Los Angeles Times

FISHER’S FUNNY CAREER CHOICES

- By Emily Zemler calendar@latimes.com

The Internet Movie Database is one of the most popular websites for tracking the work of actors, filmmakers and others in the movie and TV world. We’ve asked some actors to look at their own IMDB page and comment on some of their best-known roles.

When “Wedding Crashers” came out in 2005 it was immediatel­y clear that Isla Fisher was a comedic force. The British-Australian actress, married to fellow actor Sasha Baron Cohen, has a vivacious, good-spirited energy onscreen that has carried through all her films.

“Character-wise I’m always after somebody who I can find the humanity in easily,” Fisher says. “I know it’s fun to play an unlikable character who may make different choices morally than you would, but I still have to find empathy and something within that person I want to explore within myself.”

Fisher’s latest project is the comedy flick “Keeping Up With the Joneses,” which just opened, and she will also appear in next month’s Tom Ford-directed drama “Nocturnal Animals.” She was particular­ly excited to finally appear in a project with Amy Adams, an actress with whom Fisher is often confused. “It was like ‘Finally, we can put the rumors that we’re the same person to rest!’ ” Fisher says with a laugh.

Fisher, who now also selects her projects on whether the shooting location is good for her family, feels she’s grown a lot since those early days of “Wedding Crashers.” “I used to be so hard on myself back then and overthink every scene,” the actress says. “I’d always want to beg the director for another take and another take and another take. Now I suppose I’m better at it. I just feel more confident.”

Here, Fisher discusses some of her most notable projects, from “I Heart Huckabees” to “Keeping Up With the Joneses.”

‘Keeping Up With the Joneses’

Karen Gaffney (2016) “What I really loved about this movie is that I think there’s a part of all of us that judges other people for how they look and how inaccurate that often is. How we often make assumption­s about one another that often stops us from connecting. Karen is exactly that kind of person. And I loved working with Zach Galifianak­is. What’s great about Zach is that he doesn’t use the movie as a comedy vehicle for himself like a lot of big comedy stars do. He’s deeply collaborat­ive, and he laughs at other people’s material.”

‘The Brothers Grimsby’

Jodie Figgis (2016)

“I did work with my husband for the first time on this. I really enjoyed that experience. He’s so funny, and he’s so great at improvisin­g. I really loved the movie, and I hoped it would reach a bigger audience. It’s one of my favorite characters that he does.”

‘Now You See Me’

Henley Reeves (2013) “I hadn’t worked in a while, and I was having that panicked feeling like, ‘Am I unemployab­le?’ You never know when you’ve done your last movie and everybody’s sick of you. So I was a bit down in the dumps, and I got the phone call that this was an offer. I read the material, and the plot seemed quite anarchic and wild, and my character was this ebullient lion tamer with all these men. It just really appealed to the kid in me because I’ve always loved magic.”

‘The Great Gatsby’

Myrtle Wilson (2013) “To play Myrtle, who’s such an integral part of the story and works on so many levels and represents a whole underclass of people, was a huge responsibi­lity. Everyone has preconceiv­ed notions of who she is based on their experience reading it. It was a little nerve-racking, but it was amazing, and Baz Luhrmann is the ultimate gentleman. He’s endless imaginativ­e and patient. Some of the things he attempted were so ambitious. He has a saying for his company: ‘A life lived in fear is a life half-lived,’ and that sums up Baz Luhrmann.”

‘Confession­s of a Shopaholic’

Rebecca Bloomwood (2009)

“That was the first time I was the lead of a big studio movie. And Rebecca Bloomwood is the ideal character because she’s an overconfid­ent clown. When I began to become interested in film I began with Goldie Hawn. I loved Goldie Hawn movies. That kind of clueless, ditzy but enchanting and smart-deep-down female character that she does so effortless­ly — this felt like a throwback to that. I had just had my first baby, so there was a lot of making costumes boob-friendly in order to access the feeding supply for my infant.”

‘Wedding Crashers’

Gloria Cleary (2005) “That was my breakthrou­gh performanc­e. That was so much fun. I actually got an MTV Movie Award for that. It’s not every day you get offered the role of a bipolar nymphomani­ac. And it’s obviously had amazing ramificati­ons, just on a personal level. I’ll go to the grocery store and someone will say, ‘I’ll find you!’ That catchphras­e gets quoted back to me so often. Every time I’m traveling, a TSA officer or an immigratio­n officer will say, ‘I’ll find you!’ Clearly I’m still more recognized for that performanc­e than anything else.”

‘I Heart Huckabees’

Heather (2004) “I really love David O. Russell. He’s so brilliant. It was only a few days. David had Naomi [Watts] and I do this whole improvised scene. He kept saying to me, ‘Tell Naomi you’re better-looking and younger than her.’ It was all improvised. It was to provoke a reaction from her or to provoke a reaction from me. It was so funny. I made very good friends with Naomi from that movie, so I’ll always treasure the experience.”

‘Scooby-Doo’

Mary Jane (2002) “It was my first ever film role. I was doing off-West End theater. I had trained to be a clown. I didn’t get any kind of break. I was totally unemployed. ‘Scooby-Doo’ was such a wonderful experience. And I had a paycheck! I had a paycheck every week. I remember I went out to restaurant­s. People were teasing me for being in a movie with an animated dog and I was like, ‘Are you crazy? I had a Thai meal for dinner.’ ”

 ??  ??
 ?? Frank Masi SMPSP ?? ISLA FISHER “loved working with Zach Galifianak­is” because of his collaborat­ive comedic sense.
Frank Masi SMPSP ISLA FISHER “loved working with Zach Galifianak­is” because of his collaborat­ive comedic sense.
 ?? Warner Bros. ?? P L AY I N G Myrtle Wilson in “Great Gatsby” was “a huge responsibi­lity,” “a little nerve-racking” but “amazing,” Fisher says.
Warner Bros. P L AY I N G Myrtle Wilson in “Great Gatsby” was “a huge responsibi­lity,” “a little nerve-racking” but “amazing,” Fisher says.
 ?? Barry Wetcher Summit Entertainm­ent ?? THE ANARCHIC and wild plot of “Now You See Me” appealed to “the kid” in Fisher because “I’ve always loved magic.”
Barry Wetcher Summit Entertainm­ent THE ANARCHIC and wild plot of “Now You See Me” appealed to “the kid” in Fisher because “I’ve always loved magic.”
 ?? Robert Zuckerman Touchtone Pictures ?? “SHOPAHOLIC” was Fisher’s first time clowning around as the lead of a big studio movie.
Robert Zuckerman Touchtone Pictures “SHOPAHOLIC” was Fisher’s first time clowning around as the lead of a big studio movie.
 ?? Richard Cartwright New Line Cinema ?? “WEDDING CRASHERS” was Fisher’s “breakthrou­gh” as a bipolar nymphomani­ac.
Richard Cartwright New Line Cinema “WEDDING CRASHERS” was Fisher’s “breakthrou­gh” as a bipolar nymphomani­ac.

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