The Day

Will Glenn Close finally clinch an Oscar for ‘The Wife’?

- By MICHAEL O’SULLIVAN

It’s just September, and already there’s Oscar chatter about Glenn Close’s riveting performanc­e in “The Wife.” Adapted by writer Jane Anderson (“Olive Kitteridge”) from Meg Wolitzer’s 2003 novel and directed by Swedish filmmaker Bjorn Runge, the film centers on the relationsh­ip between Joe Castleman (Jonathan Pryce), a famous — and famously philanderi­ng — novelist, and his supportive yet equally secretive spouse, Joan, a thwarted writer played by Close in a performanc­e the Guardian called “unreadably brilliant.”

Could this be the year for the 71-year-old Close, a sixtime Oscar nominee who has never taken home the Academy’s top acting prize? Close won’t allow herself to get caught up in the buzz: “I’m a Yankee,” the Connecticu­t-born actress says. “I don’t believe anything’s going to happen until it happens.”

The movie opens just as Joe is about to receive the news that he has been awarded the Nobel Prize in literature. It follows the Castlemans to Stockholm, accompanie­d by their adult son (Max Irons), a writer struggling to emerge from his father’s long shadow, and Joe’s unauthoriz­ed biographer (Christian Slater), a literary sleuth who’s hoping to dig up dirt on his elusive subject. Before it’s all over, long-buried skeletons will be exhumed and cliches overturned.

Close, who divides her time between a country

home in Westcheste­r County, New York, a small pied-àterre in the West Village and a house in Bozeman, Montana, near three of her four siblings, was in town recently with Runge to discuss “The Wife’s” complex and provocativ­e themes.

Q: In a time of the #MeToo movement and increasing awareness of gender inequity in Hollywood, how does this film speak to the current cultural moment?

Close: This may be a little off topic, but one of my favorite lines in the film is when Joe, in prepping for his Nobel acceptance speech, says to me, “I have to thank you. Otherwise they’ll think I’m a narcissist­ic (expletive).” And I say, “But you are.” I love that line. That speaks to the moment. More to the point, I do think this whole movie is really risky. My daughter (Annie Starke), who’s 30, represents a generation of women who grew up after the feminist movement. The whole idea — that women should be equal — surrounded them, the idea that women shouldn’t have to fight for that power. So Joan is a woman who stays with an abusive man. I was afraid that every young woman watching the movie is going to say, “Just leave him.” That was my fear. That they would not be able to understand the mentality, or the culture, out of which Joan’s behavior was coming. That was what Bjorn and I worked on the most. I had to understand that mentality for myself, to act her.

Q: The question of why women stay with their abusers — whether the abuse is physical or psychologi­cal — is not just a generation­al problem.

Close: Right. The thing that was key for me, in light of the #MeToo movement, is that, at the end of the movie, Joan does get her courage up. Her anger has finally reached the point where she’s just beginning to awaken as a full person. Before that, she’s complicit. But I’ve been there myself. I’ve been in relationsh­ips where you’re in the position of wanting to buck the other person up, at your own expense, to keep him with you. It’s a trade-off.

Q: Speaking of power and powerlessn­ess, I understand that Glenn had final say-so on hiring the director for this film. Can you tell me how that worked?

Runge: Yes, I got the script from one of the producers, Meta Louise Foldager, that I had been working with in Copenhagen. I read it, and I said, “This is absolutely wonderful.” And then the producer said, “We want you to do this. Now it’s just up to Glenn Close to say yes or no to you.”

Q: Isn’t that kind of power unusual for a woman in Hollywood?

Close: I don’t know. In the independen­t film world, I don’t think it’s that unusual, because a lot of times, they’ll hang a whole film on an actor, and they hope that other people will come because they want to work with them. I do a lot of independen­t films. My definition of an independen­t film is a film that almost doesn’t get made. This screenplay had been floating around for more than 14 years. So our meeting was important. We met around the corner from my little Village apartment, at Cafe Cluny. We just talked. Runge: Yeah, we talked. Q: Did you say something special to convince her?

Runge: I was very surprised, because in addition to talking about the script, we were just talking about life, about theater and film. Suddenly, I remember Glenn was just looking at me. And now I understand, looking back, that this was the moment. There was a beat — and not only a beat, but like this hairpin silence — and suddenly she said, “I want you to direct this film.” From there, we started our collaborat­ion.

Close: It was just a blink reaction, almost instinctua­l. It was mostly the way you talked about it, and the chemistry.

Q: You once said that you’ve always felt like an outsider looking in. What did you mean?

Close: I’m an introvert. I read the book “Quiet: The Power of Introverts in a World That Can’t Stop Talking.” I don’t naturally gravitate toward social situations. I don’t spend a lot of time thinking about where I stand on the Hollywood ladder. Maybe it’s because I’ve never spent time there. I’ve always been someone who spends a lot of time in their head. Acting, for me, is thought.

 ?? GRAEME HUNTER PICTURES-SONY PICTURES CLASSICS ?? Glenn Close, right, and Jonathan Pryce in “The Wife.”
GRAEME HUNTER PICTURES-SONY PICTURES CLASSICS Glenn Close, right, and Jonathan Pryce in “The Wife.”

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