Wednesday, March 13, 2002
 
 

DREW REMEMBERS HER E.T DAYS

Drew Barrymore, E.T. Interview by Paul Fischer in Los Angeles.

Before she was controversial, and well before she briefly married - and divorced - Tom Green, Drew Barrymore was this cute child whose portrayal of Gertie in the now classic E.T is forever etched in our consciousness. With the film's 20th anniversary fast approaching, Barrymore sat down with Paul Fischer to talk about her memories of that more innocent period in her life.

It seems only yesterday when moviegoers first saw a 7-year old Drew Barrymore screeching at E.T. Now at a less precocious 27, Barrymore recalls that more innocent time in her life, before the drugs, controversy and stardom took over.

"I remember everything extremely vivid as if it was yesterday", Barrymore explains with genuine enthusiasm. "When you have to remember your lines and just be there and responsible, it stimulates your memory so well or your awareness.

So, you know, it really as if it was very recent in my memories even though I'm realizing it was 20 years ago." It was only a few days prior to our meeting that Barrymore saw E.T again, for the first time in over 10 years "and it was just such an incredible film that just makes you feel so good, makes you so emotional that you just let go and enjoy the adventure of it." This time around, Barrymore saw the film as an adult for the first time and recalls just being "moved by it not believing how beautifully shot it was, admiring the scoring and music and how well the special effects were handled. It really occurred to me just what an incredible film it is on a filmmaker's level and the writing and the acting; I was just overwhelmed by how wonderful it was."

This was only the third time that Barrymore had seen E.T, each time at a different phase in her life: At age 6, 14 and of course as an adult. Barrymore recalls those different experiences. "The first time, I thought it was still in the middle of the family.

We made the film.

We were promoting it and everyone was still together.

I was getting to travel the world and see that there were all these different types of cultures and people as I had never been outside of California. Wow, the world was so big, and it made me so and so un-judgmental towards people. When I saw it again when I was 14, I had just moved into my first apartment, I was living on my own, things had been a little crazy in my life. So I'm sitting in this apartment and I'd borrowed the video from a neighbor. I watched it, I cried and I just thought: This is such a good movie.

It's sweet, it's so wonderful and interesting.

I don't know how much pain I really had.

I just sort of watched it feeling a little distant from it and now, when I watched it THIS time, I was so happy, thinking: God, I have this great life and I feel so good and I let the film completely take me over. I was just really moved and excited and had my little tissues and wasn't afraid to cry.

The film seemed better than ever."

E.T is being reissued with an additional scene and the re-mastering of some of the film's sequences, but at its core, Spielberg's much discussed sci-fi fable has emotional elements that still manage to speak to a more cynical audience. Young Drew was required to shoot a number of emotional scenes, and handling those moments, the actress now recalls, was simply part of her job. "I never took it seriously and when I had to get sad we got sad, you know?

Spielberg told me that when I was doing the film that I should never act my character, that I should see my character, which is a lesson that has been more valuable to me than 20 years of acting classes just in that one thing that really hit me and gave me the key to travel the universe."

Spielberg remains one of Barrymore's strongest influences, and became her Godfather, recalling that "he was definitely the first adult male in my life that showed me trust, consistency and giving of your time was actually a very real thing and I did not believe that before him."

Barrymore's life has not been all peaches and cream. After E.T, despite starring roles in the likes of Firestarter, Irreconcilable Differences and Cat's Eye, Drew's adolescence was one of drugs and alcohol, coping with her new-found celebrity. By the mid-nineties, Barrymore found solace in her work, garnering positive reviews for Boys on the Side, Batman Forever, Everyone Says I Love You, The Wedding Singer, Ever After and Never Been Kissed, to name a few. Now as prolific a producer as well as a movie star, it's hard to believe, chatting to her now, that she had a once turbulent life. Perhaps it's that turbulence that has kept Barrymore grounded. "I realized that I had to overcome the trials and tribulations of my life. You have to; you don't have a choice.

And the fact is that everything in life actually IS a choice, so I just chose to experiment, get my life back on track and continue to go on an incline for happiness and enjoyment of life on a daily basis."

And Barrymore's career continues to go from strength to strength. She is producing and starring in a remake of the campy sci-fi film Barbarella, is shooting George Clooney's Confessions of a Dangerous Mind and yes, Barrymore is producing and starring in Charlie's Angels 2, about which she is most excited. "We're looking at it as this is our second case, our sophomore year; we were freshman, now we're sophomores, so it's a little bit more adult.

We've grown, we know things now and I think that's reflected in the tone but it's still really true to what it is."

Now divorced, Barrymore admits to being happily single and searching for her lifelong companion. She has learned a lot since those E.T days, but asked if she would encourage her own children to be actors, Drew is philosophical. "I wouldn't NOT encourage them.

I think that's what was so great about Steven is that he was so safe and un-exploitative in a world of child actors that can be just very dangerous to children. It can rob them of their childhood and there is such a thing as escape smother and it can get very confusing for them, but there are some children who really want to be doing that and there are people like Steven that just make it such a safe, fun, awkward community of a lifetime environment and if my child could have that experience that would be very interesting.

I think I would love to let my kids be a kid for a while and maybe when they were a little older, they can pursue it."

Filmography

Duplex (2002)

Release Date TBA 2002
A young New York couple decides to seize the opportunity to move into the duplex of their dreams. Their only obstacle? The woman who lives there, a sweet senior citizen.
Starring Drew Barrymore, Ben Stiller, James Remar
Directed by Danny DeVito
Written by Larry Doyle
Studio Miramax Films
Genre Comedy

Confessions of a Dangerous Mind (2002)

Release Date November 22, 2002
Based upon the memoir by the same name, this comical biography chronicles the life of Chucks Barris (Sam Rockwell), the man who created The Dating Game and hosted The Gong Show, and who was rumored — only half-jokingly — to have led a double life as a hit man for the CIA.
Starring Sam Rockwell, George Clooney, Drew Barrymore, Julia Roberts, Rutger Hauer, Fred Savage
Directed by George Clooney
Written by Charlie Kaufman
Studio Renaissance Films
Genre  Comedy, Biography

 

Year

Title

VHS

DVD

Domestic B.O

2001

Riding in Cars with Boys

 

DVD

 

2001

Freddy Gor Fingered

 

DVD

$14,249,000

2000

Charlie's Angels

 

DVD

$125,305,000

2000

Titan A.E.

 

DVD

$22,751,000

1999

Never Been Kissed

 

DVD

$55,469,000

1998

Home Fries

   

$10,443,000

1998

Wedding Singer, The

 

DVD

$80,224,000

1998

Ever After: A Cinderella Story

 

DVD

$65,703,000

1997

Best Men

   

$5,000

1997

Wishful Thinking

   

N/A

1996

Scream

VHS

 

$103,001,000

1996

Everyone Says I Love You

 

DVD

$9,714,000

1996

Like a Lady

   

N/A

1995

Boys on the Side

 

DVD

$23,450,000

1995

Mad Love

 

DVD

$15,453,000

1995

Batman Forever

 

DVD

$184,031,000

1994

Bad Girls

VHS

 

$15,240,000

1994

Inside the Goldmine

   

N/A

1993

Wayne's World 2

   

$47,965,000

1993

Doppelganger

VHS

 

N/A

1992

Poison Ivy

 

DVD

$1,829,000

1992

No Place to Hide

   

$135,004

1992

Guncrazy

   

$114,516

1992

Motorama

   

N/A

1992

Waxwork II: Lost in Time

   

N/A

1989

See You in the Morning

   

$4,795,000

1989

Far from Home

   

$12,000

1985

Cat's Eye

   

$9,000,000

1984

Irreconcilable Differences

VHS

 

$12,400,000

1984

Firestarter

 

DVD

$15,100,000

1982

E.T. the Extra-Terrestrial

VHS

 

$399,804,000

1980

Altered States

 

DVD

$25,000,000

 
About Drew Barrymore
Filmography
Duplex (2002)
Confessions Of A Dangerous Mind (2002)
E.T. The Extra-Terrestrial (1982)

Drew Barrymore

Real Name: Drew Blythe Barrymore
D.O.B: February 22, 1975
Place of Birth: Los Angeles, CA, USA
Mail:
C/O Creative Artists Agency
9830 Wilshire Blvd
Beverly Hills, CA 90212
USA

Flower Films, Inc.
9220 Sunset Blvd., #309
Los Angeles, CA 90069
310-285-0200

Release Date March 22, 2002  (Buy the Original On VHS)
Steven Spielberg's classic tale — being rereleased (with additional scenes added) to celebrate the film's 20th anniversary — is about a boy named Elliot (Henry Thomas) who befriends, and later attempts to protect, an alien stranded on Earth.
Starring Dee Wallace, Henry Thomas, Peter Coyote, Robert MacNaughton, Drew Barrymore, K.C. Martel
Directed by Steven Spielberg
Written by Melissa Mathison
Studio Universal
Genre Science Fiction, Fantasy
MPAA Rating PG - for language and mild thematic elements
Running Time 115 minutes
Web Sites Official site
Harry Potter is coming on DVD and VHS!
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