The Arizona Republic

Jamie Lee taking back her power in life, too

She knows ‘Halloween’ is fiction, but it hits home

- Andrea Mandell

HOLLYWOOD – It’s not Michael that haunts her.

Sit with Jamie Lee Curtis and she will try to forge a connection. She will relate, she will pound her fist on the table, she will declare herself. She turns 60 next month, and the real bone chiller is leaving this earth with ideas left on the table.

“I want to die having said something,” she says firmly.

It’s a beautiful, weird, emotional time for her. “Halloween” arrives in theaters Friday, a sequel that critics have hailed as the best installmen­t of the horror franchise since the 1978 original, with an 86% fresh rating on review site Rotten Tomatoes. This is the franchise that made her famous at age 20. Her first real job.

The new “Halloween” finds Laurie Strode as a grandmothe­r who stockpiles weapons (and, yes, that includes guns) and escape plans, knowing that one day the murderous, masked Michael Myers will return. She has pushed away her daughter (Judy Greer), who considers her paranoid and unstable. She is close only to her granddaugh­ter (Andi Matichak).

In one scene, Laurie waits in her car as Michael is transferre­d by bus from his asylum to a new prison. Rage courses through her like the booze in her cup; a gun waits by her side. It was Curtis’ last day of shooting, and to honor her, the crew donned name tags that read, “I am Laurie Strode.”

“They didn’t say a word,” Curtis says. “And what they were saying was: ‘We love you. We love Laurie. We are all traumatize­d. And we are all together with you.’ ”

“Halloween” also is a film that pulses with the repercussi­ons of trauma. It’s a horror movie, sure, but the film’s timeliness is arresting; Curtis says interview is taking place on the exact one-year anniversar­y of when Harvey Weinstein’s world imploded and just after Bill Cosby went to jail. A week after Christine Blasey Ford testified on Capitol Hill.

In the original “Halloween,” Laurie, 17, once a promising college-bound teen, “became a freak,” Curtis says, after Michael’s killing spree. The new film bookends the causal effect of Laurie’s nightmare, offering a 2018 twist in its bloody finale. “It was beautiful to watch what happened with Laurie Strode and her daughter and her granddaugh­ter and watch three women take back the power from a perpetrato­r,” she says.

She knows she’s talking about fictional suffering as she makes the rounds for “Halloween.” “But do you really think it’s fiction for me?” she asks.

“I’ve never been a soldier. I’ve never had to put my life on the line like a police officer or a fireman. … I’m an actor,” she says. “But I’ve had pain. I’ve been oppressed. I’ve been a woman in the movie business. I’ve been a woman who’s known for her figure in the movie business, and I’ve had to navigate my version of that. And so I can relate.”

Breakout films such as “True Lies,” “A Fish Called Wanda” and “Trading Places” were hard-won. She’s grateful, says Curtis, who is married to filmmaker Christophe­r Guest (“This Is Spinal Tap,” “Mascots”). “But I’m saying there are many directors I admire. I am a film lover, I am a reader, I was born and raised here, I married a film director, we have friends, we are in circles, we know people – none of them have ever hired me.”

Her gaze is unwavering. “And at some point you have to be OK with it. Because if not, it will make you crazy.”

Curtis gives an almost impercepti­ble shrug, the blue velvet of her tailored suit rising slightly: It’s a living. “And yet I have navigated 40 years. I sold yogurt that made you poop for five years because it was a gig that allowed me to stay home and be a mom.”

Over the past 20 years, her sober years, Curtis – the daughter of Tony Curtis and Janet Leigh – confronted a new normal. She recalls being a new mom on a “hamster wheel” of work, marriage and motherhood: “I think I was replicatin­g my mom and really trying to just make everybody happy,” says the actress, mother of Annie, 31, and Thomas, 22.

Take 1987, the summer she shot “A Fish Called Wanda,” the John Cleese comedy that showcased her talents inside a brainy comedy.

“My memory of ‘A Fish Called Wanda’ is that I cried every day to and from work. Not that I laughed, not that it was super-fun, nothing,” she says. “My memory of ‘A Fish Called Wanda’ was leaving my sleeping 6-month-old daughter, going to work an hour away and then working 12 hours, sometimes more, and then an hour back, often to a child asleep again.”

An alcohol and opioid addiction followed. “As soon as I got sober, which is 20 years coming up in February, everything changed. Because it was a big, big acknowledg­ment that I could not do all of the things I was trying to do.”

Curtis calls herself lucky. “I have made shifts along the way,” she says, but acknowledg­ing and honoring her personal bandwidth: “That’s the single greatest accomplish­ment of my life.”

 ?? ROBERT HANASHIRO/USA TODAY ?? Jamie Lee Curtis, at the Roosevelt Hotel in Los Angeles, returns as Laurie in “Halloween.”
ROBERT HANASHIRO/USA TODAY Jamie Lee Curtis, at the Roosevelt Hotel in Los Angeles, returns as Laurie in “Halloween.”
 ?? RYAN GREEN/UNIVERSAL ?? Laurie Strode (Curtis) is protective of daughter Karen (Judy Greer) in “Halloween.”
RYAN GREEN/UNIVERSAL Laurie Strode (Curtis) is protective of daughter Karen (Judy Greer) in “Halloween.”

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