The Mercury News

REWRITING THE SCRIPT ON MENTAL ILLNESS

Actress Glenn Close regrets how her most famous movie role in ‘Fatal Attraction’ depicted the disorder

- By Martha Ross >> mross@bayareanew­sgroup.com

Glenn Close is widely known as one of the most accomplish­ed and versatile actresses working in America today. She’s been nominated for six Academy Awards and has won three Tonys, three Emmys, two Golden Globes and numerous other honors.

Now 70, she’s also dedicated herself to a number of good causes. Nearest and dearest to her heart these days is fighting the stigma surroundin­g mental illness.

In 2009, the actress co-founded Bring Change to Mind, a San Francisco-based nonprofit with the mission of encouragin­g people to talk more openly and empathetic­ally about mental illness.

Close started the nonprofit at the request of her sister, Jessie Close, and her nephew, Calen Pick. Jessie Close, 63, has bipolar disorder, and Pick, 34, an artist in Bozeman, Montana, has schizoaffe­ctive disorder, a condition that exhibits

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symptoms of both schizophre­nia and a mood disorder.

But as Close has become nationally respected for her mental health advocacy, she realizes she is still best known for another powerful force in how mental illness is portrayed in our culture.

Thirty years ago, she starred as the emotionall­y disturbed, bunny-boiling career woman Alex Forrest in the hit movie thriller “Fatal Attraction.”

And while Close mostly likes “Fatal Attraction” and appreciate­s the opportunit­ies it brought her in Hollywood and on Broadway, she has long regretted the way her character ultimately came across and what the movie said, or didn’t say, about mental illness.

To please 1980s test audiences, the movie avoided a possibly sympatheti­c backstory for Alex (that she was molested as a child) and stripped away any psychologi­cal complexity that could help explain why the character obsessivel­y stalked a married man (Michael Douglas) and targeted his family. The final ending the movie used — not the intended original — completed Alex’s transforma­tion into femme psycho killer and one of the screen’s most memorable villains.

“In my head I tried to give her a dimension that was subconscio­usly more intriguing, but who knows?” said Close in a phone interview. “I think it’s very tricky to portray mental illness faithfully. It’s so easy to make someone with a mental illness a villain.”

When Close was making “Fatal Attraction,” she didn’t know she had family members with mental illnesses. Calen was a small child, while Jessie was years from being diagnosed. However, Close knew that her sister was not well, having seen her drink excessivel­y and burn through relationsh­ips, jobs and money.

But even though she wasn’t as well-informed as she is now, Close still held the the view that it was wrong to depict psychologi­cal disturbanc­es as evil.

“The only truly evil person I ever played was Cruella,” said Close, referring to her flamboyant dog-killing character in the 1996 live-action remake of “101 Dalmatians.”

She battled with the producers to give Alex more complexity, but ultimately she relented and went with their idea of what would make a box office hit. “I wouldn’t have given up so easily now,” she said.

Through Jessie and Calen, as well as through her work with Bring Change to Mind, Close has gotten to know plenty of people with mental illnesses and to hear them reveal how they are often wrongly viewed as strange, unreliable, morally weak or dangerous.

Those mispercept­ions mean they risk losing friends, family members, jobs or other opportunit­ies, Close said. Afraid of being ostracized, or not sure of how to get help, they may also delay getting diagnosis and treatment.

In Jessie Close’s case, she lost decades to her illness, telling USA Today in 2012: “I grieved for those lost years. There were careers I couldn’t handle because of it. I wish I was able to get help earlier.”

To start Bring Change to Mind, Close consulted with mental health experts to make sure that any work they did was grounded in science. With her celebrity, she was also able to enlist some famous friends to help in other ways. The organizati­on’s first public service announceme­nt was directed by Ron Howard, who made “A Beautiful Mind,” the 2001 drama about Nobel Prize-winning mathematic­ian John Nash’s struggles with schizophre­nia.

The PSA shows selected people moving through the crowds at Grand Central Terminal in Manhattan, wearing T-shirts identifyin­g their condition, or their relationsh­ip to a person with an illness. That includes Jessie, wearing a “bipolar” T-shirt and Glenn, wearing a “sister” T-shirt. Bring Change to Mind PSAs have since been viewed more than 1 billion times.

Bring Change to Mind also supports student-led programs in high schools that allow teens to educate one another about how mental illnesses are not failures of character, but disorders of the brain that are as biological­ly based as other chronic conditions like diabetes or heart disease. Bring Change to Mind currently sponsors the initiative in more than 100 high schools in the Bay Area and Southern California.

Close will attend the organizati­on’s second annual High School Summit this weekend in San Francisco where 250 teens will meet with mental health experts and people with mental illnesses and engage in activities.

Since starting Bring Change to Mind, Close also has come out about her own struggles with depression. But she credits her sister and nephew with being the true heart of the organizati­on, because they are willing to put a human

face to mental illness. Depression, bipolar disorder, schizophre­nia, post-traumatic stress disorder and other conditions affect an estimated one in four people per year, various studies say.

“It’s been proven that the most effective way to change attitudes around those living with mental illness is to meet people face-to-face who are living with it and surviving it,” Close said.

Pick especially is a testament of how someone can return from the depths of psychosis to lead a happy, fulfilling life, she said. He first checked into a lockdown facility at 16 and spent the next 10 years in “hell,” struggling to piece back together his fractured

sanity through a combinatio­n of medication, therapy and family support. Today, he thrives as an artist and is married.

“To me they are my true heroes,” Close said. “When they came to me and asked me for my help, to do something about raising awareness about how toxic stigma is, I said I would do it if they would do it with me. The fact that they have the courage to do that — it still moves me to my core.”

As for her most famous movie role in “Fatal Attraction,” Close believes that societal attitudes have begun to change enough that Alex would probably be treated more sympatheti­cally if the movie were made today.

But she said there is still a long way to go. “I envision the day (mental illness) will be talked about as freely and openly and without shame or fear as cancer or diabetes,” she said.

 ?? WARNER HOME VIDEO ?? Michael Douglas and Glenn Close in “Fatal Attraction” (1987).
WARNER HOME VIDEO Michael Douglas and Glenn Close in “Fatal Attraction” (1987).

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