![]() | Interview |
Q: Maria you were the 'cause celebre' of the '70s
art house films and worked with directors such as Antonioni and
Bertolucci. You had a very interesting career and did a lot for women's
roles and many people remember you for that. What are you doing now?
A: I'm still struggling for the image of women in film
and I'm still working, not as much as I would like to because for a
woman in her late forties, it's hard to find work. Not only in France. I
had a chat with Angelica Houston last year.We spoke about the same
problem, you know. I don't know where it comes from? The writers, the
producers, or the directors. But I think it's a pity even for the
public. We get a response to see a mature woman in film. We see many,
many macho men in film. An actress like Meryl Streep doesn't work as
much as Bob DeNiro. That's a struggle that's still going on for many,
many years.
Q: Lauren Bacall who was guest at the
recent Stockholm International Film Festival said the same thing. She
said that the film in which she was Oscar nominated 'The Mirror has Two
Faces' was the first good part she had got in a long time.
A: Yeah, yeah yeah. It still goes on.
Q: You did
a lot for women's roles in the 1970s and were way out there. You say
you don't like the theater; you think its boring and are a real
cineaste. Did you find art house cinema or did it find you?
A: I was a student and I wanted to be a painter and I studied
Greek and Latin. I wasn't planning to be an actress but was a cinephile
and saw two, three,four movies a week and that was a great time for
movies because you could see all the neorealism, you could see Bergman,
Visconti, Antonioni, and because of destiny I had to stop school. I had
a fight with my mother. So I was living alone and did little parts in
film to just earn some money. And in one of these films I met Birgitte
Bardot. And she took me under her wing and I lived with her for two
years and with her I met the movie business and her agents and they said
'you should do movies'. So it was well, just destiny. And then I started
right away.
Q: How do you feel about being honored by
the Créteil Films de Femmes festival for your work this year?
A: Very touched because I have followed this festival for 23
years. I was on the jury in Sceaux (original site of Films de Femmes in
the late 1970s) 20 years ago. And I discovered films at this festival
which you couldn't see anywhere. The German school, Helma
Sanders-Brahms, Margaretha Von Trotta-films that you couldn't see
elsewhere. It still exists because we still have to fight, me as an
actress, even if we have more women directors today, it's still
difficult, more difficult for women. We are not in the production as
much as men. An event like this is important and useful. And plus the
girls (organisers) told me, I could show five of my movies, that I could
choose-that was interesting.
Q: Because you have made
over 40 films?
A: Yeah, (laughter).
Q:
What do you think about art house cinema today?....Artistic films that
use film language instead of having rising action, falling action and
resolution?
A: I've seen the Julian Schnabel film
(Before Night Falls) with Javiar Bardem. I saw it privately, because I
met Julian and he showed me the film three weeks ago and I think it's a
beautiful film. Poetic, lyrical and it says something, but not heavily.
Its very fine: I'm glad that there are still films like that today. And
I think of 'Straight Story' by David Lynch. A film which I love which is
more like a John Ford film. But the message is eternal. And that's
important.
Q: That is what you mentioned about Last
Tango not being--the way that it was made was that it did not age well
as 'The Passenger' (Antonioni, 1975).
A: Yes, Last Tango
is typically 70s and the style is a little kitsch today. And it got
old. 'The Passenger', no, it still stands. I don't know what do you
think?br>
Q: It was great. It was also nostalgic to look
back at that time.
A: Me too. (laughter)
Q: How do you feel about the response to you-there is a lot of
press in France about you being honored at Créteil? How do you feel
you've been received?
A: Very interesting. Because
finally after I've been doing this now for thirty years, finally I find
some cheerful articles, and you know people kind of understand me better
now today than they used to. Because the media threw stones at me. When
you read the articles back in the 70s they were terrible back then. And
now seeing the kind of choices I made, they kind of understand me
better. And respect me better, maybe it's the age, I don't know. (laughter)
Q: Adjectives that come up about you in some
of the recent press are 'mysterious' and 'difficult to get to know'.
Would you say that's true?
A: No, I don't live around
show business. I have a simple life. And maybe that's why. I don't go on
television often unless I have something to say. And if you're not in
the media today and you don't work, you don't exist which is not true.
Many people aren't in the media. But they work and do art.
Q: To get back to Lauren Bacall, she is constantly asked
questions about Humphrey Bogart despite the fact she had a life after
him. The public has this icon in their mind.
A: I have
the same with Last Tango.
Q: If you could write your
own legend rather then the legend that has been generated about you what would
you write?
A: I will tell you in about 20 years even
later on.
Q: There is something very tricky about this
word legend-it's kind of like a story. But everyone has a story of their
life and sometimes we have our own stories of ourselves that don't get
told.
A: Movies are a mirror of society and I'm just an
interpreter of that. And I love movies because they are the memory of
our time.
Q: Thankyou very much for speaking with us
Maria. Do you have any imminent projects coming up?
A:
I'm going to shoot in May and play the sister of Isabelle Adjani made by
Laetitia Masson, a woman director (The Repentant). Isabelle is interesting. It's
Mediterranean, and we're playing two sisters and it's quite tragic.
© 2001 - Moira Sullivan - Air Date: 4/01