PopEntertainment.com >
Feature Interviews - Actresses
>
Features Interviews F to J
> Salma Hayek
SALMA HAYEK
TALKS TOUGH AND ACTS WITH VULNERABILITY
By Brad Balfour
Copyright ©2006 PopEntertainment.com. All rights reserved.
Posted:
March 11, 2006.
Wow, can you believe it? Salma Hayek is turning
40 in September. Yet for her to do this interview while battling a cold,
you would never believe she was hitting the big four zero, let alone be in
her 30s.
That's why, when you see her in her latest film, Ask
the Dust – she
plays this slightly damaged 20-something Mexican waitress, who
dramatically strips down and rushes into cold ocean waves, nude and raw
(witnessed by us and her male lover played by Colin Farrell) – it is
almost breathtaking. Though she is a beautiful woman, she also appears as
a beautiful "person" both in the film and in person. She seems almost too
vulnerable and yet is strong and incredibly intelligent.
She has certainly proven to have these qualities in ample amounts; witness
her previous work such as when she did Frida; her performance
playing the tumultuous, emotionally pained artist garnered her a Best
Actress Oscar nomination in 2003. Though she can do totally commercial
films [Wild Wild West, After the Sunset], she seems best suited for
films like Ask the Dust – directed by the great 70-plus Robert
Towne – where she can shine, delving into an emotionally conflicted woman
who struggles with the racism of the time while negotiating her way
between two very difficult men, including Arturo Bandini (Farrell), a
first-generation Italian hoping to land a writing career and a blue-eyed
blonde.
Did you see yourself at the Oscars?
Yes that was lovely.
You looked gorgeous presenting at the Oscars.
And I did that with this fever.
Robert Towne said that he first thought of you as the perfect person to
do this role, yet when he first approached you nine years ago, you turned
him down and said there was no way you could play a Mexican waitress, that
you would be typecast and never get to do anything else. What changed?
It's not just that. I didn't understand the character. I thought they were
mean. I thought, “If they love each why don't they just get together?” I
was young. I didn't want to do the movie because I didn't understand the
character. Eight years later I read the script and it hadn’t changed much.
What was so interesting was that I had changed so much. I loved it. I
said, “Oh my God, what a jewel you have here.” It’s very hard to write
love stories that are so intimate. They don't make them anymore. They make
romantic comedies, but not so many stories that are about the complexity
about human emotions. I think it takes a really good writer to explore
that and it takes a lot of courage because everybody is going if you do it
right everybody is going to see it in a completely different way. And it
cannot please everyone, but that is the nature of a real relationship and
you cannot explain it. It cannot be simplistic. It's rare to come across
projects like this. It would take a writer like John Fante to write the
book and a writer like Robert Towne to write the script. I feel fortunate
that I came across this character.
Why do they treat each other the way they do – initially being so nasty
to each other. Why don't they just get together?
That would be the best-case scenario but everybody has a different opinion
on this. What's interesting is that it will make you think, which is one
of the reasons why it's nice to do films. I think we want to narrow [this]
into a simplistic [situation] that everyone can understand. It's one of
those cases where you fall in love with everything that you never wanted
to fall in love with. It goes from that. You have to think of the time
period, it's the depression in
Los Angeles;
it's the peak of racism. Someone who is so broken that the most she can
hope for is for her children, that she doesn't have to have a better
future, and [that would mean she has] to marry an American guy. [Bandini]
is an Italian; now it's not as bad a Mexican, but it was pretty bad time
to be an Italian. He falls in love with a woman who can't even read when
it's his dream to be a writer. So it's the typical thing of "that's not
what I was hoping for." Then it's the normal thing of being terrified to
fall in love because it's very painful to fall in love and for it not to
work. When you see that there is a relationship that has everything going
against it, she's afraid.
It took courage for you to do this, with the sensuality and the nudity.
Yes, it took a lot of courage to do this part but the nudity has a lot to
do with the intimacy of the characters. I think the scene on the beach,
which is an iconic scene from the book, is symbolic of how this woman is a
free spirit, full of life, and full of passion, with a twisted sense of
humor.
It wasn't easy to do the nude scene. Were you asking for a shot
of whiskey to make it easier?
No, you could not get a shot of whiskey because it was very dangerous. It
was very, very cold. I actually had to take something special to keep my
body warm. So did Colin. There were risks of hypothermia. Actually that's
when we stopped; they would take our temperature every time. It was very
complicated to shoot not to mention the waves. You have to be very precise
and at the same time look very free and joyful while you are purple. Yes,
it was a very complicated scene. Being naked it's never easy. But I've
been diving since I was twelve and once we hit the water there was
something calming for me about the water, I sort felt at home. And Colin
was magnificent. He was very supportive. He never looked at my body and, I
know this is shocking, but I was almost starting to worry. But he never
took his eyes off of mine and he was a total gentleman. And he was fun and
made it light. I never thought I'd say this, but I think that I couldn't
have felt safer with anyone else. For some reason that was just the way he
behaved in this movie. He was very good to me.
Would you elaborate on your rapport with Colin?
It didn't start out like that to be honest with you. He had a long
rehearsal. It was part of his process to see the interaction. I think I
had my reservations about Colin as a man, and as an actor, I confess.
Number one: have you ever heard of another actor that dedicates a month or
month and a half to a movie for free? That alone… [was enough], but to be
on time every day with the best disposition, willing to learn, to
participate, and he was passionate about the work. Everybody talks about
how passionate Colin Farrell is, but nobody mentions how passionate he
actually is about the art, about learning, and being there. Some people
are sort of there, but not there, not completely. Something really
beautiful happened. He really won my respect. Our relationship worked so
well because he was always respectful of me from the beginning. We trusted
each other so we were free to try crazy stuff, make fun of each other, and
surprise each other. I never knew what he was going to do and he never
knew how I was gong to respond. So we were on our toes. I think that is
what kept it fresh and created the good chemistry.
How often do you get those stereotypical scripts?
Everyone has a different idea of what the stereotype is. I think the
stereotype is when you take a group of people and you give them five
characteristics and that's all you know. This part is unusual because
number one, the film is based on a real woman. It was funny because I met
John Fante's wife [Joyce] before she died, which was not
Camilla;
it was the woman she hated the most in her life. When she saw Colin, she
melted, and when she saw me, she came to get me. She wanted to slap me.
She started insulting me. "I hate you." So it's based on a real woman. It
has some stereotypical characteristics and 50 more. She is fragile,
afraid, and strong and has legitimate fears that we could all share.
How often to get scripts where you are supposed to play the hot
Latina?
That's not how I see this part. I haven't gotten any lately.
You mentioned that you were originally too young to understand the
part. Do you feel very strange now that you're turning 40?
I don't know what that means. I don't have this relationship with numbers
that you guys have. I find it's more like when people go to jail, and [you
get] your number, whatever whatever… I think people have that relationship
with age. To me, it's another year. I couldn't care less. I don't feel the
difference if it's number 22, or number 52. To me, every year is a gift of
life filled with opportunities, secrets and things to discover with
mystery. I don't differentiate one from the other. I never stop to think
about the number. I sort of just take in the day to the best of my
ability.
Besides your film work, you have your work with abused women.
The work I do with domestic violence is separate from my career. I like it
that way. I don't try to make movies about that because I think it takes
away from the seriousness of the problem and it becomes a fantasy story.
It makes
light of it a little bit. I think it's a serious issue. Everyone
is so concerned about the security in America. No one stops to say that
women and children are not safe in their own home. One out every three
women in America is a victim of domestic violence. We're so worried about
terrorists, but the children, they are the future of the country, and are
not safe in their own home. More should be done about it.
Are you interested in other activist efforts?
I am not an activist I just want to participate in something I believe in.
Given your interest in directing [her debut was Maldonado Miracle],
what did you learn from such a writer/director as Robert Towne
[Chinatown, Mission: Impossible, Personal Best]?
One of the things it made me think about is of all those women who have
been an inspiration to a man, who were forming a man’s life, who changed
him, who made him create a work of art. I think of all those women who
never got the credit for it. That in many times they never even knew it.
Sometimes they died. Camilla dies thinking she everything she did she did
wrong she never knew what she did for him… It made me think of how many –
all the geniuses in art and science had to have a Camilla in order to be
inspired to have a contribution to society. Who are these Camillas? It
makes me think of the name of the book, Ask the Dust.