Baltimore Sun

Actor found music inside of Mitzi Fabelman

Spielberg film role showcases extent of Williams’ range

- By Jake Coyle

In both Steven Spielberg’s “The Fabelmans” and Kelly Reichardt’s “Showing Up,” Michelle Williams plays women where life — societal hurdles and daily nuisances — gets in the way of selfexpres­sion.

Mitzi Fabelman, the early-1960s matriarch based on Spielberg’s mother, has given up her career as a talented concert pianist to raise a family. It’s a sacrifice that haunts her. It’s also a gift that radiates from her.

“I think of her as the piano that she loved so much,” Williams says. “That range was inside of her. That musicality. That emotional dexterity. That was her art. That music flowed through her, and it affected how deeply she could feel.”

As an actor, Williams has steered straight into some indelibly tempestuou­s characters: the romantic of “Blue Valentine,” Marilyn Monroe in “My Week With Marilyn,” the anguished ex-wife of “Manchester by the Sea.” But if there was ever a role that showed the extent of Williams’ range — her every-note-on-thepiano “emotional dexterity” — it’s Mitzi.

The fictionali­zed but autobiogra­phical film, now in theaters, centers on Spielberg’s coming of age as a filmmaker. But Mitzi is the film’s aching soul. At turns despondent, playful and ebullient, Mitzi’s moods swing with a quicksilve­r melancholy, caught between undying devotion to her children and a stifling of her dreams. In many ways, she gives them to her son. It’s Mitzi who gifts young Sammy/Spielberg his first movie camera.

“Movies are dreams that you never forget,” she tells him on his first trip to the cinema.

How life filters into work is deeply embedded in Williams’ emotional life as an actor, one drawn from wellspring­s of personal memory and illuminate­d by the kind of metamorpho­sis Mitzi was denied. How the two relate was on her mind as she spoke in a recent interview. Occasional­ly, Williams’ newborn, her third child and second with her husband, director Thomas Kail, stirred in the next room. Balancing a baby and a big new movie can be head-spinning. At the Gotham Awards, where she received a tribute award, Williams stood stunned at the lectern: “What is happening? I shouldn’t even be out of the house. I just had a baby.”

But it may be just the start. Williams’ performanc­e in “The Fabelmans”

is widely expected to land Williams her fifth Academy Award nomination. It’s an honor the 42-year-old has yet to win.

But what pushes an actor like Williams is closer to her character in “Showing Up.” In it, Williams plays a sculptor of modest human figures, with little hope of attracting a wide audience. The role is almost antithetic­al to Mitzi; Williams’ character, Lizzy, is solitary and less expressive. Her handmade artwork, crafted in between endless interrupti­ons, is about the opposite of something as big and glitzy as a Spielberg production. But she’s compelled, regardless.

“I think it’s that way for everybody,” says Williams. “You never know if what you’re doing is going to be of any interest to anybody but yourself.”

Spielberg’s mother, Leah Adler, died at age 97 in 2017. His father, Arnold Spielberg,

died in 2020 at age 103. Making “The Fabelmans,” which Tony Kushner and Spielberg wrote, became a way to memorializ­e the two most influentia­l figures of Spielberg’s life.

In preparatio­n, Spielberg — who had Williams cast in his mind after seeing “Blue Valentine” — gave her copious amounts of home movies and photograph­s of his mother to comb through. Williams’ impression­s thoroughly informed her interpreta­tion of Mitzi.

“The resonant informatio­n that this woman transmitte­d through a photograph was enough for me to work with, to embody her,” she says. “That’s how strong her spirit was. You could catch it in a frozen image taken 60 years ago.”

But there was also something that Spielberg, who grew up with three sisters, told Williams about his mom that struck her. He said: “We were more like playmates.”

“They got into mischief together. They got into fun,” Williams says. “And I’ll tell you this: None of her children seem to resent her for it. I think they thought they had a pretty great childhood. They had fun together. How often do we let ourselves really play with our children? What do our children want to do with us? Play! She was Peter Pan.”

The pivotal event of “The Fabelmans” comes when Mitzi reluctantl­y leaves her husband (played by Paul Dano) for his best friend (Seth Rogen). It’s a defining moment for Sammy, wrapped up in his own dawning realizatio­n of the power of cinema to capture, shape and distort reality. For Mitzi, it’s a desperate stab at self-preservati­on.

“I thought she already suffered a near-death experience. When she gave up her dream of being a concert pianist, she experience­d what it’s like for part of you to die,” says Williams. “So when she’s faced with another neardeath experience — do I stay in this marriage or do I allow myself to go where my heart is leading? — she knows that she can’t die again. There will be nothing left of her.”

Williams’ favorite thing to hear on the set was Spielberg behind the monitor saying, “I have an idea.” In one especially vivid scene during a campout, Mitzi dances in the headlights of a parked car, swaying to a melody seemingly just out of reach. Spielberg had many impromptu ideas shooting that scene. Williams, coming off Gwen Verdon in the miniseries “Fosse/ Verdon,” channeled a dancer’s composure to give Spielberg as many options as possible. “Mitzi wasn’t a dancer per se, but she carried herself like one,” she says.

Such moments making “The Fabelmans,” Williams says, were so intoxicati­ng that she wanted to “eat the air” on set. When Williams was 12, she decided she wanted to be an actor after seeing not just a play on stage but “the whole beehive behind.” “I wanted to be inside of a family,” she says. After finding that on “The Fabelmans,” letting go of Mitzi wasn’t easy.

“It’s hard to let them go. It’s sad to let them go. You’ve spent so much time, to exclusion of other things and people in your life, with them,” Williams says. “I can allow it to be a slow process of letting go of them. And I can try to cling to the couple or maybe many things that they have taught me. You can’t help but be affected by their spirit as it’s been residing with you. She certainly was a huge loss for me. I hit the floor when this movie was over. I cried in a way that caught me by surprise.”

 ?? CHRIS PIZZELLO/AP 2022 ?? Michelle Williams, seen Nov. 7 in LA, stars as Mitzi Fabelman in Steven Spielberg’s “The Fabelmans.”
CHRIS PIZZELLO/AP 2022 Michelle Williams, seen Nov. 7 in LA, stars as Mitzi Fabelman in Steven Spielberg’s “The Fabelmans.”

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