Los Angeles Times

Gloriously f lawed

Laura Dern has been fearless in embracing roles that explore the complexiti­es of the human spirit. Her Amy on ‘Enlightene­d’ is a bundle of contradict­ions.

- BY MEREDITH BLAKE

Season 2 of HBO’s “Enlightene­d” finds Laura Dern as fortysomet­hing executive Amy Jellicoe conspiring with an egotistica­l Los Angeles Times muckraker (Dermot Mulroney) to bring down her corporate overlords. Well-meaning but hopelessly naive — “I’m like the Julian Assange of Riverside,” Amy boasts without a drop of irony — she is quickly in over her head.

“She’s missing so many pieces,” says Dern, 45, shaking her head with weary sympathy. “Poor Amy.”

Decked out in an elegant black cap-sleeved dress at a swanky restaurant off Central Park, Dern is noticeably more sophistica­ted than her on-screen counterpar­t. But there are moments when the line between the actress and her creation are less distinct — in the way she gesticulat­es using her entire torso, hunching her shoulders forward to emphasize a point, or in the passion with which she speaks about the benefits of Transcende­ntal Meditation and the horrors of geneticall­y modified foods. “What if Lucy became Norma Rae?” That’s the question Dern used when she pitched “Enlightene­d” to HBO, but it’s also an apt summary of her acting style and three-decade career. Conceived while her parents, Diane Ladd and Bruce Dern, were filming Roger Corman’s outlaw biker f lick “The Wild Angels,” Dern claims to have watched the decidedly more wholesome “I Love Lucy” nearly every day of her life.

Her unique ability to combine these diverse inf luences — timeless physical comedy meets the risk-taking, socially conscious ethos of 1960s and ’70s Hollywood — is evident throughout her work, including Alexander Payne’s scathing abortion satire, “Citizen Ruth,” and now “Enlightene­d,” which began its second season on Sunday

and last year won her a Golden Globe.

It’s not surprising that Dern sees her character as a hero, albeit a misguided one. In Season 1, Amy suffers an explosive emotional breakdown at the office, a blandly sinister health-and-beauty conglomera­te. She returns from a month in treatment blissed out and determined to change the world — a mission that proves easier said than done.

“The world is changing fast because of noble Amys,” Dern says. “She believes something about herself that I wish for all people, and that is we are all entitled to a voice.”

Co-created by Dern and Mike White, “Enlightene­d” premiered in 2011 to positive reviews, but its tricky tone — it’s somehow earnest and cynical at the same time — and a vexing protagonis­t made it a tough sell for some viewers.

Dern isn’t fazed by the mixed reaction to her character — by now, she takes it as a sign she’s doing something right.

A formative experience was the polarized response to David Lynch’s “Wild at Heart,” which won the Palme d’Or at Cannes in 1990 and starred Dern, Ladd and Nicolas Cage. “Half the audience is booing at us, screaming, ‘ How dare you?’ And half the audience is giving us a standing ovation. And I thought, ‘Oh, I’m making a great movie. This is awesome,’ ” Dern recalls. “I was raised by folks who trained me well for this terrain.”

Dern’s parents divorced when she was still a baby, and she spent much of her childhood in the care of her “magnificen­t Alabaman grandmothe­r” while they were off making films with the likes of Hal Ashby and Roman Polanski. During a visit with her mother on the set of Martin Scorsese’s “Alice Doesn’t Live Here Anymore,” Dern was asked to be an extra, and a star was born.

Dern was allowed to pursue acting only if she first studied the craft for two years, so she dutifully rode her bicycle to drama classes every Saturday. “They really grilled in me the importance of studying, and that’s been a massive inf luence,” says Dern, who continues to work with her longtime acting coach, Sandra Seacat.

After introducin­g herself to an agent at a party, 11year-old Dern scored a small part in Adrian Lyne’s “Foxes.” Initially skeptical, Ladd was finally convinced by her daughter’s perform- ance.

“I thought, ‘ This soul chose to come through me as a parent and she can help the world smile,’ ” Ladd says via telephone, her voice breaking dramatical­ly. “The least I can do is help.” (Ladd stars in “Enlightene­d” as Amy’s tightly wound mother, a part she says is based on her own mother.)

Dern worked steadily throughout her teens, screen-testing for all the Brat Pack movies but gravitatin­g toward darker coming-of-age tales — “Mask,” “Smooth Talk,” “Ladies and Gentlemen, the Fabulous Stains.” The trend culminated when she was cast as the virginal girl next door in Lynch’s “Blue Velvet, “the first of her three collaborat­ions with the director (a fourth project is “cooking,” according to Dern, but doesn’t yet have a script).

Unlike many a showbiz kid, Dern managed to escape her teen years unscathed by drugs or alcohol, and her career continued to thrive with adulthood. There was an Oscar nomination in 1992 for her performanc­e as a promiscuou­s Southern belle in “Rambling Rose,” and a brief but instructiv­e brush with megastardo­m thanks to Steven Spielberg’s blockbuste­r “Jurassic Park.”

“I was on the cover of a lot of magazines and there were compliment­s about beauty and fashion and what I was wearing. Man, if you get locked into that, you can lose your freedom as an actress,” she says. “If you’re not locked in it, and if you’re lucky enough to get that part with the right group of people, then suddenly you’re in the makeup trailer like, ‘Can I have a herpes sore? Can I have a hickey? Can it go further?’”

For Dern, that moment arrived with “Citizen Ruth,” a politicall­y charged film from a then-unknown director. She played the titular role of Ruth Stoops, a pregnant, shiftless, paint-huffing mother of four who unwittingl­y becomes a pawn in the culture wars.

It was, to say the least, a risky decision for a young actress on the rise, but Dern calls it her favorite film experience to date. “That was the turning point role for me to really explore and fall in love with comedy,” she says.

She was equally fearless — if slightly more made-up — in her portrayal of Florida Secretary of State Katherine Harris in 2008’s “Recount.”

In “Enlightene­d,” Dern takes a vanity-free approach to storytelli­ng. And in an inspired programmin­g choice, her show now airs after Lena Dunham’s “Girls.” “It’s a good hour of uncomforta­ble entertainm­ent,” she promises.

Coming from Dern, that’s a ringing endorsemen­t.

 ?? Carolyn Cole Los Angeles Times ?? LAURA DERN says her character “believes something about herself that I wish for all people … that is we are all entitled to a voice.”
Carolyn Cole Los Angeles Times LAURA DERN says her character “believes something about herself that I wish for all people … that is we are all entitled to a voice.”
 ?? Prashant Gupta HBO ?? LAURA DERN with Luke Wilson in “Enlightene­d,” now in its second season.
Prashant Gupta HBO LAURA DERN with Luke Wilson in “Enlightene­d,” now in its second season.

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