November 1999
From L.A. Magazine:
BOXING HELENA
by Richard Johnson
Helena Bonham Carter, seated in the restaurant of the Covent Garden
Hotel in London, easily holds a stranger's gaze across a starched linen
tablecloth. Contrary to the impression left by a string of doe-eyed
ingenues she's played on screen, Bonham Carter (the hyphen, she insists,
is optional) is not given to blushing or pushing garden peas around her
plate. "People have misconceptions about me" she says. "Lots of them. My
first live interview was to promote Room With A View on The Today Show.
The interviewer went 'Tell me what it's like to be royal?'. 'Royal?' I
said. 'I'm not royal. My family is posh, but only because my great
grandfather (HH Asquith) was the British Prime Minister.' I could see
the publicist in the corner of my eye shaking her head, going 'No, no,
no!'. After I finished, she ran over and said 'Don't do that. They love
the royal thing in America'."
Her breeding has been a mixed blessing - or so she would have us
believe. "If you're not pretty and you're working class" she once told a
British newspaper, "you have an easier time in terms of people's
attitudes to you". Kathy Burke, the actress who starred in the gritty
British drama Nil By Mouth, took the statement personally, and started a
celebrity spat on the letters page of London listings magazine Time Out.
"As a lifelong member of the non-pretty working classes" wrote Burke, "I
would like to say to Helena Bonham Carter, wholly-pledged member of the
very pretty upper-middle classes, 'shut up you stupid cunt'.' Bonham
Carter replied, politely, muttering something about how her irony had
been misrepresented. Then she shut up.
Bonham Carter has made a very good living out of being 'quintessentially
English'. "My Mum, who is half-French and half-Spanish, actually gets
outraged when I'm called 'quintessentially English'. She says, 'What
about our side of the family?' I owe my looks to my Mum. Which was 90%
of me getting my first job. And some people would argue 90% of my entire
career. Journalists are always calling my features 'Edwardian' or
'Victorian' - whatever that means. I am small, and people were smaller
in those times. I'm pale and sickly looking. I look fragile, although
I'm not. I look like a doll. But sometimes I just wish I had less of a
particular look. A look that was more versatile."
It does sound ungrateful. A woman with a Lux-complexion moaning about
her looks. After all, when she was making Margaret's Museum - a film
about a coal-miner's wife in Nova Scotia - she looked young enough to
get into the movies for half-price. And Yardley approached her to
rejuvenate their brand image. "I thought, 'For Christ's sake Hel, don't
be so precious. It's just going to be a few photos - mostly for the
Middle East market. It's great security'. But it didn't end up just for
the Middle East market. It was worldwide. And you're advertising
make-up, not what you look good in. So, unfortunately, they put me in
bright red lipstick." Which never looks good on consumptive skin. The
contract wasn't renewed.
She has always struggled to show her versatility. It's why she took the
role of Theresa the drug-addicted doctor in Miami Vice. "Ten days in
Miami. I said 'Why not?'. But I was only 19 at the time, and I didn't
think I could look like I was old enough to be a qualified doctor. I was
taken to meet Don and (Philip) Michael. (Philip) Michael was pleased -
major bonding because we had the same birthday. But that was where the
bonding ended. The director looked at me and said 'You don't look old
enough to be a qualified doctor'. It was a love story, and Don was
worried about looking like a paedophile. So they started to put latex on
me in make up. You don't start wrinkling at the age of 25, so they gave
up and let me get on with it."
In The Wings Of The Dove she plays a chain-smoking Jezebel who seduces
men on the subway. The role got her nominated for an Oscar. In The
Theory of Flight she plays a woman, crippled by motor neurone disease,
determined to have sex before she dies. And in Fight Club, her new film
co-starring Brad Pitt and Ed Norton, she plays a death-obsessed,
support-group junkie. "But however many modern parts I do - the last
three films have been modern - people still refer to me as Mrs Costume
Drama. I suppose it depends if the films are successful. So far, the
costume dramas have got the most attention. But Fight Club is a studio
pic, and I've done very few of those. I've got a feeling it's going to
be big."
Bonham Carter wasn't born to act. It was a career choice - when she was
five. "I remember this actress friend of the family's" she says. "She
was immensely glamorous, and both my brothers had crushes on her. So did
my Dad. I thought 'She's got the right idea'. Lots of actors were born
to do it. Kate Winslett, for instance. I think she probably came running
out of the womb saying 'Where's my mark?' Me, I invented myself as an
actor. I'm not particularly emotional. Really. Except when it comes to
laughter. I'm squeamish about emotion. I've got a very low
sentimentality threshold, and I don't like people showing off. I haven't
got that 'exhibitionism of emotion', which is what you're required to
have as an actor."
When it transpired that a friend at Westminster school had an agent
("and was a terrible source of envy") Bonham Carter sought
representation. At the age of 13. Before she could even spell
'representation'. She ended up as Juliet - in a hi-fi advert. Romeo came
out of the other speaker. When subsequent roles in A Pattern Of Roses
and Lady Jane Grey drew more critical acclaim than the hi-fi advert,
Bonham Carter postponed her place at Cambridge to concentrate on acting.
Her next film (the first of four she made based on the novels of EM
Forster) was the hugely successful A Room With A View. Like Lucy
Honeychurch, the lovelorn romantic in James Ivory's beautiful
adaptation, Bonham Carter was an innocent abroad.
"I remember in A Room With A View year, I was asked to present something
at the Oscars with Matthew Broderick. I didn't know what to wear, so I
just went and got a dress from my cupboard. It was a tulle thing from
Miss Selfridge (an inexpensive High Street clothes store in Britain). I
shoved a skirt of my mother's underneath it. And tied my own bow on the
front. It had flair, I suppose, but looked a nightmare. No-one told me.
I even did my own hair and make-up. A friend of my mother's said
afterwards 'You looked completely green. Was there something wrong with
you?' I remember journalists asking me who I was wearing. They wanted to
know the name of the designer. I just said 'The skirt's from my Mum'."
Mum is a psychotherapist. Dad is a banker. A loving couple - and the
main reason Bonham Carter took a full 30 years to leave home. She still
feels guilty about abandoning her father, who was left in a wheelchair
after an operation on a brain tumour went badly wrong. It's why she only
moved a short bus ride away, and goes home for dinner whenever she can.
"It took me so many years to move out. I'm definitely a bit of a Peter
Pan. Definitely a reluctance to grow up. It all seemed really nice at
home - why change it? Part of me would prefer not to have any
responsibility whatsoever." Now the builders have finished renovating
her new place, and it's the swatches of furnishing fabric that are
making the mess.
Bonham Carter lives in Belsize Park - one of London's prettier villages,
and full of eccentric fashion boutiques. But Bonham Carter's black jeans
are from a mall in Paris. And the cardigan looks like it came from a
thrift-store. "I'll try on things that look nice, but they're just never
comfortable. I've got millions of shoes but I always end up wearing
these great clumpy things (she points at a pair of black Buffalo
trainers that she's been wearing this past year) because they're comfy
and they add a few inches. Unfortunately they don't go with everything.
But you get the length of leg (she doesn't like her legs) without the
pain. I tend to buy things I would never wear - only because I would
like to be the sort of person who would wear them."
She is happy to live alone. But since she met Kenneth Branagh - while
filming Frankenstein in 1994 - Bonham Carter has maintained a discrete
silence about her private life. She denied their involvement for a long
time because, technically, he was still married to Emma Thompson. Then
they were photographed kissing in a park. The pair remain tight-lipped,
even though their affair is now rumoured to be over. "The press know we
haven't really ever spoken about it, so all they get from me is 'Not
going to go any further'" she says. "As soon as you begin to have a
dialogue with the press, it's an invitation to ask. It's a very subtle
line. Before you know it's a licence to hang around outside the house.
As it is, we've had remarkably little hassle."
She resolutely refuses to be imprisoned by fame. Her friends say that
she has stopped noticing when people stare at her. It certainly helps
that she's short-sighted. "Famous people come up to me, but I don't know
who they are because my sight is so bad. It's always at the pool of the
Four Seasons, when I don't have my lenses in. And my glasses are in my
room. The last time it was 'Hi Helena'. I could tell he was Caucasian. I
said 'Hi'. He said 'How are you doing?'. I said 'I'm fine. But I can't
see who you are'. It was Matthew Broderick. The next day, the same thing
happened with Sigourney Weaver. The number of people I ignore, I'm lucky
I work at all in this town."
Branagh is convinced that Helly (as he calls her) will always get work.
"It sounds like a silly thing to say of a young person, but I sense a
growing admiration for her longevity. I imagine it's quite hard for
people like Helena - people who are truly learning about what they do in
the spotlight. The advantages of having such a significant success at a
young age (A Room With A View) are that you have opportunities that
other people wouldn't have. But there are disadvantages too. You're more
exposed, and don't have the chance to make mistakes quietly in a career
that starts off with less noise. People really admire the fact that she
has stuck at it, and dealt with all of that prejudice. I think she's
finally paid her dues."
David Fincher, the director of Fight Club, agrees. "Brad and I were
watching The Wings Of The Dove, and thought if you took Helena's face,
and it wasn't in some period garb, it could really work. And what an
actor. She's incredibly physical. She's not an intellectual actor, which
is surprising, because in the past she's played such restrained
characters. Marla (her character in Fight Club) has her chin thrust
forward, with her head down. When Helena came on set you could see she
was either ready or she wasn't. When she was ready, no matter what you
said, she wouldn't look at you - she was in Marla mode. She was like
this little train - burrowing along with these puffs of cigarette smoke
trailing behind her."
Fight Club was written by Chuck Palahniuk, a Portland diesel mechanic.
He jotted down plot threads while he was fixing trucks. "It's a real
men's picture" says Bonham Carter. "It's about two young men who set up
an amateur bare knuckle fighting club for disadvantaged youths, and the
woman who comes between them. It could be described as Raging Bull
crossed with Harold and Maude. But I'm in the Harold and Maude bit, you
see." Bonham Carter plays Marla, who meets Jack, Ed Norton's character,
at a support group for the terminally ill. He works out very quickly
that she's a fraud. But he's a fraud too. The pair are both hooked on
the support group culture.
"Ed and I tried to rehearse in a conventional way" she says. "But it all
fell apart. Ed and Brad would always be playing basketball. The whole
film is about boys being boys, and there they were playing basketball.
When I suggested perhaps they could stop playing - because I don't
actually play basketball - they were 'Oh sorry, sorry'. Ed talked a lot
on set, and Brad took pictures. Brad just looked like a God, in three
dimensions, but was nauseatingly normal. A lot of the time I didn't
really understand what he was saying. He speaks in this street voice. I
don't know where he picked it up. Fincher obviously understood him, but
they had both worked on Seven. I think it's his own Brad language."
Polly Steele, the producer of Bonham Carter's next film, Women Talking
Dirty, was surprised at how thoroughly un-Edwardian she was. "It's just
that I've seen her in so many contained roles" says Steele, "that I
didn't expect to find her such an ebullient person. That's so unfair,
because all I've ever known of her is period roles with corsets and
heaving bosoms. But she so isn't like that in reality." It's why Bonham
Carter is now confronting the misconceptions in - of all things - a
watch advert. "The advert has a picture of me in period costume" she
says. "And a picture of me as a modern woman. It says 'I am what I am.
I'm not how others perceive me'. So I'm exploiting the misconceptions.
For once, I'm making a lot of money from them."
The release of Bridget Jones' Diary - which is scheduled to be made into
a feature by the producers of Four Weddings And A Funeral - will change
the misconceptions for good. Helen Fielding, the author of Bridget
Jones' Diary, wants Bonham Carter for the lead. The film starts with
Bridget's New Year resolutions to quit smoking (Bonham Carter once gave
up for six days), lose 10 pounds, and develop "inner poise". Bridget is
a disorganized, insecure, weight-obsessed woman, who can argue the pros
and cons of nicely-pressed sheets. She is a thoroughly modern role.
Along with Fight Club and Women Talking Dirty, the part might allow
Bonham Carter to pack away the corset once and for all.
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