Anjelica Huston on Modeling, Movie-Making, and a Life in the Spotlight - podcast episode cover

Anjelica Huston on Modeling, Movie-Making, and a Life in the Spotlight

Apr 07, 202048 min
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Anjelica Huston has lived many lives, all with grace and charisma. As the daughter of John Huston (director of The African QueenThe Maltese Falcon, and more) she was movie royalty from birth. But she grew up in rural Ireland and went to high school in Swinging-Sixties London. That meant she developed a set of values far removed from Hollywood high society. Her first career was as a high-end fashion model, a favorite subject of Richard Avedon and later a muse of Halston. But she had always wanted to be a movie actress, and she spent time in the trenches, working on her craft in classes and smaller roles before her Oscar-winning turn in Prizzi's Honor. Right as she was leaving the photo studio for the movie studio, she met Jack Nicholson: "he made me laugh," she tells Alec. The couple defined Hollywood cool for almost two decades. Huston tells Alec the story of all of her transitions -- romantic, professional, and geographic. Her two wonderful memoirs are A Story Lately Told and Watch Me.

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Transcript

Speaker 1

I'm Alec Baldwin and you're listening to Here's the Thing. Angelica Houston is a remarkable actress who has lived a remarkable life. She has an Oscar for her emotionally complex and very funny performance and Prese's honor as the Black Sheep mob daughter may Rose pretty Man and a Maya. I've got a reputation to live up, and the family skin everybody be disappointed if I stopped her. Pitched perfect mor Tsia in the Adams family will be loved for generations.

I'm just like any modern woman trying to have it all, loving husband, family. It's just I wish I had more time to seek out the dark forces and join their hellish crusade. But to fully understand the context of our conversation today, you'll also need a line from a movie Houston had nothing to do with. We're gonna meet Jack and Angelican have a drink there, and if you'd like to come, we'd love to have you and we can

just sit and talk. Nothing. That was Paul Simon ad libbing to Diane Keaton in six trying to conjure the most unpretentious but exclusive party in all the world. Jack and Angelica will be there, no last names needed. Jack is Jack Nicholson, of course, Houston's boyfriend for almost twenty years, starting in the early seventies, and for all that time, nobody embodied the nonchalant glamor of the Hollywood New Wave

more than they did. Angelica Houston is the daughter of Prima Ballerina and Rica Soma and John Houston, one of the greatest filmmakers who's ever lived, the director of The Maltese Falcon, The Treasure of the Sierra Madre, the African Queen and Prese's Honor, for which his daughter one that Oscar.

Angelica didn't spend a lot of time on set with her dad growing up, but she does remember being with him in the studios smoky Darkwood offices in the final days of a Hollywood inhabited by the fast talking, sharply dressed producers and agents of the Golden Age. They were the remnants of the old School. They were serious. There was a definite regard for the autour. The agents worked

for the auteurs, and these guys commanded respect. Even Irving Lazar, who was the book agent who was commonly known as Swifty and Swift, was about four ft tall and looked like a gnome. Yeah, but there was there was a kind of grandeur to it. Um. I remember being around them, and they were affectionate towards me. I was, I was my dad's daughter, so I was. I was sort of tolerated, well, maybe more than tolerated. Well tolerated. Well, you did the one film with your dad first, which was what year

was that? That was called A Walk with Love and Death and that was in nine. I was sixteen years old. I knew nothing except that I wanted to be a movie actress and why movie actresses were beautiful? They and they got the attention of the men in Hollywood, well even before the men in Hollywood, you know, because I didn't grow up in Hollywood. I grew up in Ireland

and I went to school in England. And um, I had a really fantastic mother who who showed me not just movies, but showed me theater and took me to plays and operas. And where was she from? She was Italian, but she was raised in New York and she had been a balanchine dancer. And um, she had a very eccentric, wonderful father. What do you do? He was a restaurantur called Tony Sulma, and he used to stand on his

head and sing opera for his clientele. Restaurant it was called Tony's Wife, and the Rockefellers went there, and people loved him a lot. He was like no one I've ever met. He was an eccentric but wonderful. But my mother took me everywhere. I saw not only Maria Callis singing Tosca, but I also saw I con Tina Turner when I was like fifteen years old at the Revolution. Yeah, I saw it all. I saw Sir John Gielgud, I saw Dame Margaret Rutherford, I saw Laurence Olivier, I saw

Daddy LaRue. I saw the best that England had to offer. Um, your parents met where they met in Los Angeles many years before she'd come out here for what to work. She'd been offered a contract by Selznick because she was very beautiful in her face, was on the cover of Life magazine as a as a young bell or Arena, she roomed with Audrey Hepburn. She was part of that whole movement of young women, very beautiful, who are being groomed for stardom. Um, and then she met my father.

She had actually met him at Tony's restaurant. My grandfather always insisted she write an essay if she was allowed to go to the theater or to see a ballet. So um, some years before my father was about to go off to war, and he'd promised her that, um, he would take her to the ballet and she wouldn't have to write an essay about it. Um. But then he'd he'd renequed on his promise because he was sent off to war. So at least that's how he did. He was a director already and um, they sent him

there to film, and that's right. He did several movies. Um, he did Let There Be Light in the Battle of San Pietro, seminal documentaries for that time. He had a bit of a fight with the War Department later on because they considered them a bit too graphic, a bit too honest, we say. And when he came back from the war, because when I'm trying to track here is Ireland England, l A, why did you grow up in Ireland? Was that his idea? He wanted you guys to live

over there. Well, he was part of the committee for the first Amendment. McCarthy was hard at it, beating all the writers out of Hollywood. My father and Humphrey Bogart, Gary Cooper, Lauren Bacall, a bunch of them formed a committee for the First Amendment, which was basically that you know, you could stand on your on your rights as an individual as a citizen not have to answer questions from the committee. And I think the whole thing left Dad

with a really bad taste in his mouth. He was making a movie called African Queen when I was born. And then afterwards, when where did your mother deliver you cedars of Lebanon in Santa Monica? Where did they shoot in Africa? Yes, in the Belgian Congo. Hepburn and Bogart and your father went to the Belgian Congo. And is back in the day when women would deliver babies and the father was on the road. That's right. Your dad

was making African Queen when you were delivered. Yes, he was, and the call was making meals from you know, I think cooking up bugs for dinner and stuff um. When he returned. He then went practically immediately into Moulin Rouge in Paris, and my mother was sort of chasing him across the continent and left me behind. I was like three months old, and finally came back and collected my brother and I and brought us to France where we lived in Dauville for a while and Saint Jean leus

to a base for you or European base exactly. But when you say she was chasing him around, was he? I mean, listen, I'm gonna I'll get this out of the way up front, Okay, I want to. He was such a great director, One of the greatest directors that ever lived was John Houston. Incorporated a tough thing. To keep God those fires going? Did he always have to be shooting and going and working? He was on Yeah, he was on the march my father. He was working

on the next picture while shooting the last Pig. He loved to shoot, and he loved locations, and he loved um hotels, hotels, challenges, women, consequent cigars, a certain amount of liquor. He liked the chase. Uh. He was a sportsman, a daredevil, and I think extremely enticing to women in general. So I think my mother was attempting to keep up, which of course was hopeless. It was hard to tame him. Yes, indeed,

I think she tried well. I don't know that she tried to tame him, but I think she tried to keep up, to keep up with him. Your parents get divorced when you're high old. My mother died when I was sixteen years old in a car crash, and Um, they hadn't divorced. Where did this happen the accident? Um, she was killed traveling to Venice where were I was in London at school? What was she like? What was your mom like? Um? My mother was incredibly beautiful. She

was very sensitive. She had an Italian background, even though she was a New York Italian. Um. She she was a good girl. Um. She pleased her father. She wrote him long letters when she was on the road in the ballet Um. She was still in the court of ballet Um when she was in her teens and almost until she married my father. She'd come to Los Angeles just in the previous couple of years, and she had gotten immediately pregnant with my brother. She had incredible taste.

I don't know where she got it from, but she knew about things. Yeah, she was a great decorator. She was a wonderful hostess. But She was earthy as well as just beautiful and erudite. She had a full laugh and she had great wit. And I think it was hard for her because in a way, you know, she wasn't like those beautiful adjuncts to the gentleman. She was

very specifically herself. But when your mom dies in your sixteen, which is a very significant age, what happens to you in terms of your mom, I'm assuming it was around more yeah, and I was living with my mother. I may have been seventeen, actually going to school in London. I'd done this movie with my dad where we were very very bad relationship. Point during that movie, I said, all my life, I want to be an actress. I want to be an actress. And finally he'd launched me.

This was, you know, a huge thing that he'd done for me. I think, against everyone's better judgment. And to tell you the truth, I never liked the part. I never liked the film. I didn't really have any regard for it. And who was I to feel that way? And who was I not to be grateful? So this was a really bad moment between my father and I. And it was after I came back from making that movie. Um barely speaking to him, which it's not a good

relationship for a director actress. It's an ugly thing. But anyway, I then took a job understudying Marianne Faithful in Tony Richardson's Hamlet, which yeah at the Roundhouse, Nicol Williamson was playing Hamlet. I rather enjoyed that because, um, Marianne was in delicate health and she often didn't go on, so I had I had some good opportunities to go on. And Shakespeare is like a protective shield. He's like a hazmat suit. You can't be bad. I don't think with

with lines. Shakespeare a lot a lot better, you know. And I remember lines in A Walk with Love and Death like go shoot a cow. And I reacted so badly to the script. I was barely able to do it, you know. But now having been given a little bit of a chance to go on and flex my muscles, um, I was really liking, you know, treading the boards. It was at that time that my mother died doing that show.

I was doing that show, and and when she died, the show was on its way to New York, and I grabbed a seat on board and went to New York, and I don't even remember my father's having an objection. I think he was those sort of bewildered by by my powers of escape. And by the time he caught up with me in New York, I was already modeling. I had started a career for myself, and I was pretty determined to lead life my way. New York was

never home for you, no, UM. I stayed initially with my best friend at the time, who I had met when I was like seven and she was ten. UM. Her name is Joan Buck. She was the daughter of my father's producer on those war movies, UM and cameraman, Jules Buck. And I stayed with Joan and she was working for Mademoiselle at the time, so I met a

lot of people through her. UM I met very good photographers, like people dan't Helmett Newton and David Bailey who had actually met in in London, and Dick Avedon who I had met in London, who was a friend of my mother's, and so UM I started to model. UM At first, it was kind of difficult because I didn't have a lot of self confidence. I knew what I wanted to do,

but UM, it wasn't a natural fit. I remember going into Eileen Ford and she said, well, obviously you need a nose job, and then she asked to look at my legs and it was it was not that comfortable, but yes, yeah, yeah. But on the other hand, I had a few um champions, Dick Avadan being one of them, and we did a really nice layout in Vogue, like a lot of pages in Ireland, and so I kind of gained a reputation as an editorial model, not an

advertising model. So it was considered very grand to be an editorial model, except that one didn't make money, you know, for editorial you made a few hundred dollars a day, yes, as opposed to the girls who were out there for Claire All or whatever. And I was never going to be a Claire All girl. So um. After about four years where I was in a relationship with a much older photographer called Bob Richardson and he was great to work for a lot less nice to live with, but

went home. That's right. Yeah, you met him shoot for Harper's Bazaar. He was the photographer. He was the photographer editorial and you were how old I was and was, but he was an artist and he was a magician. He'd look at you through the lens and then he'd just take the camera down and place it in his lap for a minute and stare at you. And you felt like you could really provide the goods. Sometimes after we worked together, I'd be trembling, I'd be shaking, um

from the impact. Um, there's something about working with people who are very, very good. It's the biggest turn on in the world. Talent is the greatest effdaisac it is And I'd have to say that, you know, our relationship was very much guided by that. Was that was central to our relationship. I don't really want to remember how we were um as a man and a woman. I much prefer to remember as as as photographer and molleagues. Yes, as colleagues, and as two people who went after something

is a period that ends New York. Well, my father, of course, was horrified by the fact that I was going out with a forty two year old man, and not just any forty two year old man. Bob had a history of of drugs, and Um, where's your father anti drug? Oh? Seriously, yes, extremely extremely anti drug. Um, and I don't think any fathers all that much in love with the idea of his seventeen year old girl

getting involved with a drug addict. But the fact about Bob was that he was um one of of a group of rather important and interesting and famous people who went to see a doctor called Dr Max Jacobson. He had people like Margot Fontaine and Jack Kennedy and Truman, Capodi, Tennessee Williams, a lot of very interesting people, and um, he gave them the combination of of drugs, some I think very pleasant and mind expanding, and then he'd hit them with something not quite so good. He was manipulative.

And there was an article written about Bob Richardson in the New York Times. It talked about his experience with Dr Max Jacobson. And my father read this article and his consequence thought, well, maybe this is not a common street my daughter's chosen to be with, but someone of deeper interest. So he invited Bob and I to go on a trip to Mexico. It was an ill fated excursion in that um, straight out I got the worst

sunburned in my entire life. They thought about you know what I wanted to drink, They fought about, you know where we should eat. They fought about a lot of things. At the end of the that trip, my father went on an excursion solo to LAPAs to find me a black pearl and came back empty handed except for a pair of straw hats. Despondent um. If I remember correctly from the book, this was the period of lots of

jewels and furs. Lutely just a cascade. Yes. And then we were leaving to go back to Los Angeles, and Bob and I had an epic fight, and um, we parted at Los Angeles Airport. It and I'd separated our clothes from our bags the night before, and down to the last minute, I wasn't sure if I could actually make the cut. Yeah, but I did, and I didn't look back. I went to live with my dad for the next four or five months where in the Palisades is he in l a as a function purely of

the business. And this is where did he love Southern California, actually loathed it like it had had, you know, a certain sort of despisal for it. They couldn't decide on a on a particular style of house, and how you know. Tutor was followed by Regency was followed by George and aesthetically it didn't please him. He felt that it was all too safe, um, predictable bourgeois, um no man and had a great line, there's no place on earth where the homes are more finely appointed than in bel Air.

And these and the artwork and the tapestries. He said, these moguls who control these media companies, and they have the most elegant taste. And he wondered what happened to that taste from when they left their driveway and drove through the gates of the studio. Where did that taste go? Well, sometimes they took it to their offices some day, and then others not so much. Yes, and it has been for a long time. And something about it said home to me. When I began to live here, the Palisades

was very beautiful. It was sort of semi rural. Um. My father had just gotten remarried to a woman called C. C. Shane. Um. I could ride horses with C. C. Up in will Rogers. I really liked Will Rogers a lot. Um. Something about being in this city that wasn't concrete, being in place where you could go out to restaurants and shops, and and eli was great in the day. I mean it was fun. There was the Luau, there were there were about seven great restaurants. Uhcan. Yeah, there were some really

wonderful places to go and be. And I think in the day it was very fun place to change. Ah, the eighties probably just gets too built up. It got too built up, and Rodeo Drive became very glitzy. Up until that point, there was a kind of comfort to the place. And and I longed for beautiful weather and brown skin. I mean, that was the thing that you really wished for in school when I was growing and Nicholson, of all people, I said to him, I said, you

could have any home anywhere, and you live here. And he said, and he I can't do my bad Jack, But he was like, he said, yeah, he said, this is my town. Oh he loves this is my town. Said, he just loves it. He loves it. He doesn't have to leave home. He's completely happy, has his pictures, he's got his books, his teeth, and his Lakers. I was so sad about Kobe. I was as sad for Jack about Kobe as I was for Kobe. Frankly, the Lakers

are almost part of Jack, like an extra limb. But but yes, it was truly his town, and I fell in love with it as I fell in love with jack Um. There was a kind of freedom. You could be completely um under the radar here New York. Every time you go outside, people see you, people recognize you for some reason. I was recognizable quite early, and I never really liked it, you know, unless I was ready for it. I'm fine if I put on the dog and go out, but I'm not fine if I'm taken unawares.

And something about um feeling exposed like you did on the streets of New York. It's still it still takes me by surprise. And there's a look people give you in the streets sometimes I'm sure you know it, which is like it's a look of appreciation, and it's almost a wink. And they don't want to bother you, but still you feel like they know me. They know me too much. They signal it, especially when you think you

look shitty. But everyone's got a camera in their pocket twenty four hours a day, and they take pictures of you eating, and they take pictures of me with my children, and they make your life miserable, miserable, and it's a very different thing for me, having been a model. I loved having my picture taken, I really did. Yeah, it's a form of addiction and also the way of a good photographer takes your picture. I'm reminded briefly of Bill Cunningham,

who was essentially a street photographer. But he would say do you mind, and then and you go no, no, go ahead. But there was a kind of decorum about it. Now, not at all. And when did you decided to get back on the horse acting? Was when I split with Bob at l a X. And what's the next project to take on as an actress? The last Tycoon with Elia Kazan DeNiro with Bob de Niro, But Jack was maybe going to do that and then decide um, Actually, yes, just just where did you meet? I met him at

his house at his birthday party? I went with Cecy. She said, oh, there's a party of Jack Nichols. I mean, that's how loose things were those days. And all of his nicknames, what did he call you? SUTs? And then it's the Big which came from the Big the Big Fabulous because I used to say fabulous all the time, so it was the Big Fabulous. And then it became the big What did he call the car? The Mercedes was the what bing bing bing cherry. He doesn't still

have that card, as he was a car. I have a six Mercedes the last year they made the old model, such a beautiful car. What do you do you call your car name? No, but I'm going to now mine call it. That was another nickname Jack had for me, mine, which became minal. When we were skiing, I'd be swallowing down the slope and he'd be up on a on a chair lift, and I'd heard Angelica Houston. Another seminal figure of the seventies and eighties his poet and punk

rocker Patti Smith. Like Houston, Smith is a great artist who had to navigate a complex relationship with another great artist, in Smith's case, photographer Robert Maplethorpe, who died of complications from AIDS in nine. You know, I'm still connected with him. I still think about him every day. And I mean, of course, you know we were boyfriend and girlfriend. We

did all the things young people do. But as he felt freer as an artist in a human being, the next thing that happened is he blossomed and felt his sexual nature. We had to weather that. It was difficult and it took a few years because neither one of us wanted to part. You can get a link to my full conversation with Patti Smith by texting Smith to seven zero zero one. That's s M. I T H two seven zero one zero one. I'm Alec Baldwin and

this is here's the thing. When Angelica Houston's stepmother, Ccy brought her to Jack Nicholson's birthday party in n she didn't have imagined what she was setting in motion. Houston was smitten and spent the night. He made me laugh, but he sent me home in a cab. I showed up the next day in my evening dress from the night before, and Cecy said, what are you thinking? I had no idea how I should be treated. Basically, I

was about nineteen or twenty. I was still a baby kid. Yeah, without any idea how I should be treated or you know, sense of decor. No none. And I remember desperately hoping he'd call me, and when he did, I said, immediately, but if you take me out, you have to pick me up and you have to drive me home. And I remember this long pause on the other end of the phone. But he did just that. Once he was kind of once he signed on, yes, once he signed on her, he was pointed in the right direction. He

could be very gallant. Um. Jack was a wonderful boyfriend, too easily distracted. UM do you find that getting married and settling down, It's just like there's no time for that. You're too busy enjoying this life. Well, I can't say that I really enjoyed it all that much. I spent um. I spent a lot of time and tears, a lot of time crying when I was with Jack a lot of the time, feeling slighted a lot of the time, UM, feeling like he didn't get me enough, or that I

wasn't getting enough attention from him. His attention was very splintered. He he reminded me sometimes of UM. A wonderful dog we used to have called Big Boy together, who's a He was half Labrador, half Golden Retriever, big black dog, wonderful dog. But he'd got a look in his eye and that was it. He was off. And I always knew that I really wasn't the most important thing in

Jack's life. I was your dad all over again. Um, yeah, and and Jack got a tremendous amount of attention, and that was hard for me, you know, because also I knew what it was to get my own kind of attention. Um, and so it turns into a kind of competition. When did that begin? Meaning when did you start to say? What am I going to make me and my work the most important thing? When does that start? It started pretty early on, and I think, oh, it was difficult

because I didn't really have any background in acting. I've been around these guys all my life, but I had never studied. And I remember going to a class A good friend of Jack's called Harry Giddis, wonderful guy, took me to a class at Eric Morris's studio, and I was just sort of appalled. Um, there was Linda Crystal on the floor begging for a dime. That was you know, it was a whole kind of scene in there, and I'm We're coming out and being just indignant and outraged.

And I knew nothing except that I had an instinct. So shortly thereafter, I was speaking to a friend of mine and she said, I'd like to introduce you to someone that I think you might like. She's a teacher um, and her name is Peggy Fury. And I walked into Peggy's studio and I audited maybe for three classes before she said, all right, you know, let's see what you do in this exercise. And God, I fell in love. I fell in love with acting. I fell in love

with her. I fell in love with that class. And I was in that class for about three or four years, just doing scenes. She turned on all the lights in me, you know, and around that. What about her? How how did she succeed in doing that? First of all, she really listened and she really watched you, and she built up a complicity with me. So someone was really bad, So it's Bob over again, but a different medium. Yeah.

And if someone was really bad in the class or was sort of hashing it up in a scene or something, she would kind of sneak a look at me, like give me a wink or something. She made me feel like I knew what I was doing. And sometimes she'd she'd criticize me outright, but she never embarrassed me. She she loved props. Peggy would love it, like if you brought food into class, because then you know, you'd eat the food after the scene. There was something so motherly

and so um warm about her. She reminded me of the way I was with my mother, and I think that was something that I really needed at the time. And then women helped you. Yeah, women always. Actually, it's true, it's true. Although they challenge you, women, it's as gentler approach. And I think men challenge you. It's it's not because they love you less. It's because they want you to prove yourself somehow or or at least the men in my life kind of were more attracted to what was

independent in me. So the first film you do that is a real movie that you get some attention for is Preature's honor. He was, and you were with Jack. Then I was with Jack. So when you're on the set of the film and it's Jack, it's your boyfriend and your dad, and you're back on a set with your dad after the last go round, wasn't it was

not a party? And I always remember Jack said to me, I said, what was it like on the set of Chinatown where it's this iconic director and you have great movie star and Polanski is about to become an iconic director. He's on his way to that and I said, what

was it like with the three of them together? And I'll do my bad imitation of your dad to Jack said that, Uh, he said that Houston called him Roman, You call him Roman, and and he said Polanski would hold forth with all this kind of direction, and and Houston would turn him and say, now, Roman, there are really only two directions, a little more or a little less and really and and I thought, what a what a world to be with these three like titans wherever

you want to call them. On the set of the film. Well, so I remember on Chinatown Jack going like, Roman wants me to wear this fucking package on my nose. He doesn't want to shoot my face. He wants this bandage on my face. But of course it's the most iconic still still in movies practically. What was it like for you when you were doing Pretzy? Um? I felt like, oh when I when I first of all, the part

didn't come to me through either of them. It came to me from John Foreman, who put me in a movie called The Ice Pirates, which was we used to call them be movies, but um it was. It was a pretty pretty tragic movie UM in which I played UM made of the most powerful swordswoman in the universe. But I liked it a lot because I got to play more type. I wasn't playing a wilting flower. I like that a lot. And I got to decapitate men and stuff. So that was that worked for me pretty

well in that movie. And as I left the set one night, Oh and my love my love interest was John Mattuzac. I used to climb in like a tree. He was fund football player, the two's um. But anyways, I was leaving the set one night, John gave me a book Preaches Honor and said, I'd like you to read this, tell me what you think. So I read it overnight. I said to him the next day it's wonderful, such a good book. And he said, um, so what do you think of may Rose? And I said, wow,

that's a great part. He said, yeah, what do you think about you playing may Rose and Jack to play Charlie Partana and your father to direct. And I went, no, don't do that to me, John, God, that's terrible. Don't do that to me. Tonightmare a nightmare. And then he said, well, we have to go and recruit them, and I went, you can recruit them I'm not going to recruit them.

Finger nothing, not a finger, And then cut to a couple of weeks later, John is on my doorstep to pick me up to go to Mexico to talk to my dad about doing preseas Honor, and I said, I'm not going with you. How's yes? You are? I want no, I'm not. He left alone, furious with me, came back. He'd been to Mexico. Jack was already in Mexico visiting with Dad. He'd somehow gotten Jack out there. They've been watching the female gymnasts in the Olympics for the better

part of the weekend, and Jack had misunderstood. He thought the movie was a straight movie. He hadn't read it as a comedy. But as soon as Dad had explained to him that it was a comedy, he felt good about it, and that was it. He was on board. When did they find out you run? I'm not sure that they knew quite yet. They might not have. How was your father different when he directed you in that film than when he directed you in the first Did he treat you differently? Well, yeah, because he saw that

I knew I'm happy. He saw that I was happy in my part There's there's nothing worse than a disgruntled actress, as I'm sure you know. And then the film comes out end and good time for you, very good time, very good you feel I felt? Honestly, how did you feel vindicated? Did I felt? Um? First of all, it was great playing the Wrong Girl, Um, because it was a movie about or at least my movie, because it was the movie within The movie for me, was about being the wrong girl, and so I got to play

all of my insecurities. I got to demonstrate every single insecurity that I had in a in a totally confident way. So it was fantastic for me. Um, Just do things change in terms of what you're gonna do, who you're going to work with, the script of the usual bullshit, the scripts that are sent to you, the directors that are bringing up the changes. After that, it changes. Nothing changes your life like an oscar. Nothing changes here. And also you get offered a bunch of stuff that you're

really wrong for. He want you to play Superwoman exactly, Superman and Supergirl. We want you to be the blonde part. Yeah, but I got to play another great part. I got to be Lily Dylan and the Grifters a real blonde part. How did Jack and your father react when you want? I think they were a bit flabbergasted. Actually, I remember I didn't go backstage because I was in such a delirium. I ran back into the audience and you didn't go

do the press lap back. I ran off stage before anyone could steer me in the right direction, and I went back to my seat and Jack was crying, and I thought, what's he crying about? And then I said, my dad was crying. Foreman was crying. He was probably crying because I forgot to thank him. But I couldn't believe it. It's like, how come they're all and done? Who's another director that you worked with who you felt that really tense? The wonderful Nick Rogue. I loved working

with Nick. He was so subversive and so fun and naughty and smart. I did a movie with him called The Witches, and it's ostensibly for children, it's actually a very sophisticated movie. It's about Hitler. It's this strange group of women who come together in a hotel in Cornwall and they all turned into witches and they turned little boys into mice, and it's it's really a very good movie. I have to say it was certainly one of my best experiences. I grew up and watched a lot of

television for a very specific period of my life. I watched f Troope and Gilligan's Island and The Munsters and The Adams Family and Candid Camera, and I watched and when as soon as the Errand Spelling era was launched, I never turned on the last brook As TV show I watched with any regularity as I used to watch Mary Hartman. Mary Hartman was the last show I watched.

So if you told me that someone was going to take the Adams Family and make it into a film that I thought was really really funny, I say, you're out of your mind. And yet it's it's two of the funniest movies I've ever seen in my life. How did that happen? Um? Well, I'd have to say Barry was fabulous, But there was the genius Scott Ruden. And I think Scott. Scott is so passionate about the work. He's an amazing producer and he he I remember him being there day and night. He for for every scene.

For people who don't know, Son and Philip was a great cinematographer before he directed directed films. I needed a good producer, probably unbelievable, and and I think occasionally they fought, but we never knew about it. Yeah, they were absolutely unified. And I'd get into a really bad mood because I had I had lifts on my eyes and lifts on my neck and corsets and nails, and you know, it was the most job four our makeup job, and it took another two hours to prep me before I went

on set, and that it was just brutal. You couldn't sit down in the dress. It was a nightmare. Um. And every once in a while you'd have to wait for things to work, you know, and we're like, come on six hours later. You guys have to be kidding me. And they become and apologized in the sweetest way. Yeah, I did Cat in the Hat with Mike Myers. And they said, now remember that Mike comes in and we get him in makeup, and once he's done in makeup, and we have we've prelit his sets and we've rehearsed

the scenes. And they got and they they said, were so frantic about the time we have Mike available because he's only going to work so many hours in his country, then we're gonna take all the ship off of him. They said, please don't be offended. But whatever scene you're in the middle of, and you're going to be in mice and when we they walking talking us that Mike is ready, we're gonna just stop everything and leave you dead, because we'll leave you by the side of the road.

Well that's what it was like, except in this occasion was thing Harry Thing when I came to New York in seventy nine. I came to New York and somebody who I admired him to the ends of the earth, Prince loveliest, sweetest talesman, talented, used to sing opera to the children between takes. I mean, he'd do anything. He was special with some of the other leading men that you really really thought that this was really a great battery.

That's a difficult question. I have to go to Jack, you know, just because the great ones provide, and it's not necessarily because you notice how great they're being. It's just that they're there for you. Jack did a thing in preseas where I come out of the wedding scene and my father has been a real asshole to me and and I'm crying and Jack offers me his handkerchief. Now, you know, an audience doesn't really know what that means at that time, but he gave me the opportunity to

blow my nose really loud. You know. It's a comedy, that's what it is. It's somebody who who you can work off with, who you have that kind of repartee. I had it with Cusack and the Grifters. Um it's it's it's nice when you play, when you play with someone that hits the ball back. Oh, absolutely, pung and Cusack, who is kind of an enigma to me. He falls into that category of these predator naturally talented men, young

leading man, brilliant actor while he was young. You know, it's a great thing to be able to put the Rubricks cube together while you still have the shine on you of the youth and beauty. And he's a very very talented guy who then all of a sudden he doesn't look like he really wants to work very much. I don't know. I think it's interesting to me how he did a row of great films and then it's kind of like he couldn't. It was almost like he couldn't find anything he likes. Yeah, he burned out a bit.

I mean, he was amazing in that movie. I was completely mesmerized by him. I was mesmerized by a Nette Benning too. I have to say when I went in UM to read, Martin Scorsese and Stephen were producing the film as well as as Stephen was directing it, and it was my instinct that I should be a blonde. But I didn't put on a wig to go for the meeting. I thought that was a bit on the nose. So I just wore a very suggestive dress and you know, went in and within the first ten minutes Stephen said,

what if? What if you were a blonde? He gets it, He gets it, He gets me cool. Did your dad because of his great, great career, did he have films that he was really the most proud of, Like what did he feel was his best work? Well? I think he had a special regard for Treasure of Sarah Andre because of his dad, because he brought his dad to an Academy Award, And I think it's like the best performance in movies. Frankly, if you haven't seen that movie in a while and you you really look at that movie.

It's magical of that performance. Like and I think his direction to his father was speak fast, honest, men, speak fast. I'd sit there with my friends whenever we were huddled around in the wee hours, and we since the party was over, and you knew that men were going to fall asleep, I turned them might say, what's three times thirty five dollars? But hundred and five thousand dollars? You fall asleep before I do, I'd say, Oh, guard around

one of the greatest movies ever made. You directed one movie? Correct? Three? What was the first one you directed? It was called Bastard out of Carolina. What was it that propelled you to want to get behind the camera take on that job? Um? Well, I had always wanted to direct um and it so happened that the director fell out of the movie and I was offered it over a weekend literally, and my agent knew that I was interested in in directing something. We didn't quite know what it would be. And I've

read the script and I really liked it. Did you enjoy the process? I loved it? You did? What about it? Um? For the first morning I went to my trailer and my heart was beating, and I was waiting and waiting and waiting for the knock on my door to call me to set. I didn't even understand that. Director, Director, you think that I have known a little better with John Houston as a father. But that's how excited and out of my mind I was. Um. The part I

love best was working with the kids. Jena Malone was brilliant little actress and fun. Are you going to direct another movie? You think? You know if I found the right thing. Um, in a way, you know I'm lazy and that I wanted to find me. But things do. I think when synergy works, that's right, It's right, That's how it works. Thanks for doing this, Oh God, bless you, Thank you, actress icon Angelica Houston. She has written a captivating memoir in two parts, A Story Lately Told and

Watched Me. The first half covers her childhood and teenage years in Ireland and England, while the second half is a romp through her day is on the modeling circuit and in Hollywood. Both are told with emotional depth and graceful humor, and I can't recommend them highly enough. I'm Alec Baldwin and this is Here's the thing,

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