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HOT STILES VENTURES INTO ADULTHOOD
Julia
Stiles, Business of Strangers Interview by Paul Fischer from Toronto.
It didn't take her long, but teen sensation
Julia Stiles is one of Hollywood's major new stars. With a number of high-profile
projects, a variety of magazine covers, and a spot on Teen People's 1999
The 21 Hottest Stars Under 21 list under her belt, actress Julia Stiles
has come a remarkably long way in a very short time. Born March 28, 1981,
in New York City, Stiles was interested in performing from a very young
age. When she was 11 years old, she wrote a letter to a Manhattan theatre
director asking to be cast in a production, and was soon acting onstage
in avant-garde plays at both the La Mama and Kitchen Theatres. In 1996,
Stiles made her film debut with a small part in I Love You, I Love You
Not and, the following year, had her television debut in the Oprah Winfrey
Presents: Before Women Had Wings, in which she played an abused child.
The same year, she made a brief appearance as Harrison Ford's daughter
in The Devil's Own and followed this with roles in two 1998 films, Wide
Awake and the Sundance entry Wicked.
1999 proved to be Stiles' breakthrough year, as she played a prominent
part in the television miniseries The '60s and the lead role in 10 Things
I Hate About You, the latest film to mine gold and product endorsements
out of William Shakespeare. The film was a hit and Stiles was soon being
heralded as one of the Hottest Young Things of her generation, a label
cemented by the box office hit, Save the Last Dance. Stiles then appeared
in 2 more contemporary takes on Shakespeare: Ophelia in Hamlet, starring
Ethan Hawke, and the controversial 'O', a provocative retelling of Othello.
In her latest film, The Business of Strangers, Stiles delivers her finest
and most mature performance to date, a chilling drama co-starring Stockard
Channing. Following the film's US premiere at this year's Toronto Film
Festival, Stiles talked to Paul Fischer.
Paul Fischer: Julia, correct me if I'm wrong,
but Business of Strangers is the first film of yours you had where you
were not in your teen years?
Julia Stiles: Yes, that's true except for
the one I'm shooting now.
P.F: How challenging was it for you to
play that older character?
J.S:
It was only really challenging in terms of the physical transformation.
I wanted to make sure that when we chose the tattoos, my wardrobe, and
we changed my hair a little bit, that I looked older, but in terms of
what you call acting, I wasn't concerned with that, because of the anonymity
of the situation, she had the tendency to be anybody, as long as she's
in her surroundings, and being around other people who were just out of
college, or around people who she's working with, so I felt like it would
be more a little more believable.
P.F: You seem to do some of your best work
in Indie films. Is it as difficult to find those characters in more mainstream
films?
J.S:
It's difficult, yeah. What was great about Business of Strangers, is
that I think when I've done mainstream films, I've learned to maybe back
away from being so - how do I say this? What Patrick reminded every day
on the set, was not to be ashamed to be as blunt as this character is,
and I think I've learned that from doing mainstream movies, so it was
nice to be learning that.
P.F: Is there a conscious effort on your part
to balance mainstream with independent roles or do you just take good
roles as they come along?
J.S: It's both. I mean I do want to do both
mainstream and independent films but it's more about what is good, and
I don't really care about how much money is behind the movie or what I
get paid.
P.F: How surprised were you that Save the
Last Dance was this remarkable hit and having that success alter the industry's
perceptions of you?
J.S: Well, I mean it helped me a lot certainly,
and it DID exceed my expectations because I like to keep my expectations
about commercial success, relatively low, because I have no way of predicting,
especially that, the market place or how people would respond to the movie,
so I was totally happy when it did well and it's helped me a lot. I feel
that I can make more choices and I just like working.
P.F: Even though you're sort of moving out
of that kind of teen film, you always seem to have the admiration of little
girls, and yet you seem almost too smart sometimes for the teen roles
you play, and you seem to be a very knowing person, and that. How do
you figure that is, they admire you but yet your kind of playing above
them a little bit?
J.S: I don't think it's playing above them.
I guess teens that I talk to get it. You know, I think they're generally
a little more knowing than we expect to. I think that's what they find
refreshing about me.
P.F: What about this affinity you've had with
William Shakespeare, three Shakespeare films; I mean two contemporised
versions and Hamlet. Are you surprised that you have suddenly become more
identified now with Shakespeare?
J.S I'm glad you asked me that. The Shakespeare
trilogy, I guess, was like any choice that I make in the work that I do.
It's just what interests me and it's not really a calculated plan. Each
project comes to me separately and I take each project on its own merits
and for different reasons. it's not like I planned to do three Shakespeare
movies; it's not as calculated. Even with Business of Strangers, after
Save the Last Dance, I was looking for something different from the character
that I played in Last Dance, but it was more because I just wanted to
feel stimulated when I went to work.
P.F: Were you disappointed that 'O' took so
long to get released in the US and that you had to end up promoting 'O'
as well as Business of Strangers, even though 'O' was made quite some
time ago?
J.S: Yeah, you know it's weird because it
SEEMS like I've just been on automatic drive doing movie after movie after
movie and that's really not what has happened. I've taken time off and
have done other things, and it's just that all of these movies seem to
have come out at the same time. Um, but I - yeah, I was surprised it.
P.F: I understand you will be resuming your
life back in the dorms of the University of Columbia. Are you getting
more comfortable with that situation?
J.S: Yeah, it's gotten a lot better. This
year I've only had a week of school, but I'm living in a different situation,
where I'm with people that I know more and other Columbian students are
over it and are not surprised that I'm going there anymore, so it hasn't
been awkward.
P.F: If I were a student at Columbia, I would
be bothering you every day.
J.S: Maybe I'm just in denial. Of course
it's weird. I mean I have this weird dual life., I remember I had to
go to the Video and Music Awards for MTV, and they sent this huge stretch
limo that says like 'MTV Styles in front of it, and they set it outside
my dorm room waiting for me. And I'm like: Oh my God. Then I see these
sorority girls walk into their house, and they're like 'Oh, did you see
that superstar Julia Stiles get collected by that limo? So of course,
it's really weird, but mean that's what I do everyday.
P.F: What are you taking in college?
J.S: Right now I'm going to probably major
in English and Latin American studies.
P.F: why Latin American studies?
J.S: Because I am interested in Latin American
history, which I'm taking now, and it was really because I just wanted
to keep taking Spanish and I wanted to get credit for it, but not so much
Spanish literature, but like I'm more interested in the way of Latin Americans.
P.F: Would you do something beyond the degree?
I mean if you get in a situation where you'd maybe give up the acting
and do something academic or something related to teaching?
J.S I don't think so. I mean I think English
is actually very relevant to acting, and very relevant to writing and
I like doing both. I wouldn't want to just be in school or just be acting.
I like going back and forth because they complement each other very nicely.
P.F: You do get paid very nicely for your
work. Does that allow you to create a world of complete independence
for you, such as putting yourself through college, not dealing with the
normality of student loans, etc.
J.S: Well, it will definitely pay for college,
and it IS security, certainly. Keep in mind, it's still a ridiculous
amount of money, but after my taxes and payroll, my agents and managers
and lawyers and whatever, there is less money than what you see in print.
P.F: Is it surreal when you talk about managers,
agents, lawyers and all that kind of stuff?
J.S: Yeah, and that is a sort of dependence.
- Birth Name: Julia Stiles
- Born: March 28, 1981
- Birth Place: New York, New York
Prepare yourself for some high-jinks. The morning after his bachelor
party, Jason Lee's character wakes up in bed with a strange woman (Julia
Stiles), whom he presumes he must have slept with. As he tries to hide
his alleged affair from his fiancée (Selma Blair), the aforementioned
(you guessed it) high-jinks occur.
Release Date: tba 2002
Starring Jason Lee, Julia Stiles, Selma Blair, Thomas Lennon, Lochlyn
Munro
Directed by Chris Koch
Written by Greg Glienna, Pete Schwaba, Matt Tarses, Bill Wrubel
Studio MGM
Carolina (2002)
A young Southern woman named Carolina (Stiles) moves out west where she
meets two men who are both in love with her.
Release Date: tba 2002
Starring Julia Stiles, Shirley MacLaine, Alessandro Nivola, Edward
Atterton, Mika Boorem, Jennifer Coolidge
Directed by Marleen Gorris
Written by Katherine Fugate
Genre: Comedy, Romance
Studio Miramax Films
Based on Robert Ludlum's novel of the same name (as well as the 1988
TV movie starring Richard Chamberlain), this film is the first in a trilogy
of books by Ludlum featuring Jason Bourne. A man (Matt Damon) is fished
out of the Mediterranean Sea, awakens from a coma-like state, discovers
he has been shot several times, has microfilm implanted in his body(!),
and, perhaps worst of all, has no idea who he is or how he got there.
Soon he becomes the target of international terrorists. And the only person
who may hold the answers to Jason Bourne's true identity is a woman who
knows his past.
Release Date: May 31, 2002
Starring Matt Damon, Franka Potente, Chris Cooper, Brian Cox, Clive
Owen, Julia Stiles
Directed by Doug Liman
Written by Tony Gilroy, David Self
Genre: Action, Thriller
Studio Universal
Although stuck in an airport hotel, a recently promoted businesswoman
(Stockard Channing) and her assistant (Julia Stiles), a disaffected college
grad, are determined to have a good time. As the night progresses, the
women drink a lot, flirt, lie, and find themselves wrapped in an intricate
power struggle. The story acquires a new wrinkle when the male business
traveller (Fred Willard) who joins the mix is identified by the assistant
to be the man who sexually assaulted her best friend back in college.
Release Date: December 7, 2001 (limited)
Starring Stockard Channing, Julia Stiles, Fred Willard, Frederick
Weller, Marcus Giamatti, Jack Hallett,
Directed by Patrick Stettner
Written by Patrick Stettner
Genre: Drama
Studio IFC
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