Moviehole (December 2006)
Interview: Naomi Watts
There
was a time that Australia’s Naomi Watts, now 38, was so insecure
about her profession that she was ready to give up altogether. That
was then, this is now. Her professional insecurities behind her,
Watts has now attained a position by which she can equate a
comfortable security with the ability to take greater risks as an
actress, admitting, “I think I really used to fight with myself over
how to make decisions, because I always thought my next job would be
my last,” the actress says, curled up on a sofa in a Los Angeles
hotel room. .”But I have settled into a place, not a comfort zone,
but believing that this is not necessarily the last thing, yet you
always want to make your decisions carefully, as long as they are
for yourself, not for anybody else.” Despite her growing stature as
one of Australia’s most in demand international stars, Watts has
remained reticent to embrace mainstream Hollywood, last year’s King
Kong notwithstanding. For Naomi, it’s not budget but character that
is of primary importance to her. “Yes, the character is definitely
the thing that appeals to me. It is not like I am just seeking
independent and obscure films, and that I am pooh poohing a studio
movie, but I think it is just often the characters, directors and
perhaps it the less controlled environment and the intimacy of an
independent film set, that always ends up being more
collaborative.”
Watts’ passion for a particular project comes
to the surface as she attaches herself as both star and producer, as
in the case of the latest adaptation of Somerset Maugham’s "The
Painted Veil", which opens in select cinemas across North America in
time for next year’s Oscar nominations. The Painted Veil is a love
story set in the 1920s that tells the story of a young English
couple, Walter (Edward Norton), a middle class doctor and Kitty
(Watts), an upper-class woman, self-absorbed and equally
self-destructive woman, who get married for the wrong reasons and
relocates to Shanghai, where she falls in love with someone else.
When Walter uncovers her infidelity, in an act of vengeance, he
accepts a job in a remote village in China ravaged by a deadly
epidemic, and takes her along. Their journey brings meaning to their
relationship and gives them purpose in one of the most remote and
beautiful places on earth. Watts is no stranger to playing flawed
women, as she laughingly concedes that “I’ve certainly played a few
in my time. So now I am looking for the perfect lady, but I am not
sure that she exists.” Painted Veil, she says, instilled further
passion in her, simply because “I think it is such a great love
story, that you can really get swept up in - the fact that people,
no matter what, can change. So that is kind of what you want to
believe in human beings, but it is not always so easy.”
It
was Kitty’s “fantastic transformation” that she says just “leaped
off the page to me. To make that really work, you have to play out
those beats and that means committing to her flaws, even at the risk
of losing the audience interest and writing her off as some vacuous,
shallow, self obsessed, irritating person. You have to play those
moments, because out of them comes something much greater which is
that after the crisis she grows and finally gets into the true depth
of herself, and stops sort focussing on what she thinks she should
be or what she is, and actually taking in everything that is going
on around her and letting her true self awaken.” Watts admits that
she found Kitty surprisingly easy to identify with. “I found her
very human, because she thinks she is supposed to behave a certain
way and thinks she is liked for these reasons, and when really those
people aren’t necessarily liking her for those reasons. They are
just on the same kind of path of self-destruction and not allowing
her to grow or find herself in any way. So I think it is someone you
can relate to, because she is sort of stuck and a little bit dead
inside, but there is a real goodness to her.”
Partly the film
explores the notion of family pressure and dealing with expectations
that Kitty fights against. This is one facet of "Painted Veil" Watts
does not see in her own life, despite embarking on a profession full
of risk and lacking convention. “I never really felt like my family
was trying to mould me into anything and when I told them I wanted
to be an actor, it was never poo poohed, but t wasn’t particularly
encouraged either. Because there were no other actors in my family,
the decision was completely born out of my own thinking, yet there
were a lot of creative people in my family so for that reason, it
was definitely encouraged.” Watts denies being something of a
non-conformist, but rather “I would say that I can reject someone
trying to push me into something, but I also find myself trying to
fit in a lot of the time. Yet if someone tries to tell me to fit in,
I will reject it, so does that make me a non-conformist? I think
from moving around so much as a child, I felt an incredible need to
blend and fit in.”
That nomadic lifestyle she endured as a
child has further manifested itself in her work as an actor, as she
travels the world, from rural China to London, for the sake of her
art. “I enjoy the gypsy living, but I find it very frustrating as
well.” Yet the actress has settled into a new home, recently buying
a house in the trendy Los Angeles suburb of Brentwood, but not even
that is completely permanent. “I don’t know that I want to live here
forever, but I do have a home even though I guess that house could
be anywhere. But the idea of having a home has really centred me as
a person.”
It doesn’t seem that the perennially busy actress
has time to enjoy her new home or for that matter return to
Australia this Christmas to attend her brother’s engagement party
[“I’m just too busy working so I think I’ll stay here this year”].
In between promoting The Painted Veil, the actress returns to London
where she is the middle of shooting David Cronenberg’s "Eastern
Promises", a political thriller in which she plays a midwife.
Denying it’s a weird Cronenberg film, Watts sees it as “a good juicy
thriller that focuses around the Russian Mafia Mobsters. It is not
too weird at all, but it is not completely formulaic and a really
good script.”
Watts also completed a new film, "Funny Games",
by unconventional Austrian director Michael Haneke. Watts says that
her life could not be more content. “Certainly it feels pretty good
to be able to jump from things like King Kong, to doing a Michael
Haneke movie, a Cronenberg movie and just bounce around in all
different places.” But after playing so many intense characters, she
says “I would like to do something lighter. I hate to think I am
being repetitive. Someone said to me once that [Jean Luc] Godard
said, ‘Good film makers make the same film over and over again.’ Now
I not saying that I am not trying to pull myself in with the likes
of Godard, but if you are a creative person, you are trying to tell
the story that is based in truth and perhaps the story that I am
approaching is one that is not afraid to face the struggles of what
it is to be a woman.”
By Paul Fischer © Moviehole
Australia
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