Actress Naomi
Watts pulls a fast one in David Lynch`s Mulholland Drive. Introduced
as Betty Elms, an impossibly sweet and perky blonde trying to make
it in Hollywood, she reinvents herself as a lesbian Nancy Drew who,
in partnership with mystery brunette Rita (Laura Elena Harring), discovers
the rotting corpse of a failed and embittered actress whose alter
ego was ... Betty Elms.
With its dream logic and baleful satire
of the movie business, Lynch`s recently released thriller-cum-conundrum,
which origianted as a pilot for a TV series that ABC balked at, has
the trace marks of both mid-`50s Hitchcock and Kenneth Anger`s book
Hollywood Babylon (Dell). A 31-year-old Anglo-Australian with 15 years`
worth of credits, Watts demonstrates remarkable range as she negotiates
this dank world; her performance shimmers, in different moments, with
innocence, lust, goodness and sadomasochistic humiliation.
We talked at the Toronto Film Festival
the day before the terrorist attacks on the World Trade Center and
the Pentagon, and then again a week later.
Graham Fuller: Are we from the same
English town? I`m from Shoreham in Sussex.
Naomi Watts: [laughs] I`m from Shoreham
in Kent.
GF: The next county along - close
enough.
NW: I lived there until I was eight.
My father worked as a sound engineer for Pink Floyd so there was a
lot of that rock`n`roll lifestyle; I hardly ever saw him. My mum raised
my brother Ben [Watts, who photographed Naomi for this story] and
me on her own because she split with my dad when I was four. She had
no money, so we lived with her parents and her sisters. There
are a lot of strong-willed matriarchs in my family. I`m the youngest
woman and the shyest of them all. Mum had a series of bad boyfriends,
and we moved around with them. There was talk of my mother and father
reuniting at one time, but he died when I was about nine and it freaked
my mum out. I think she felt she couldn`t bring us up alone nad she
passive-aggressively threatened my grandparents, saying she would
send us to a foster home, so that they would take care of us, which
they did.
GF: Where did they live?
NW: They had moved to norteast Wales
and we went there to live with them. We took Welsh lessons in a school
in the middle of nowhere while everyone else was taking English. Wherever
we moved, I would adapt and pick up the regional accent. It`s obviously
significant now, my being an actress. Anyway, there was quite a lot
of sadness in my childhood, but no lack of love. My mum is a very
demonstrative, loving person, but she`s had a really hard life.
GF: Did she remarry?
NW: Yes. Then she went on holiday to
Australia and it felt it was the land of opportunity, so we all emigrated.
I was uprooted again, this time to a whole new culture, one that took
me a long time to fit into. At school, I hung out with the dorks because
I knew they would accept me. It took me a while to find my way to
the cool group.
GF: When did you start acting?
NW: Mum put me in drama classes when
I was about 14. I`d been going on about it for some time, so maybe
it was a way to shut me up. Then I started taking more serious classes.
I`d had the desire to act even back in Shoreham.
GF: Do you think it was related somehow
to your fatherґs absence?
NW: Mabye I was lacking some kind of
support and needed to be accepted or appreciated. My father had not
only left the family, but he`d died, so perhaps as a child I felt
doubly abandoned.
GF: Flirting [1991] was the film that
got you noticed, right? Along with Nicole Kidman, Thandie Newton and
Noah Taylor.
NW: Yeah, though I`d had other parts
here and there. I`d taken a break from acting because I`d had a terrible
experience modeling in Japan and I swore I`d never be in front of
any camera again. Back in Sydney I got a great job producing fashion
shoots for a big department store when I was 19. Then I was poached
by Follow Me, an alternative fashion magazine to Vogue. A friend I`d
done acting classes with begged me to come to a weekend workshop.
I resisted at first, but I did it and had a great time. That was it.
On the Monday morning I quit my job and told them I had to follow
my dream. Two weeks later I ran into [director] John Duigan at the
premiere of Dead Calm [1989]. We got to talking and I told him I was
an actress and he said I should audition for Flirting. I thought,
this could be one of those bullshit lines you hear at a party. But
I called, auditioned and got a part. After that I was offered a role
in a soap opera called A Country Practice, but I turned it down.
GF: Why?
NW: Naivetй. I felt I didn`t want to
get stuck on a soap for two or three years. Everyone thought I was
mad. I probably should have done it, but it doesn`t make any difference.
Eventually I got a few more high-profile jobs and then I came to Hollywood
- again naively.
GF: Which is exactly what your character,
Betty, does in Mulholland Drive.
NW: People keep mentioning that, but
it never occurred to me. When I came to America there was so much
promise of good stuff and I thought, I`ve got it made there. I`m going
to kick ass. Then I went back to Australia and did one or two more
jobs. When I returned to Hollywood, all those people who`d been so
encouraging before weren`t interested. You take all their flattery
seriously when you don`t know any better. I basically had to start
all over again. I get offered some things without auditioning today,
but back then they wouldn`t even fax me the pages of a script because
it was too much of an inconvenience. I had to drive for hours into
the Valley to pick up three bits of paper for some horrendous piece
of shit, then go back the next day and line up for two hours to meet
the casting director who would barely give me eye contact. It was
humiliating.
GF: How did your character in Mulholland
Drive evolve between the ABC pilot David Lynch originally shot and
the subsequent movie version?
NW: In the most brilliant way possible.
I saw the pilot and I was really unhappy with it because a lot of
Betty was lost. In the beginning you think she`s a one-dimensional
character who should be on the side of the cereal box. She`s got stars
in her eyes, dimples in her cheeks, bounce in her step - you want
to slap her. But the paying off of the character was gone from the
pilot; it was sabotaged.
GF: But then Lynch turned it into
a movie with an expanded script...
NW: Yes, and I got 18 more pages.
GF: And we see how Betty is actually
someone else, Diane. By the same token, the amnesiac Rita, who Betty
befriends, is also someone else, Camilla.
NW: Everyone`s got a different interpretation
of it. But I had to make something up for myself so I could make some
solid, coherent choices. I thought Diane was the real character and
that Betty was the person she wanted to be and she`s in absolute need
of Betty, and Betty controls her as if she were a doll. Rita is Betty`s
fantasy of who she wants Camilla to be. In the end, though, all the
characters are little conduits of David and what`s goinf on in his
stream of consciousness. The hardest part for me was playing Betty,
because she was less naturalistic than Diane. I needed to make her
human somehow. When I see her now, I go, "Oh, my God, you`re
a psycho." But there were places where I tried to show that she
had deeper dimensions, for example, when she turns detective.
GF: Presumably, too, in the audition
scene where she suddenly steps out of her goody-two-shoes persona
and shows her seductive side.
NW: I love that scene. It just comes
out of left field. Betty`s definitely a thrill-seeker. I saw her as
this completely innocent young girl from a small town who suddenly
finds herself in a world she doesn`t belong in and is ready to take
on a new identity; even if it`s somebody else`s .
GF: Were you thinking of Doris Day
or Grace Kelly?
NW: Yeah. And Tippi Hedren, Kim Nowak.
GF: Nowak seems right because her
character in Vertigo [1958] also starts out as someone else. Was playing
Betty the key to finding Diane, or vice versa?
NW: I couldn`t have done Diane without
doing Betty. Knowing that things once went well for Betty is what
caused Diane`s depression to emerge. Everyone` experienced some degree
of depression in their life and I definitely have, but not to the
point where I didn`t get out of bed or shower for days.
GF: What the film`s really about,
though, is the trampling of dreams in Hollywood, isn`t it?
NW: Yes, and how it can stifle creativity.
David must have experienced some of that when the network refused
to finance the Mulholland Drive series.
GF: What did you learn making the
film?
NW: David helped bring me out of my shell.
My spirit had been broken a bit over the years by my having to work
on films I didn`t love. Hollywood`s a surreal place, and it really
is an assault on your spirit. David saw me for myself and was OK with
my self-doubts. And I gave him the part of myself I felt I`d been
hiding for so long, that didn`t need to be hidden. But he`s an artist
and he knows that creativity, humor and sexuality all come out of
a dark place.
GF: Do you have a partner?
NW: Yeah. We`ve been together a year
and a half.
GF: How do you balance work and love?
NW: My work is the only thing I`ve been
able to depend on. I`ve never been completely sure in a relationship
to the point where I`ve felt like I`m going to be completely taken
care of emotionally.
GF: Do you want to stay in Hollywood
and make a life there?
NW: I have been making a life there,
yet I`ve never felt like it was home. I need to leave L.A. every three
months for the sake of my head.
a heap on the floor, then that`s
another way. I guess I`m a mixture of both. But watching the way people
are coming together now ... I mean that`s pretty wonderful. |