Re: JB 說溜嘴
看板the_L_word (拉子/女女/泛同志影音)作者jamiemarch (jamiemarch)時間19年前 (2006/01/20 23:03)推噓0(0推 0噓 0→)留言0則, 0人參與討論串2/3 (看更多)
※ 引述《ansa001 (ansa)》之銘言:
(ansa原文恕刪)
ansa提到的advocate上的jb訪問:
Soul of The L Word
We may argue about The L Word, but on this we all agree: Jennifer Beals
takes our breath away. The star opens up about shooting sex scenes,
being a new mom, and giving lesbians what they want
By Anne Stockwell
Excerpted from The Advocate, January 31, 2006
***********************************************************************
By virtue of her acting chops and star power, Jennifer Beals
unshakably anchors the L Word ensemble as lipstick lesbian dynamo
Bette Porter, who aspires to run the world and never break a sweat.
Born in Chicago, her mother Irish and her father African-American,
Beals was 19 years old when she ripped the neck out of a sweatshirt
and aerobicized herself into film history with 1983’s Flashdance.
Directed by Adrian Lyne and cowritten by Joe Eszterhas, this was just
one of a crop of would-be imitators of Saturday Night Fever. With her
model’s stature and wounded eyes, Beals turned it into something else
again.
The “wounded eyes” thing shows up in every story ever written
on Beals, and no wonder. Those liquid brown eyes are a gift of nature,
and Beals—an agile intellect who majored in American literature at
Yale—deploys them to stunning advantage. In The L Word, Beals has put
The Eyes in the service of lesbian fans everywhere, using that smoldering
gaze to create some of the most erotic woman-to-woman love scenes in
memory. Even Chaiken can’t explain how Beals works her magic.
“I’ve never met anybody else,” says L Word creator Ilene Chaiken
simply,“who can do it like she can.”
Q:Do people still assume that you have to be a lesbian to play one on TV?
A:No, not at all. At least they don’t say that to me. I heard a
rumor that somebody—a studio executive in L.A. who saw some of the show
—assumed I was bisexual. Which was a huge compliment to me, because
oftentimes I will go Leisha or Kate or Ilene or Rose Troche most often
and ask, “OK, is this the right thing to do? Is this not the right thing
to do? Am I going to seem like a total chump if I do this?” And so I feel
really proud, actually, that somebody would think that I was bisexual—
I was pleased with myself. And I don’t care, frankly. But I think mostly
people will ask the question to get a titillating lead for their article.
My older brother is a journalist, so I know how the game works.
Q:Some in the lesbian community have said, “Everyone’s too pretty, too
rich"—all of that. But on this season there’s going to be a more
explicit look at butch and femme roles.
A:Yeah, I think Ilene’s explored that so far. But, you know, it is TV.
I don’t know any group of people in New York who look like the characters
on Friends either. But I take their point. It excites me that if people
don’t like something, they voice their opinion about it. Because this, by
and large, is a group that's never been represented. And instead of just
saying, “Oh, we’re so thrilled to be represented and we’ll take whatever
we can get,” there are very specific opinions of how people want to be
represented.
Q:Let’s talk about season 3. Your character, Bette, is at a crossroads.
The job's gone. Her father has died. Her relationship with Tina has to be
rekindled. And then there’s a new life that requires more commitment than
she’s ever given anybody.
A:Yes, it’s true. It’s the curveballs that come, one after the other. The
second season was definitely the trials of Job in a way, and then this
season has its own trials that aren't as necessarily evident but are
profound nonetheless.
Q:In what direction does Bette most need to grow at this point?
A:[Sighs] I don’t know. It’s hard for me to presume to say how someone
needs to grow. Then I’m standing back and judging her, which is a tricky
thing to do as an actor. I think she needs a really good attorney at this
point. [Anne laughs]
Q:Having seen the first couple of episodes, I can only say that baby Angelica
is a gorgeous, beautiful baby.
A:Oh, that kid is just—her name is Olivia, and she’s just such a delight.
She makes me laugh so hard, and she’s been so patient with all of us.
Oftentimes, working with children can be very hard. They don’t know
where they are, they don’t know why they’re there, and they don’t enjoy
it. But she clearly enjoys being around.
原文出處http://www.advocate.com/
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