Oscar Actors: Mirren, Helen–Life Achievement Award from Screen Actors Guild

 

Helen Mirren on Battling Sexism, Advice to Young Actresses, “Begging” Diesel for  Role in ‘F9’

The Oscar winning British actress reflects on her humble beginnings in London, becoming an American citizen and why she appreciates and encourages the debate about authenticity in casting sparked by her upcoming role as Golda Meir: “It’s a healthy discussion to have.”

Busy actress: the 76-year-old Oscar winner is coming off back-to-back-to-back productions, ranging from the British dramedy The Duke to F9: The Fast Saga (her third turn in the Fast & Furious franchise) to Shazam! Fury of the Gods, her first superhero movie, in which she plays the villain Hespera.

She has just finished shooting Guy Nattiv’s Golda, in which she plays Golda Meir, the prime minister of Israel during the Yom Kippur War.

An Oscar, Emmy, Tony and BAFTA Award winner, Mirren has had the equivalent of four or five ordinary careers. She was the youngest actress to be accepted into the Royal Shakespeare Company and helped lead the 1980s and 1990s revival of British cinema with roles in John Mackenzie’s The Long Good Friday (1980), Peter Greenaway’s The Cook, the Thief, His Wife & Her Lover (1989) and Nicholas Hytner’s The Madness of King George (1994) — the latter securing Mirren her first of four Oscar nominations. Her primetime depiction of police detective Jane Tennison on ITV’s long-running Prime Suspect, a role that garnered Mirren six Emmy nominations and two trophies, was groundbreaking, and in the 2000s, following her performances in Robert Altman’s Gosford Park in 2001 (also Oscar-nominated) and her Oscar-winning turn as Elizabeth II in The Queen (2006), Mirren was finally elevated to “national treasure” status in Britain.

Then, well into her 60s, Mirren became an action movie star, first as an assassin lured out of retirement by Bruce Willis in RED and RED 2, then as Jason Statham’s East End gangster mum, Queenie, in the Fast & Furious films.

On Feb. 27, SAG-AFTRA will honor the actress with its highest tribute: the SAG Life Achievement Award for career and humanitarian accomplishments.

Endlessly curious, phenomenally talented and endowed with a work ethic that would shame a 20-something, Dame Helen Mirren has survived, thrived and transformed through six decades of a matchless career while still remaining indelibly herself.

Going way back, like therapy session, to your childhood? 

Well, Dad was born in Russia, but he came to England at the age of 2. On my father’s side, it was definitely an immigrant family. In those days, to have any kind of a foreign name in Britain was quite uncomfortable. He got it changed when I was about 10 from Mironoff to Mirren. So my dad was born in Russia, but my mum was London pure for who knows how many generations. A very old, London working-class family. Well, more of a trades family. You know, in England, we have all these different levels of class. Tradesmen is a particular class, and that was where my mum came from.

Strongest memories from growing up in London?

Well, I grew up in postwar Britain. So I remember rationing. We were not a wealthy family. Intellectually, I grew up in a very middle-class family, but financially it was [a] working-class [family]. My father eventually was a cab driver. Money was always very, very tight. Just the other day I was mentioning this. My husband always teases me because he says the British never take showers. But I was reminding him that, actually, we used to only be able to have a bath once a week because only once a week could we afford to light the boiler to heat the water to have a bath. So the whole family would have a bath on Fridays. My mum left school at 14, but my dad had an education. So intellectually, it was a very vibrant household.

Father encouraged you to become an actress?

No. My parents were very against me becoming an actress. Understandably so because, you know, they came out of a depression followed by world war, and they had struggled financially, enormously. So they just wanted us to be financially secure. Financial security meant for us all to become teachers. And my sister did become a teacher. I, in fact, went to a teacher’s training college, but I very much wanted to become an actress. It was something that caught my imagination quite early in my life; I would say when I was about 12 or 13. I suddenly was exposed to the world of drama, basically through Shakespeare. I was very electrified by that. But my parents were very against it because they thought it was, financially, a disaster. It could well have been. I was very lucky that it wasn’t. But I do understand their attitude. Absolutely.

Growing up that way influenced view of the world?

Playing characters across the spectrum of nationality, politics and class?

Well, Queenie is very close to me. She’s named after my Auntie Queenie — my mum was the 13th of 14 children. And the last eight of those children were all women. So I had a lot of aunts growing up in the East End of London. Working-class women. One was Queenie, and I based the character on her. But, you know, everyone is a human being. Everyone has their faults and their strengths, their vulnerabilities, their complexities and their fears, their ambitions, their cruelties and their generosity. It’s just a question of finding the human being in every character you play.

Though my parents were republicans, they didn’t believe in monarchy. I’ve found myself, when I started researching the role, very admiring of the queen. I honestly never really thought about her before. To me, she was like Big Ben. She’d just always been there. The queen came to the throne when I was 7, I think. She’s been there for my whole life. I didn’t really take any note of her until I started having to research her as a person, as a human being. Then I found myself finding a huge admiration for her, and respect.

Do you know if the queen has seen the film?

I don’t know. At the time, it had never been done before, playing the queen. It was quite nerve-racking because I didn’t know — no one knew — how the public would receive it, let alone the establishment in Britain. But I got the sense that it had been seen and that it had been appreciated. I’ve never heard directly, and I never will. Of course, since my performance [there have] been many others [to play the queen]. I think Claire [Foy] and Olivia [Colman] on The Crown have carried it on and been absolutely fantastic.

Lazy loaded image

Need for identification or empathy with the character? like Golda Meir?

Yes. I don’t think I could take a role if I couldn’t empathize with the character. I admire actors who can. Maybe our job as actors is to find the humanity in the character. But to play a real monster I think would be very, very difficult. With all the roles I take on, I feel an affinity with the character. Or maybe an understanding. Of course, if they’re real-life characters, you start searching, researching and trying to find the element in this person, this character, that you can identify with. It’s difficult to play Catherine the Great because there’s nothing in my life remotely equivalent to the life that she led. But you can always find little, often funny little elements that you can identify with or, if not identify with, understand. You go, “Oh, I see. I understand now.”

Moments for Golda Meir?

The thing with Golda, as with the queen, was I’m playing them at a very specific moment in their lives. For Golda, it’s during the Yom Kippur War, which was a very difficult and very traumatic moment for her. So obviously that, on top of who she is, influences the performance. But, funny enough, I’ve found Golda and the queen to have a lot in common. Weirdly, there’s a similar single-mindedness and an absolute total, total dedication to the job at hand. Golda was an absolutely extraordinary person. I didn’t really know much about her before, but as I researched her, as usual my respect for her grew and grew and grew. Of course there are faults. Golda had faults. People like that who are very driven, certain things in their lives have to become, if you like, one dimensional, because without that attitude, you can’t achieve what you need to achieve. Golda could be very rigid in many ways. But she was an absolutely extraordinary person, with extraordinary strength and absolute commitment. We have at least one element in common, which was we both worked on a kibbutz. I worked on a kibbutz for a very short period, a long time ago, in the late 1960s. So I did at least have that experience.

 

 

Lazy loaded image
Mirren as former Israeli prime minister Golda Meir in the upcoming Golda. JASPER WOLF/BLEEKER STREET MEDIA/COURTESY EVERETT COLLECTION

Criticism in the British media about you playing Golda despite not being Jewish?

I’m really glad that the discussion is out there. It’s a very important discussion to have. In fact, when I was meeting with the Israeli director of Golda [Nattiv], I said: “You know, I’m not Jewish, so if that changes your mind about casting me in this role, I understand and I will step away, no hard feelings, because I think it might become an issue.” His response was that he wanted me to play that role. And that was it.

I had thought about that beforehand. But it’s a fascinating discussion, and I absolutely appreciate the explosion of understanding of what casting can or should be. You know, [in Britain] we have a Black actor called Adrian Lester, who played Henry V, brilliantly, and very, very successfully. Well, Henry V definitely wasn’t Black. But it doesn’t mean that a Black actor can’t be absolutely brilliant and show us something, reveal something about the role of history, about the character that maybe one hadn’t thought of before.

I love casting against type, against gender, against race, for the whole thing to be out there. But, at the same time, I absolutely understand a deaf actor saying: “I’m a deaf actor, I’m an actor, if there’s a deaf role, at least give me the chance to play it.” I absolutely understand that. We’re in a world where all these questions are up in the air, but I think it’s a healthy discussion to have.

Any roles regret taking? 

I don’t think so. I mean, I’m sure I’ve made many mistakes, but mistakes are part of life. You know, you carry on. Some things I’ve done have been far more successful than other things. Certainly, there are roles I wish I had done that I was asked to do but turned down. But I’m not going to name those.

 

 

Lazy loaded image
Mirren with Michael Gambon in 1989’s The Cook, the Thief, His Wife & Her Lover. MIRAMAX/COURTESY EVERETT COLLECTION

You were up for roles that Meryl Streep ended up getting: French Lieutenant’s Woman and The Devil Wears Prada.

No, no, no, never. I didn’t have a chance with those. Maybe someone mentioned my name at one point — but without me knowing it. The only thing Meryl did tell me was she based her hairdo in The Devil Wears Prada on my hair. That’s all I can claim.

Distinct periods in your career: theater, British TV, art house movies.

At the time, in the 1970s, British film was kind of nasty. It wasn’t very good. It was said — and it was true — that British film was alive and living on television. Many of the film directors who became very successful — like Alan Parker and Peter Greenaway — started working in television. I did quite a few major roles on television through the ’70s. That was sort of my training for working on film. But most of that’s gone. The BBC, because it wanted to use the tapes again, wiped everything. Can you believe it? They lost so much great work. Now the opposite is true: You can’t escape from anything you’ve done. It’s out there forever.

Being sexualized early in your career.

Oh, absolutely. I used to think of it as a sort of, a rather uncomfortable backpack that I was having to carry with me. But it was something I realized quite early on that I just had to deal with, had to accept and sort of carry on regardless. To not allow it to affect me. It wasn’t altogether detrimental — it was valuable in some ways. But, at the same time, it wasn’t really me. It was me in the sense that I looked the way I looked, and some people saw that in me.

 

 

As I got older, I started to quite enjoy it, to play with my image. But when I was younger, it was really a pain in the butt, quite honestly. But I always said to myself: It’s the work that counts. I think that’s partly why, early in my career, I really concentrated on becoming, for lack of a better word, a classical actress. It’s the work that counts, so keep doing that sort of difficult, challenging work, and this other thing will hopefully drop away.

Lazy loaded image
Onstage with Ian Richardson in The Two Gentlemen of Verona for the Royal Shakespeare Company. COURTESY OF DONALD COOPER/ALAMY STOCK PHOTO

Enjoy playing with that image.

Yes. Now, absolutely. I love to dress up — it’s fine. Now it’s absolutely fine. Because I’m much, much, much older. When you’re a young woman, especially in that era, being sexualized was the opposite of what I wanted. That or the opposite: “Oh, you’re not sexy at all.” The whole attitude was just paralyzing. And absolutely enraging.

Is it different for young actresses now?

It’s absolutely different now. There are elements of it still, but I think — and I might be wrong about this — but I think young women have claimed that territory, their sexuality, for themselves. They’ve got the chins up about it, they don’t have to substitute for it or feel embarrassed about it. Sexuality used to be disempowering. Now I think maybe it’s empowering.

Roles that captured aspects of yourself?

It’s a good question. I don’t think so. I think the characters that I feel closest to, in a way, are the ones that have been furthest from me as a person because I could really enter the psychology of someone very different from myself. I played Ayn Rand for Showtime in 1999’s The Passion of Ayn Rand, and I found her an absolutely fascinating character to investigate. Weirdly, again, a bit like Golda or the queen. This amazing, hugely intellectual but so single-minded [woman] became emotionally stupid. That’s not the right way to put it, but she couldn’t handle normal human emotions. Like falling in love. She was absolutely hopeless. I’ve found that contradiction absolutely fascinating. But a character whose personality and politics couldn’t be further away from my own.

Becoming American citizen?

I was very moved; I cried actually when I became an American citizen. It was a very moving moment. I’m a dual citizen now. I wouldn’t have been able to give up my British citizenship.

Married to American (director Taylor Hackford)

I was in New York doing a play on 9/11. I actually saw the second tower come down. I was living quite far downtown, and I was going to rehearsal — we literally were about to open the next week — and the car arrived, I got in the car and looked out the window and saw the second tower come down. I went and I bought an American flag and I put it outside my window. I just thought: “If I’m on any side of this fence, I know which side I’m on.” I don’t believe in nationalism. I don’t like British nationalism, or American or French or German or Italian or Saudi Arabian. I don’t like any nationalism. But there are moments when you have to say which side you’re on.

Lazy loaded image
Mirren with husband Taylor Hackford at the Cannes Film Festival in 2006. SAMIR HUSSEIN/WIREIMAGE

Being American citizen vs. British one?

They’re both very challenging at the moment, but I guess that was always the case. I certainly would have more respect for the American B [Biden] than the British B [Boris Johnson] at the moment.

Appeal of action movies like RED and F9?

Well, there’s no real difference to the work. The periphery is different, you know, the number of trailers or the sets or the amount of time you’ve got to shoot a scene. But, fundamentally, it’s exactly the same thing. But I love the special effects world. And the stunt world. I really believe stuntpeople should be nominated for Oscars. They’ve become such an intrinsic part of filmmaking now. You look at these big action movies, and it’s 75 percent stunts, really. I love working and watching the art, the craftsmanship and the expertise of these people. The whole digital side of things, the special effects, is just extraordinary. Every time I go on set, the technology has advanced to another level.

Asking Vin Diesel to be in Fast & Furious movies?

I didn’t ask, I begged! I think I was at some function, and he was there, and I got introduced to him. And I was shameless: “Oh God, I’d just love to be in one of your movies! Please let me be in it.” And then Vin, with that beautiful, deep voice of his, said: “I’ll see what I can do.” And he did it for me. He found this great little role for me, which was perfect. I’d just never done anything like that before — one of those big movies. And, in my vanity, I just loved driving and really wanted to do my own driving in a fast car.

Advice to young actresses?

HM: I don’t know. It’s tough. I would just say, try to mix it up and take every opportunity that comes your way. Try to make the best of whatever comes your way. My mantra is, “Be on time and don’t be an asshole.” That’s fundamentally my attitude in life.

 

xosotin chelseathông tin chuyển nhượngcâu lạc bộ bóng đá arsenalbóng đá atalantabundesligacầu thủ haalandUEFAevertonxosokeonhacaiketquabongdalichthidau7m.newskqbdtysokeobongdabongdalufutebol ao vivofutemaxmulticanaisonbetbsport.fitonbet88.oooi9bet.bizhi88.ooookvip.atf8bet.atfb88.cashvn88.cashshbet.atbóng đá world cupbóng đá inter milantin juventusbenzemala ligaclb leicester cityMUman citymessi lionelsalahnapolineymarpsgronaldoserie atottenhamvalenciaAS ROMALeverkusenac milanmbappenapolinewcastleaston villaliverpoolfa cupreal madridpremier leagueAjaxbao bong da247EPLbarcelonabournemouthaff cupasean footballbên lề sân cỏbáo bóng đá mớibóng đá cúp thế giớitin bóng đá ViệtUEFAbáo bóng đá việt namHuyền thoại bóng đágiải ngoại hạng anhSeagametap chi bong da the gioitin bong da lutrận đấu hôm nayviệt nam bóng đátin nong bong daBóng đá nữthể thao 7m24h bóng đábóng đá hôm naythe thao ngoai hang anhtin nhanh bóng đáphòng thay đồ bóng đábóng đá phủikèo nhà cái onbetbóng đá lu 2thông tin phòng thay đồthe thao vuaapp đánh lô đềdudoanxosoxổ số giải đặc biệthôm nay xổ sốkèo đẹp hôm nayketquaxosokq xskqxsmnsoi cầu ba miềnsoi cau thong kesxkt hôm naythế giới xổ sốxổ số 24hxo.soxoso3mienxo so ba mienxoso dac bietxosodientoanxổ số dự đoánvé số chiều xổxoso ket quaxosokienthietxoso kq hôm nayxoso ktxổ số megaxổ số mới nhất hôm nayxoso truc tiepxoso ViệtSX3MIENxs dự đoánxs mien bac hom nayxs miên namxsmientrungxsmn thu 7con số may mắn hôm nayKQXS 3 miền Bắc Trung Nam Nhanhdự đoán xổ số 3 miềndò vé sốdu doan xo so hom nayket qua xo xoket qua xo so.vntrúng thưởng xo sokq xoso trực tiếpket qua xskqxs 247số miền nams0x0 mienbacxosobamien hôm naysố đẹp hôm naysố đẹp trực tuyếnnuôi số đẹpxo so hom quaxoso ketquaxstruc tiep hom nayxổ số kiến thiết trực tiếpxổ số kq hôm nayso xo kq trực tuyenkết quả xổ số miền bắc trực tiếpxo so miền namxổ số miền nam trực tiếptrực tiếp xổ số hôm nayket wa xsKQ XOSOxoso onlinexo so truc tiep hom nayxsttso mien bac trong ngàyKQXS3Msố so mien bacdu doan xo so onlinedu doan cau loxổ số kenokqxs vnKQXOSOKQXS hôm naytrực tiếp kết quả xổ số ba miềncap lo dep nhat hom naysoi cầu chuẩn hôm nayso ket qua xo soXem kết quả xổ số nhanh nhấtSX3MIENXSMB chủ nhậtKQXSMNkết quả mở giải trực tuyếnGiờ vàng chốt số OnlineĐánh Đề Con Gìdò số miền namdò vé số hôm nayso mo so debach thủ lô đẹp nhất hôm naycầu đề hôm naykết quả xổ số kiến thiết toàn quốccau dep 88xsmb rong bach kimket qua xs 2023dự đoán xổ số hàng ngàyBạch thủ đề miền BắcSoi Cầu MB thần tàisoi cau vip 247soi cầu tốtsoi cầu miễn phísoi cau mb vipxsmb hom nayxs vietlottxsmn hôm naycầu lô đẹpthống kê lô kép xổ số miền Bắcquay thử xsmnxổ số thần tàiQuay thử XSMTxổ số chiều nayxo so mien nam hom nayweb đánh lô đề trực tuyến uy tínKQXS hôm nayxsmb ngày hôm nayXSMT chủ nhậtxổ số Power 6/55KQXS A trúng roycao thủ chốt sốbảng xổ số đặc biệtsoi cầu 247 vipsoi cầu wap 666Soi cầu miễn phí 888 VIPSoi Cau Chuan MBđộc thủ desố miền bắcthần tài cho sốKết quả xổ số thần tàiXem trực tiếp xổ sốXIN SỐ THẦN TÀI THỔ ĐỊACầu lô số đẹplô đẹp vip 24hsoi cầu miễn phí 888xổ số kiến thiết chiều nayXSMN thứ 7 hàng tuầnKết quả Xổ số Hồ Chí Minhnhà cái xổ số Việt NamXổ Số Đại PhátXổ số mới nhất Hôm Nayso xo mb hom nayxxmb88quay thu mbXo so Minh ChinhXS Minh Ngọc trực tiếp hôm nayXSMN 88XSTDxs than taixổ số UY TIN NHẤTxs vietlott 88SOI CẦU SIÊU CHUẨNSoiCauVietlô đẹp hôm nay vipket qua so xo hom naykqxsmb 30 ngàydự đoán xổ số 3 miềnSoi cầu 3 càng chuẩn xácbạch thủ lônuoi lo chuanbắt lô chuẩn theo ngàykq xo-solô 3 càngnuôi lô đề siêu vipcầu Lô Xiên XSMBđề về bao nhiêuSoi cầu x3xổ số kiến thiết ngày hôm nayquay thử xsmttruc tiep kết quả sxmntrực tiếp miền bắckết quả xổ số chấm vnbảng xs đặc biệt năm 2023soi cau xsmbxổ số hà nội hôm naysxmtxsmt hôm nayxs truc tiep mbketqua xo so onlinekqxs onlinexo số hôm nayXS3MTin xs hôm nayxsmn thu2XSMN hom nayxổ số miền bắc trực tiếp hôm naySO XOxsmbsxmn hôm nay188betlink188 xo sosoi cầu vip 88lô tô việtsoi lô việtXS247xs ba miềnchốt lô đẹp nhất hôm naychốt số xsmbCHƠI LÔ TÔsoi cau mn hom naychốt lô chuẩndu doan sxmtdự đoán xổ số onlinerồng bạch kim chốt 3 càng miễn phí hôm naythống kê lô gan miền bắcdàn đề lôCầu Kèo Đặc Biệtchốt cầu may mắnkết quả xổ số miền bắc hômSoi cầu vàng 777thẻ bài onlinedu doan mn 888soi cầu miền nam vipsoi cầu mt vipdàn de hôm nay7 cao thủ chốt sốsoi cau mien phi 7777 cao thủ chốt số nức tiếng3 càng miền bắcrồng bạch kim 777dàn de bất bạion newsddxsmn188betw88w88789bettf88sin88suvipsunwintf88five8812betsv88vn88Top 10 nhà cái uy tínsky88iwinlucky88nhacaisin88oxbetm88vn88w88789betiwinf8betrio66rio66lucky88oxbetvn88188bet789betMay-88five88one88sin88bk88xbetoxbetMU88188BETSV88RIO66ONBET88188betM88M88SV88Jun-68Jun-88one88iwinv9betw388OXBETw388w388onbetonbetonbetonbet88onbet88onbet88onbet88onbetonbetonbetonbetqh88mu88Nhà cái uy tínpog79vp777vp777vipbetvipbetuk88uk88typhu88typhu88tk88tk88sm66sm66me88me888live8live8livesm66me88win798livesm66me88win79pog79pog79vp777vp777uk88uk88tk88tk88luck8luck8kingbet86kingbet86k188k188hr99hr99123b8xbetvnvipbetsv66zbettaisunwin-vntyphu88vn138vwinvwinvi68ee881xbetrio66zbetvn138i9betvipfi88clubcf68onbet88ee88typhu88onbetonbetkhuyenmai12bet-moblie12betmoblietaimienphi247vi68clupcf68clupvipbeti9betqh88onb123onbefsoi cầunổ hũbắn cáđá gàđá gàgame bàicasinosoi cầuxóc đĩagame bàigiải mã giấc mơbầu cuaslot gamecasinonổ hủdàn đềBắn cácasinodàn đềnổ hũtài xỉuslot gamecasinobắn cáđá gàgame bàithể thaogame bàisoi cầukqsssoi cầucờ tướngbắn cágame bàixóc đĩa开云体育开云体育开云体育乐鱼体育乐鱼体育乐鱼体育亚新体育亚新体育亚新体育爱游戏爱游戏爱游戏华体会华体会华体会IM体育IM体育沙巴体育沙巴体育PM体育PM体育AG尊龙AG尊龙AG尊龙AG百家乐AG百家乐AG百家乐AG真人AG真人<AG真人<皇冠体育皇冠体育PG电子PG电子万博体育万博体育KOK体育KOK体育欧宝体育江南体育江南体育江南体育半岛体育半岛体育半岛体育凯发娱乐凯发娱乐杏彩体育杏彩体育杏彩体育FB体育PM真人PM真人<米乐娱乐米乐娱乐天博体育天博体育开元棋牌开元棋牌j9九游会j9九游会开云体育AG百家乐AG百家乐AG真人AG真人爱游戏华体会华体会im体育kok体育开云体育开云体育开云体育乐鱼体育乐鱼体育欧宝体育ob体育亚博体育亚博体育亚博体育亚博体育亚博体育亚博体育开云体育开云体育棋牌棋牌沙巴体育买球平台新葡京娱乐开云体育mu88qh88