Chicago Sun-Times

# METOO ‘ MAGIC’ MOMENT

Heather Graham takes on Hollywood sexism in debut as writer- director- actor

- RICHARD ROEPER Follow F Richard Roeper on Twitter: T @ RichardERo­eper Email: Em rroeper@ suntimes. com

It’s been 21 years since Rollergirl hung up the skates. By the time Heather Graham skated across the screen and into pop culture lore in Paul Thomas Anderson’s masterful “Boogie Nights” ( 1997), the Milwaukee- born actress had been working formore than a decade, with roles on TV (“Growing Pains,” “Twin Peaks”) and in films such as “Drugstore Cowboy” and “Six Degrees of Separation.”

Graham ( who owns those famous skates and for a time kept them in a display case in her home) has often been cast as the bombshell femme fatale, but she’s also been a comedy gamer in the likes of “Austin Powers: The SpyWho Shagged Me” and “Bowfinger.”

At 48, Graham ismaking her triple- threat debut as the writer, director and star of “HalfMagic” ( opening Friday on demand and at the Pickwick in Park Ridge), a cheerfully raunchy Hollywood satire in which she plays Honey, an aspiring screenwrit­er. She’s the assistant and sort- of girlfriend to a sexist, self- absorbed leadingman ( hilariousl­y played by Chris D’Elia), whose catalog of work includes such titles as “Bros Before Hos,” “The Traumatize­r” and “Ultra Violent.”

“Why does the woman who enjoys sex always have to die in horror films?” asks Honey in a pitch meeting. “Maybe she could fight back. … Nobody kills male sluts in movies.”

In a telephone interview, I told Graham I was gonna take a wild leap and guess “Half Magic” was based in part on her own experience­s with sexism and stereotype­s in Hollywood.

“Yes, for sure,” she said. “I actually started writing this about seven years ago. … I went through a breakup and I was really sad, and I wanted to [ explore that]. … I started to write about bad relationsh­ips and how sexist I thought Hollywood was, and how I had struggled for years to makemovies about women.”

In “Half Magic,” Graham’s character becomes friends with a successful fashion designer ( Angela Kinsey from “The Office”) and a New Age spiritual healertype ( Stephanie Beatriz, “Brooklyn Nine- Nine”). They lean on one another as they experience personal and profession­al peaks and valleys.

Said Graham: “Before I started writing this script, I spent about eight years trying to produce movies that I would act in, stories that I thought were inspiring and about female empowermen­t … and I kept hearing, ‘ Nobody cares about women’s stories. If you want to get a movie made, write about a man.’ … It was so frustratin­g. So I decided to write my own script.”

Although “Half Magic” is mostly broad satire and was written long before the dawn of the # MeToo movement, Graham recognizes the timeliness of a movie holding up a mirror to some of the most deplorable aspects of the industry. ( Last November, Graham wrote a guest piece for Variety in which she recounted a meeting with Harvey Weinstein in the early 2000s and saidWeinst­ein implied if she had sex with him, she could choose from the pile of scripts on his desk.)

“I feel like someone up there is watching out for me,” she said. “When I first started work on this, I was afraid people wouldn’t want to [ deal with] the subject matter, so I tried to make it as comedic and sexy as I could— but in the [ current environmen­t] it feels as if everyone ready to deal with this subject matter, which is amazing.”

In Variety, Graham wrote, “While I still do feel guilty for not speaking up all those years ago, I’m glad for this moment of reckoning. To the countless other women who have experience­d the gray areas: I believe you.”

Graham told me when she wrote those words, “I just thought, ‘ OK, I’ll come out and tell my story, and hopefully I’ll feel better about myself, and hopefully the other women who were coming forward would feel [ supported].’ But I had no idea there would be so many stories about [ Weinstein and other men in Hollywood].

“These types of things have been happening to women everywhere for so many generation­s. It’s great that we finally feel open to talk ta about them.”

“I SPENT ABOUT EIGHT YEARS TRYING TO PRODUCE MOVIES THAT IWOULD ACT IN, STORIES THAT I THOUGHT WERE INSPIRING AND ABOUT FEMALE EMPOWERMEN­T … AND I KEPT HEARING, ‘ NOBODY CARES ABOUT WOMEN’S STORIES.’ ” HEATHER GRAHAM

 ?? VITTORIO ZUNINO CELOTTO/ GETTY IMAGES ?? Heather Graham poses for a portrait.
VITTORIO ZUNINO CELOTTO/ GETTY IMAGES Heather Graham poses for a portrait.
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