The Unofficial
Rachel Weisz
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The "Empire" Interview
-- Empire Interview - May 1998 issue --
The last time Empire encountered Rachel Weisz was in an ersatz 19th
century fisherman's cottage on a rain-soaked patch of the Cornish coast. She was there to
fill the lead role in next month's Amy Foster, Beeban Kidron's adaptation of the Conrad
short story of the same name. Empire was there (when it was known as Swept From The Sea)
to ruin a pair of Reeboks in the mud.
"I'm sorry," she says honestly, when reminded of the occasion. "I've just
drawn the most enormous blank." Oh. But thankfully, the young actress is not nearly
so absent-minded when it comes to the auspicious events that have marked her career so
far.
Born in London, where she still lives, Weisz became a professional actress after studying
English at Cambridge. Plans to attend stage school were shelved when she resolved that, at
22, she was too old to "carry on being taught stuff". A decision further
prompted by the wealth of experience already gleaned from Talking Tongues, the theatre
group she formed while still at university.
"We did things at the Edinburgh Festival," she explains. "We were described
as 'The Giants Of The Fringe' by The Scotsman or something, which was pretty funny because
it was just two small girls performing, a producer and a director. It was like a little
family."
Culled from improvisations, their performances were intense sets of what Weisz terms
"fraught naturalism". "I know," she blushes, "it sounds too
pretentious to mention. In one, called Slight Possessions, we played two lovers. It was
about how people try to control each other in a relationship. We were in these little
floral dresses with bare feet, looking very vulnerable and sweet. And we just proceeded to
hurl each other round the stage. It was very violent, very funny and, I have to say,
superb."
A subsequent show at the National Theatre Studio brought her to the attention of director
Sean Mathias who cast her in the West End revival of Noel Coward's Design For Living, for
which she won the prestigious London Critics Circle Award for Most Promising Newcomer.
That in turn led to her fleeting but memorable screen debut as the sexually voracious foil
to Liv Tyler's vacillating virgin in Bertolucci's Stealing Beauty. She describes the
veteran Italian auteur as "very poetic, very magnificent, a bit of a maverick,"
and claims she would have done "almost anything" for the chance to work with
him. Given that it was her first movie, though, did she have any qualms about portraying
such a . . .
"Such a what? Such a tremendous bitch?"
No, such a tremendous slag.
Hmmm," she muses. "I didn't really think,'Is this a good idea?' It was just the
elation of getting the part. I felt quite clumsy, actually," she says of the
transition from stage to screen acting. "They are very different crafts and I think
I've got a lot to learn. It's not like drawing a picture where you can rub bits out and
start again."
Unfortunately, Weisz's follow-up to Stealing Beauty, Andrew Davis' acrid sci-fi stinkbomb
Chain Reaction with Keanu Reeves, was anything but a cushy date. "Looking back on it,
I think it's kind of hilarious," she giggles. "This English person lost in the
wrong genre running around going, 'Which way?' 'I dunno. Run!' Obviously I was like
(whispers in awe) 'I can't fucking believe this, Keanu Reeves!' It was beyond belief, this
huge $60 million movie with huge megastars and egos and suits. But it was so arduous to
make I can tell you."
Tell us, tell us.
"First of all, Andy Davis is a lunatic. I adore him and respect him, but he is a
total lunatic. Sometimes we'd work 18 hours a day in the snow. He does a lot of takes and
when there's action stuff going on, you're doing everything 200 times. You get one minute
of film and you've spent three days getting it. It was unspeakably difficult and
gruelling, mentally as well as physically. "I was very disappointed," she
admits. "But I was most disappointed for Andy because I have never seen a human being
put so much of themselves into a project. And he's a lovely, lovely man so I felt
particularly sorry for him. "
With that under her belt, Weisz is obviously delighted to be starring in Amy Foster, a
film she became involved in while doing re-shoots for Chain Reaction. "I read the
script and it was without doubt the best I'd ever read. It's the most beautifully written
script. I read it and cried for a whole day. I just knew exactly who Amy Foster was,"
she says of the tragic, reclusive heroine who falls in love with a shipwrecked Ukrainian
emigrant and is shunned by the local community. "I knew her in my mind. Making the
movie was a tremendous experience."
Casting her alongside such heavyweights as Sir Ian McKellen, Kathy Bates, Joss Ackland and
Tom Bell, Kidron also appears to have considerable respect for Weisz, describing her as
having "a timeless and authentic beauty" and compares her to 30s movie goddess
Merle Oberon.
"There's a lot of contemporary actresses I admire," says Weisz, "but
there's practically no one who has made a colour movie whose career I'd want. My
favourites are Katharine Hepburn, Bette Davis, Elizabeth Taylor - Hepburn's flair for
comedy; Davis' self-dramatising, Liz Taylor's burning sensuality. They are what I aspire
to. I don't feel very modern, not at all . . ~
© Empire - May 1998, Issue 107
Empire is published by: EMAP Metro Ltd
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