 1942 book Time to be Born for a film she hopes to direct. Im starting to write more than I have for years, she says. Ive always liked writing -- I was drawn to it in school. I kept a diary, but at one point it was read by a friend and that stopped me writing for a while. But e-mail started me up again. I like it; its a great exercise, because its immediate and makes you think quickly. She corresponds electronically with friends, relatives and other actors, but doesnt surf the net unless she needs something specific. She says shes never checked out the Anjelica Huston pages on the web and wouldnt dream of discussing myself in a chat room. Im too easily hurt by what people say. Its not constructive and I take it personally. Neither does she get her news from the net, preferring instead to touch the newspaper in the morning. She says she follows the first steps of the new Bush administration with amusement and is hard-pressed to understand the climate in which our new president can turn back time, a reference to the ban Bush imposed during his first week in office on the use of federal funds for aiding overseas organisations promoting abortion. Its medieval that we can be even discussing abortion at this point, Huston says with asperity. I find it really disturbing that greater America has voted this way -- or so we have been led to believe. Coming from a family of Democrats, Huston has long supported the party -- both morally and financially -- and has a deep respect for Bill Clinton. She thinks he was a very good president, and probably would have been better if he had been given the chance to operate unhindered by the constant attacks on his character. Huston, who has met Clinton about a dozen times, describes him as a wonderful, heartfelt, informed and conversational man who remembers your name across a room and the last time he saw you. He manages to make a crowd of 500 people intimate. Hes extraordinarily gifted and a great humanitarian. She maintains that there was a real change under Clinton in the US and, at the risk of sounding incredibly self-serving, tells me she quit smoking as a result of his administrations anti-tobacco policies. I was a big smoker when Clinton came to the White House in 1992, and after the first four years the whole smoking thing that went on in Washington irritated me. All of a sudden it became a national thing -- you couldnt smoke in a restaurant, in the park, in the open air. But he really influenced people and if you look at the numbers youll see a big difference. That was a positive, helpful and clever thing, even though those of us who were avid tobacco consumers were very irritable. But it really came home. I gave up smoking and that was a very healthy thing. It was a healthy presidency. Huston says she would gladly support Hillary Clinton if she decided to run for president in 2004, or later. Id vote for Hillary -- sure I would. Id like to see a woman achieve the presidency in my lifetime. She feels comfortable living away from Washington politics, although she cares about her community and the people around her. She is appalled, for example, that Californias beaches are full of garbage -- shes gone down the beach between the Venice and Santa Monica piers picking up straws just to see how many you can possibly collect. She finds the people in Los Angeles ruder and tempers shorter. People are much more ambitious than when I was first here. We were much more laisser-faire and not quite so self-promoting. We used to make our own decision what to wear and where to go, and it wasnt a live-or-die thing whether you showed up at the Golden Globes or not. You had to show up for the Academy Awards out of respect for the Academy. But it wasnt necessary for everyone to thank everybody they knew. It was an opportunity for people to say something different. I miss those days. Everything has become so safe and tame. You cant tell whether someone has a good or bad taste any more, because they are all dressed by designers and are wearing somebody elses jewellery. I dont want to be sour grapes, but insincerity seems to be ruling these days in Hollywood, claptrap and nonsense. There is a blueprint of how you behave, and regimented things cut out the fun. Although many have argued that artificiality and shallowness are nothing new to Hollywood, it was indeed a very different time when Huston was inducted into showbusiness, where her family roots run three generations deep. As well as her father, her grandfather, Walter Huston, was a famed actor and a favourite of Franklin Roosevelt (He used to have dinner in the White House kitchen with Eleanor and the president; they were tight friends). Walter won an Oscar in 1948 for The Treasure of the Sierra Madre, and his son John, walked away that same night with the best director award for the same film. Thirty-seven years later, John Huston directed his daughter to her own Academy Award. He was filming The African Queen in the Belgian Congo in the summer of 1951 when he received a letter from his wife: You have a daughter. Her name is Anjelica, with a J. After spending the first decade of her life at St Clerans, a 150-acre estate in Irelands county Galway, Anjelica moved to London with her mother, Ricki Soma, a New York ballet dancer who at 20 had become John Hustons fourth wife, but died in a car accident in 1969. When Anjelica was 17, her father decided to launch her acting career with a role in his film A Walk with Love and Death, a lyrical tale about a young man in war-torn medieval France. The movie was a disaster, which made it even harder to swallow for Anjelica, who had disliked the script from the beginning. She was longing to play Juliet and was on a school search for Franco Zeffirellis film Romeo and Juliet. Now she thinks that episode was one of lifes little hiccups. In 1971, a friend of her mother asked Anjelica to model for a Vogue fashion shoot in Ireland. That offer kicked off her short but successful modelling career, which brought her back to the US. In 1973, she met Jack Nicholson at a party in his house. Their stormy relationship ended in 1990, when Anjelica learned that Jack was having a child with actress Rebecca Broussard. Huston finds it none of her business to opine about Nicholsons latest relationship, with the 30-year-old TV and film star Lara Flynn Boyle, 33 years his junior. I like and see him, and we have a nice relationship, but I dont spend my time thinking about his girlfriends. For about a decade after arriving in Hollywood, Huston had small roles in films such as The Last Tycoon (1976) and The Postman Always Rings Twice (1981). Then, in 1985, came mafia princess Maerose Prizzi in Prizzis Honour, the part that made her a star -- in the eyes of others, if not in her own -- and won her an Oscar. Her father directed her again two years later, in The Dead, James Joyces story about a young mans jealousy of his wifes dead lover. It was John Hustons last film. Anjelica learned her craft not only from her father, but also from Peggy Feury, a legendary LA acting coach who was among the few people Huston thanked in her Oscar acceptance speech. She still remembers one of her first classes when Feury gave her an ambiguous piece about a woman dealing with a man in a room. The man could have been anyone -- son, husband or father -- and Hustons job was to be specific in an ambiguous situation. At one point the part required that she ask that man for something, so she put out her hand. After the scene was over, Feury said: Anjelica, you are big and arresting -- we pay attention to you. If you are asking for something, well give it to you. You dont have to put out your hand. She de-emphasised me as an actress and relaxed me, Huston recalls. That took the stridency out of my performance. In spite of her Oscar, the Academy Award nominations for The Grifters and Enemies: A Love Story, and the high critical acclaim she received for her subsequent roles in Crimes and Misdemeanours (1989), The Witches (1990) and Manhattan Murder Mystery (1993), Huston never felt like she made it as an actress. Every time I complete a job, I feel a sense of satisfaction, she says, but I move on to the next one. You have to be constantly reinventing yourself -- you cant rely on the last job you did. I was having dinner with Sir Peter Hall the other night and he was telling me about Laurence Olivier. He would shake before he went on stage and had to be pushed on. Someone who thinks they will never make it -- this is what makes an actor. In 1995, Huston took up directing, which she regards as a good way to learn about your own instincts. Her first film was Bastard out of Carolina (1996), the story of a southern girl abused by her father. It was initially made for TNT, but cable mogul Ted Turner rejected it because of some rather graphic scenes of molestation and child rape in the directors cut. Showtime, the paid cable channel, eventually aired it, after it had grabbed the spotlight at the Cannes Film Festival. I learned a tremendous amount, she says of her directorial debut, but there were hardships involved. I had hardly any preparation time and 28 shooting days it was fast and furious. Hustons second directing experience, Agnes Browne, based on Brendan OCarrolls bestseller The Mammy, was harder yet -- she wound up acting in it, when comedienne and TV talk show host Rosie ODonnell withdrew. The film was well received overall, she says, but it wasnt well-publicised. You work too much on something like that and put too much of your soul in to be happy. Although she is critical of her younger colleagues for being too aggressive and career-oriented, Huston acknowledges that they seem really smart, more than we were at their age. They are focused and regimented. I couldnt imagine being that myself. I thought Id like to act because its lovely and glamorous; actresses are beautiful and get lots of attention. She willingly names her favourites among the young generation of female stars -- Kate Hudson, Angelina Jolie, Christina Ricci, Jena Malone, Reese Witherspoon -- but cautions them against the head-on, knock-out, drag-it-out fame they experience at a very fragile age. Its
hard when youve saturated the public by the time you are in your
early twenties -- it doesnt leave you a lot of room to move,
she says. Its dangerous because it wastes you, and unless
you are really fortified and confident, and have your underpinnings
neatly stacked underneath you, it would be very easy to lose your mind.
Copyright © The Financial Times Limited |
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This site contains articles published in the Financial Times, the Washington Times and the Harvard International Journal of Press/Politics Copyright © Nicholas Kralev |
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