Copyright ©2007 PopEntertainment.com. All rights reserved.
Posted:
February 21, 2007.
In
Notes on a Scandal, a high-school teacher Sheba Hart (Cate Blanchett)
starts a affair with one of her students, Steven (Andrew Simpson), and is
discovered and emotionally blackmailed by her colleague Barbara (Judi Dench,
receiving a Best Actress Oscar nomination for this film). As adapted by
Patrick Marber – who garnered accolades over his previous screenplay
Closer – Zoë Heller's 2003 Booker-shortlisted novel becomes a
Hitchcockian treatise on betrayal and obsession.
Blanchett
has become a Hollywood institution without actually having become Hollywood,
acting in such acclaimed films as Elizabeth, Charlotte Gray, and
The Lord of the Rings trilogy. This has been a particularly good year
for Blanchett, having starred in three similarly-lauded films – The Good
German,
Babel
and Notes – which landed her in the Best Supporting Actress category
for this year's Oscar.
Is it important to be inquisitive – as inquisitive as say, Barbara, while
performing in or watching Notes on a Scandal?
I think it's important to ask all the questions, but not necessarily to
answer them. It's important to let all of those ambiguities breathe because
once [Sheba] dives in [the affair with Stephen], there's no way back. The
wound is open and there's no way in closing in, no matter if the affair ends
or not. Given the damage to her children, to her husband, to herself, she's
on the public hit-list, so to speak and will be forever so.
How did you get into this role?
Once I understood Sheba as being somebody who's incredibly lost, enormously
fragile – and a time bomb, there was a way "in" for me.
Did
you use the novel when you prepared for your part?
The novel [of the same name by Zoë Heller] was a great source, but it was
from a very unreliable narrator. It's all from Barbara's perspective. I
think what Patrick [Marber, playwright and screenwriter of Notes and
2004's Closer] did with the screenplay, which is fantastic, was to
liberate Sheba from Barbara's perspective. That enabled the film to become
its own entity.
One review put forth the idea that while
Sheba is
in an incredibly lonely position, it's not due to a lack of love in her
life. How complicated was it to get that sort of nuance into the character?
Well anyone who embarks on a destructive relationship like that.... There's
an enormous cry for help in there. Sheba doesn't actually know where to
start. What I like about the film is that it doesn't really attempt to
justify or explain in simple terms why Sheba does what she does. If she sat
down on the analyst's couch and had about fifteen years to deconstruct it,
she might find the language to explain it, but I like how fragile she was.
How
do you think
Sheba
and Barbara ultimately felt toward one another?
I think that they both underestimated one another, Sheba to a fatal degree.
Sheba feels quite sorry for Barbara in a lot of ways and has no idea of the
lengths to which Barbara will go to attach herself to her. And I think
Barbara completely underestimates how lonely Sheba actually is. I think she
just sees the trappings of her life and how peopled it is.
So how tough was Judi Dench during the fight scene?
She can hold her own. We had to do that [scene] quite a lot and she had
this, sort of, ninja turtle [thing] and I had to thrust her into the
bookshelf. We were both dreading the scene, actually. Because it – it
reaches a certain level of absurdity – the stuff that they're saying to one
another. It's actually thrilling to hear the words that
Patrick put into the characters' mouths because the stakes are so high and
"Where did you get my hair? Did you pluck it from the bath with some special
fucking tweezers?!" [laughs] It's a pretty great line.
Did you ever consider what would happen if Barbara didn't expose the
secret?
Sheba's not someone who's going to write her life story. She's not Mary Kay
Letourneau [notorious American schoolteacher who went to jail for having sex
with her 13 year-old student and once released, married him] or somebody who
stayed with the boy. We did talk a lot about what would happen if Barbara
didn't expose the secret and I, sort of, feel like it would peter out.
It's
interesting that it doesn't. There's a desire to blow apart her world. She
describes herself as a good wife and a good mother. There's a sense that she
just wants to fuck it all up. I think that there are a lot of people who
feel that way. The more happy people perceive them, the more they want to
destroy it all and almost start again and have an adolescence that she never
had. Sheba herself married her teacher, so there's an echo, there's a mirror
up there held to herself.
Were you able to suspend your moral judgment?
Yes, absolutely. I think it was very important for me to suspend my own
moral judgment because there is no way to defend what Sheba has done. I
don't think that this film intends to do that at all. The main thing is that
the relationship with Steven is the catalyst which propels her into
Barbara's arms and there lies the true drama and its delicious and thrilling
side.
Is there universality to Barbara's self-involvement?
Look — [I think] we're all absorbed in our own lives and we're the heroes of
our own narratives.
How did you feel about the way that Heller imagined Barbara in the book
version of Notes?
It was an interesting description because it was all from Barbara's
perspective. Barbara never struck me as somebody who had an enormous fashion
sense. She describes [Sheba] as being fey and I found that quite helpful.
She describes her dress as being floaty. The costume designer and I talked
about fabric that floated. Given the hard edge of the punk of her
adolescence, I had met several English women like that. They all had bangs
and there's a, sort of, gossamer quality to them.
Since
you are working with an amazing set of actors, director and screenwriter all
schooled through theater, what's the difference between actors in plays and
actors in films?
People who primarily work in film can be very private about their process.
There's something about being in a theater rehearsal room where people just
go for it and they're not embarrassed to make mistakes because they realize
that it's just a rehearsal. So, it's a much more open process.
With Notes, it was a very open set. That comes from the director,
Richard Eyre, who runs the National [Theater] and is an extraordinary
producer, but also, as a director, he's a great lover of actors. It was
certainly enjoyable from that perspective. You could just feel like you
could muck it in and throw it all around. There wasn't really any judgment.
How does it feel getting all this press for doing The Good German,
Babel and Notes on a Scandal?
I'm certainly sick of talking about them [laughs] – proud as I am of
them. But they're all very different. To have gone from Notes on a
Scandal to The Good German and to be part of an endeavor like
Babel
— they are three things that I am very proud of. Years like this don't come
very often.
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Copyright ©2007 PopEntertainment.com. All rights reserved.
Posted:
February 21, 2007.