Calgary Herald

FUNNY GIRL GETS SERIOUS

McCarthy loved playing ‘heroic and flawed’ character

- MARK DANIELL

With such scene-stealing NEW YORK performanc­es as the foulmouthe­d Megan in Bridesmaid­s and the brash Shannon in The Heat, Melissa McCarthy knows you love it when she plays wildly comedic characters.

But in her latest turn, the 48-year-old Oscar nominee is getting serious. In Can You Ever Forgive Me? she plays an acerbic, down-on-her-luck criminal.

McCarthy plays Lee Israel, the real-life writer who made a name for herself writing bios for famous women including Estee Lauder and Katharine Hepburn. But unable to get a new book contract, Lee turns to forgery, writing fake letters by such famous writers as Noel Coward and Dorothy Parker, then selling

Q Can You Ever Forgive Me? and the role of Lee seem so different from what we’re used to seeing you play. Was it a big stretch for you?

A In my head it’s not, but I see what you mean. It certainly has a different tone and a different type of energy to it. But I read it and I just loved her. I found her heroic and flawed, and I knew that I was rooting for her very early on when I read the script. I liked her so much, but I couldn’t pinpoint anything she’d done that I should like. When I’m befuddled by a character, I take that as a very good sign.

Q Lee’s not easy to like, but watching this I was hoping she’d figure out a way to be likable.

A She was exactly who she was. When you watch Lee navigate society, she was likely more extreme than many of us. But I think anyone can watch this and just think, ‘Aw Lee, c’mon.’ There are so many instances where she could have had a different kind of life. But she couldn’t bend and she couldn’t stop pushing people away.

Q Audiences have seen you do drama in 2014’s St. Vincent, but you’ve mostly stuck to comedy. Was this rebrand something you were seeking to do?

A For me, I never think about what category something is supposed to be in. When I get a script, I don’t ask about genre because I don’t want to have a preconceiv­ed idea of what it will be. I read the script, and if I love the story and I’m really grabbed by the character it makes no difference to me if it’s a comedy or a drama. I’ve done comedies on screen, but I’ve probably done more dramas when you include all the random plays I did in New York when I was in my 20s.

Q Lee Israel died in 2014. What do you think she’d say about your performanc­e?

A I’ve often wondered if she’d find me annoying, which also tickles me, weirdly. I think it’s not sentimenta­l. That’s something I don’t think she’d have wanted with this movie. It doesn’t paint her as pathetic when she’s down on her luck. She still maintains who she is and I think that would be important to her.

Q I was pretty good at forging my parents’ signature in high school. Were you a master of forgery by the end of shooting this?

A I loved the ways that Lee does it. How she matched the paper and the pen ink. I don’t know if you can learn how to forge, but I have notebooks of me re-creating all these signatures. I had to be able to do it for real. I have notebooks of pages and pages of fake Noel Coward signatures. Someone’s going to find that later and think, ‘What’s the matter with her?’

Q Lee is a person who struggled to find her way as a writer, but Melissa McCarthy the actress has turned out to be someone a lot of people love and admire. I’m curious how your dreams of being an actor measure up with where you are today.

A I don’t know that I knew exactly what I wanted. I liked the thought of doing something where I felt I was making a visceral connection that people would react to. I remember telling people stories or having people laugh, and that spurred something in me (to act). I remember growing up around the dinner table, everyone would talk about their day and we laughed a lot. We weren’t doing bits, but I remember everyone was really able to tell a story in a funny way ... So I started in standup and then I moved into dramatic work onstage. But with dramas, I’ve always felt a need to show (characters) in a light that made people understand them better.

Q You went from living on a farm in rural Illinois to moving to New York City at 20 with $35 in your pocket. Now you’re one of the most well-known actresses in Hollywood. When was the moment you felt, ‘I’ve made it?’

A I’m always comfortabl­e when I’m working. I’m very comfortabl­e when I get to step into someone else’s shoes. The other stuff is never something I’m ever super comfortabl­e talking about. When people say to me, ‘Let’s talk about what it means,’ I’m always thinking, ‘Just give me a project.’ I don’t know what it means and I may never know what it means. All I know is I love acting and I love the fact that I get to do something that I love from the bottom of my heart. Having people fall in love with a character they might not have liked ... I like being able to do that.

 ?? FOX SEARCHLIGH­T ?? Melissa McCarthy loves and admires the character she plays in Can You Ever Forgive Me?, which is based on the true story of a writer who turns to forgery.
FOX SEARCHLIGH­T Melissa McCarthy loves and admires the character she plays in Can You Ever Forgive Me?, which is based on the true story of a writer who turns to forgery.

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