Arab Times

I don’t plan my career: Mirren

Actress always had secret hankering to do ‘Fast’

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LOS ANGELES, Oct 12, (RTRS): In Variety’s 2016 Power of Women issue, Helen Mirren is honored for her work with SAY, the Stuttering Associatio­n for the Young. Just after the issue’s cover photo shoot in New York, she sat down for a chat with Variety’s Gordon Cox to talk “Fast 8,” women in Hollywood and the pay gap.

Question: You tend to move easily between serious, thoughtful dramas — like last spring’s “Eye in the Sky,” or “Collateral Beauty,” hitting screens in December — and popcorn fare like the upcoming “Fast 8.” What guides the decisions you make in your career?

Answer: Usually what I do is a reaction against what I’ve just done. I’m always looking for something that’s a bit different from my last gig. But I don’t plan my career. I never have. It’s potluck, really, what happens to come along. But I had always had a secret hankering to do “Fast and Furious,” because I love driving cars. Of course, when I finally got my chance, I wasn’t driving the bloody car. I was in the back of an ambulance with Jason Statham. Q: What superhero would you want to play? A: I’m not really into superheroe­s very much. But certainly someone who can fly! Q: Who do you think should play Bond? A: Kenneth Branagh would be a fabulous Bond. He never would do it, because he’s too busy doing other stuff, but he’s got the urbane-ness and the intelligen­ce and the wit. And he’s quite hunky. Q: Could a woman play Bond? A: I think a woman could play, and has and should played, a similar character. But I think — Hm, I’m wading into murky waters here, but I wonder if the iconic-ness of James Bond... Maybe I’m wrong. I played Prospera in “The Tempest” [a gender-bent version of the Shakespear­e play’s male protagonis­t, Prospero], much to the hilarity of certain older actors who found it hysterical­ly funny. I don’t want to find myself in the position of those geriatrics, saying women can’t play men’s roles. Let’s put it this way: There are no rules about anything. Anything is possible.

Q: What are your thoughts about how women in Hollywood are faring right now?

Progress

A: There’s been massive progress. I’ve always said this, for my whole career: Don’t worry about the number of roles available for women in drama; worry about the number of roles for women in real life. Because as women’s profile gets raised in all the arenas in real life — politics, business, the medical profession­s, science, technology, whatever — the world of drama will inevitably reflect that, and roles for women will get better. However, having said that, it still really pisses me off that in many movies, the only time you see more women on the screen than men is in a swimming pool scene, in which case suddenly the world is populated by women in bikinis. And often they’re wearing high heels! No woman ever wears a bikini and high heels around a swimming pool!

Q: Have things changes much for women in the industry, over the course of your career?

A: I have witnessed such a huge change. The biggest change for me, and the best change, is to seen women on the set, in the crew. It wasn’t that long ago I saw my first female electricia­n. And to me, that’s really exciting. That’s a really big change, because that was such a macho, male world.

Q: Salary disparity has also become a hot topic recently. What’s

for the televised spectacle geared toward MTV’s internatio­nal audience. (AFP)

LOS ANGELES:

Miley Cyrus was at a turning point in her life after a performanc­e as a gyrating teddy bear at the 2013 Video your take on it?

A: It’s such a complicate­d issue. How much money your last movie made, how many days you’ll spend doing the role. It’s not as simple as saying, “I want parity.” Of course, if there are a man and a woman on a set, and they’re doing the same number of days, and they’re of the same stature, then of course they should be paid the same.

And it’s a hard thing to talk about, too, because obviously you’re not going to get much sympathy from people, since we’re talking about pretty massive sums of money. Which I think is why women in general, rather sweetly, said, “I’ve got enough money, that’s fine.” Men didn’t.

I love the fact that women are speaking up. I thought what Jennifer Lawrence did was fabulous, and what Patricia Arquette did. They’re brave and I really approve of that. I certainly do believe that the influence of the younger energy, the younger understand­ing, of how things should be, or can be — or actually are, only you guys haven’t caught up with it yet — is powerful. I would say: Listen to the 20- to 30-year-olds.

LOS ANGELES:

Also:

Imagine it: You’re standing in front of 850 people, and you can’t get your words out. The moment might provoke awkwardnes­s or discomfort in a lot of audiences, but not the one that gathers together every year in support of SAY, the Stuttering Assn. for the Young.

“There’s something very magical about an audience full of people just sitting, without any embarrassm­ent, and waiting for the person onstage to say what they have to say,” says Helen Mirren of the annual gala. “It’s beautiful.”

Mirren got involved with SAY after learning about the New York-based nonprofit from Broadway actress Kelli O’Hara. The two knew each other from the theater scene — they both won Tony Awards in 2015 — and O’Hara invited Mirren and her husband, director Taylor Hackford, to the organizati­on’s fundraisin­g gala. “I absolutely was blown away by it,” Mirren recalls.

SAY runs after-school and weekend programs, as well as speech therapy, for young people who stutter. But its fastest-growing initiative is Camp SAY, the annual two-week sleep-away retreat for 8- to 18-year-olds. Drawing some 125 participan­ts to its North Carolina facility, the camp offers traditiona­l summer activities, as well as programs aimed at empowering young people who stutter.

“It’s about making a space to be who you are, and be free and be accepted,” Mirren says.

With a full-time staff of just eight, SAY sustains itself through funds raised by the gala as well as by annual bowling nights hosted by board member Paul Rudd (in New York) and Houston Astros player George Springer (in Houston). That money also helps bolster a financial-aid fund that allows kids from all socioecono­mic background­s to attend the camp. No child has ever been turned away from the camp because a family can’t afford it.

Despite a busy acting schedule that includes upcoming tentpole film “Fast 8” and “Collateral Beauty,” the December Warner Bros release in which she plays a woman who is the personific­ation of Death, Mirren supports not only SAY but a wide range of other charitable organizati­ons, including internatio­nal body Oxfam and the UK’s Refuge. As she notes, “It is a responsibi­lity.”

Music Awards generated mockery and endless media coverage. “It seemed wrong that I had so much attention, and there were so many

people in the country that didn’t have a place to call home,” Cyrus says. “I wanted to bring attention to what was really important.”

The next year, she attended the VMAs with a 22-year-old homeless man named Jessie Helt, who went onstage to accept Cyrus’ Video of the Year award, delivering a speech about homelessne­ss in front of 13.7 million viewers. The gesture was inspired by the 1973 Oscars, at which Marlon Brando sent Native American activist Sacheen Littlefeat­her to decline his award. (RTRS)

PARIS:

French investigat­ors are studying several DNA samples found in the Paris apartment where Kim Kardashian was tied up and robbed at gunpoint of $10 million in jewels, sources close to the inquiry said Tuesday.

“These DNA samples are currently being analysed,” one of the sources told AFP.

However, no DNA has been recovered from Kardashian’s diamond pendant that was found in the street by a passerby near her luxury residence just hours after the crime, the sources said. (Agencies)

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