Swank returns with new appreciation for life
Actress stars in family drama after three years out of spotlight
TORONTO — Hilary Swank has never seen a loved one suffer from Alzheimer’s disease, which is the basis of her new film, What They Had.
But she does know what it’s like to care for someone who is fighting for their life.
The two-time Oscar-winning actress, who stars as the daughter of Blythe Danner’s Alzheimer’s-stricken character, says she largely stepped away from the spotlight for the past three years to be the sole caretaker for her dad as he recovered from a lung transplant.
“It was one of the best things I could have done for myself, for a lot of reasons,” Swank said during an interview at last month’s Toronto International Film Festival, where What They Had was screened.
“It made me realize that I’m so much more than just an actor. I’ve been an actor since I was 15, and I’ve worked every single year. And to step away from it and to know that that’s not who I am — it’s a part of who I am, but it’s not who I am — was really important for me as a woman.”
It also gave her more appreciation for her career, added Swank, who won an Oscar for her leading role as a transgender man in 1999’s Boys Don’t Cry, and another for playing a boxer in 2004’s Million Dollar Baby.
“I realized how much I love this craft, how much I love telling stories about people who enrich my life and make me see the world in a deeper, more thoughtful way,” said the Nebraska-born actress.
“Now, strangely, I’m getting more opportunities than I’ve ever gotten. I think that’s an exciting time for women.”
In theatres Friday in Toronto and Vancouver, What They Had is from first-time writer and director Elizabeth Chomko, based on her own experiences with her grandmother’s Alzheimer’s diagnosis.
Swank and Michael Shannon play the children of Danner’s
character, while Robert Forster plays her husband and Taissa Farmiga plays the grandchild.
Forster’s character resists putting his wife into assisted living, and the children grapple with their mother’s condition while also facing their own personal struggles and family dysfunction.
Signing on to a project from a first-time filmmaker was a
risk, Swank said, but Chomko told her: “If it’s not authentic, then don’t do it.”
Making the film, and facing her father’s condition, made Swank realize: “All we have is our health.”
“It puts everything into perspective, really, that life is fleeting, and you really have to cease the day and be in the moment and be there for one another, and really not stress
about things that aren’t important,” Swank said.
“That was an important lesson for me and I haven’t lost it. It wasn’t something that was fleeting and just came to me in that moment and then went away.
“I think the same thing with anyone dealing with an illness and a disease that threatens your life — and our memories are certainly our life.”