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JAMIE LEE CURTIS FLYING HIGH

Actress explains why her Laurie Strode from ‘Halloween’ is relevant in the #MeToo era

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Jamie Lee Curtis has many reasons to be grateful this year. She turns 60 on Thanksgivi­ng (November 22), and she’s currently celebratin­g the monster success of Halloween. The new sequel to John Carpenter’s 1978 original earned $76.2 million (Dh279.8 million) in its first weekend — the biggest opening for a horror movie with a female lead and for any film starring a woman over 55. Curtis plays Laurie Strode, the terrorised baby sitter turned avenging grandma who again battles the masked killer Michael Myers. And she pointed out the success of the new film (directed by David Gordon Green) in what she called a “boast post” that has been liked 187,000 times on Twitter.

“That wasn’t meant to be an ego boost,” Curtis said. “It was a moment of great pride for all of us. Let me be the bell-ringing, banner-waving representa­tive of generation­s of women who have been in the movie business and have gotten no recognitio­n. Let me be the one who stands up and says, ‘We can do it, we did it, and we will do it again.’”

She spoke via telephone from Australia, where she attended the film’s Sydney premiere.

What’s the reception been like Down Under?

I’ve travelled the world as the ambassador for this movie. Everywhere I’ve gone, the reaction is the same. The movie works on such a wonderful level. The experience people have seeing David Gordon Green’s movie, scored by John Carpenter [who directed the original and composed its haunting theme], told at a time when women taking back the narrative of their lives from their perpetrato­rs is both life imitating art and art imitating life. And it’s thrilling to be the girl in the red power suit in the middle of it all.

Did you have any doubts about signing on to play Laurie again?

No. I first heard about this script in June 2017, and I said yes immediatel­y after I read it. I understood what [the screenwrit­ers] David, Danny McBride and Jeff Fradley were trying to do. They were trying to talk about generation­al trauma in the middle of a slasher movie.

This was before the #MeToo movement exploded.

Yes, it was before women all over the world started raising their hands and having the immense courage to name their aggressor and to stand behind their experience­s. The power that came from all those brave women, all those young gymnasts, all of Bill Cosby’s accusers, started to affect all of us as we were making the movie because it was happening concurrent­ly. So we all understood that we had a much bigger responsibi­lity.

How has becoming a mother and grandmothe­r affected Laurie?

Being a parent is the most transforma­tive experience a human being can have. Laurie was a broken person when she conceived her daughter. She did her best to try to raise and protect her, but she was not able to allow her to have an innocent childhood, because Laurie was traumatise­d. I’ve never experience­d something like that. But I’m not going to lie and say I haven’t had trauma and horrible, unexpected things happen because that’s what happens in life to everybody. That’s why the movie is resonating.

Why does Michael Myers remain such a compelling figure?

He’s a big draw primarily because of his enigmatic evil. This is an evil that makes no facial expression, doesn’t have a voice, moves slowly but kills with a vengeance. This is a universal terror that you combine with a woman representi­ng everyone, and you have a recipe for people going to the movie over and over again, which is what seems to be happening.

“[Halloween makers] were trying to talk about generation­al trauma in the middle of a slasher movie.” JAMIE LEE CURTIS | Actress

 ?? Photos by AP and Reuters ?? Halloween is currently showing in the UAE. Jamie Lee Curtis in ‘Halloween’ (2018). Don’t miss it!
Photos by AP and Reuters Halloween is currently showing in the UAE. Jamie Lee Curtis in ‘Halloween’ (2018). Don’t miss it!

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