The House
that Kline Built
Kevin Kline, Life as a House Interview by Paul Fischer in Los Angeles.
Kevin Kline has a self-deprecating manner about him,
but these days, given recent events, it's hard to retain a sense of humour.
So Kline, who plays a dying architect in his new film Life as a House,
tries to explain precisely why life IS a house, at least in this movie.
"It's an ambiguous metaphor and rather broad. For an architect manqué,
which my character is, it's more like a house. A house is an expression
of yourself, as well as refuge and shelter, and it's got an interior and
an exterior; it's like life. Like a person maybe.
" Normally a man of more words, Kline is New York, preferring not
to fly to Los Angeles to participate in the PR rounds for this film. Yet
it's a film of which the Oscar-winning actor is proud, as well he should
be.
Kline is George Monroe, a failed architect, the anti-social, eccentric
inhabitant of a tumble-down shack that's an eyesore on a wealthy California
cul-de-sac. When he's given a terminal diagnosis, he decides to spend
his remaining days repairing his home, and by extension, his relationships
with his ex-wife (Kristin Scott Thomas) and troubled teenage son (Hayden
Christensen). A happily married father, Kline says he identified greatly
with his character.
"He leapt off the page at me," he said. "I loved the story
and that screenwriter Mark Andrus allowed for the humour in the most dire
situations. What I related to was his rather mordant sense of humour and
his ill-timed sense of humour.
" Kline sees his character "as just pushed into living. He's
pretty hooked into his misery. I have a feeling he's very comfortable
with it," Kline said.
The actor, who lost nearly 20 pounds for this movie, and happily admits
that he has made an old fashioned tear-jerker. "I love a good cry,
and I'm embarrassed to say when I saw the movie the first time, well,
I was just a mess," he laughingly recalls.
Yet despite the often emotional moments in the film, shooting Life as
a House was a far more cheerful experience than the film's subject matter.
"I was happy all the time," he said.
"I remember doing 'Sophie's Choice' and people would say, 'It must
have been harrowing.' It wasn't. It's fun, invigorating, to act with wonderful
writing and actors and a caterer whose food you love to eat but you're
starving yourself.
It's fun because you need an antidote to these dramatic scenes."
Kline also insists that the film is far from preachy. "The moral
of the story and the lessons one learns are reminders of things you knew
all along but are good to be reminded of," Kline said.
Even the film's depiction of a family that comes together to build a
house and restores itself in the process isn't meant to be some kind of
universal truth.
"That just works for George," Kline said. "It's not the
building of the home that unites them but provides the context they can
all work together.
Ironically, it's a home he's building, as much as a house and it provides
a space where he finally can do what he's postponed for much of his life:
relate to his loved ones and build the house he's always wanted. He's
had to destroy the abusive, alcoholic ghost of his father to build himself.
"For Kline, 'building' the house depicted in the movie, meant that
he can practice some of his own handiwork. "I'm a useless carpenter.
Maybe doing this film has taught me to hit a nail", he quips.
While Kline can relate to some of this film's universal
truthfulness, the battles with his fictional adolescent son have not translated
into Kline's real-life family saga. Married to actress Phoebe Cates
since 1989 and the father of two young children, the 54-year old Kline
said, "I'm still in that blissfully happy period where my son is
only 10 and that adolescent demon hasn't emerged.
"In fact, some Kline family bonding took place when the actor shot
"The Anniversary Party," the recent comedy about Hollywood types,
for which Cates stepped out of retirement to play Kline's husband in the
film. Kline says he was initially opposed to having his daughter, Greta,
and son, Owen, appear as his and Cates' on-screen children.
"Not because they'll get a taste of acting and never shake it off,"
he said, "but to protect their privacy. But Jennifer (Jason Leigh,
who co-wrote, co-directed and co-starred) is Phoebe's closest friend,
and only she could drag Phoebe out of retirement.
Maybe that's part of the package, and that made it attractive for Phoebe.
The kids enjoyed it. We shot our whole part in 12 or 13 days. There were
no dressing rooms or trailers. We just hung out. It was more like going
to a party than making a movie - like going to a Sunday barbecue."
Kline's own career, like many of the themes of his latest film, reflects
his own diversity as a screen chameleon, from the tragic to the pure comic,
and he has had hits and misses. He made his film debut in 1982's Sophie's
Choice and emerged as a major star the following year with The Big Chill.
In 1991's Soapdish, he made fun of his own beginnings on TV's Search For
Tomorrow.
He was charming as a substitute U.S. president in the hit Dave and less
effective in French Kiss. He earned a best supporting actor Oscar for
A Fish Called Wanda, two Tony Awards on Broadway, was nominated for the
MTV Movie Awards' Best Kiss trophy for making out with Tom Selleck in
In & Out, and shared a Worst Screen Couple Razzie with Will Smith
for Wild Wild West.
But ultimately, the kudos don't matter; it's family that remains his
priority. Asked if Kline would change any of his own priorities if facing
his final birthday, he pauses slightly. "I would live even more intensely
than I do now. I would relish just hanging out with my family. Tell my
children everything I know. That wouldn't take too long. A couple hours.
You know, try to die beautifully, happily, with as little pain as possible,"
he explains with a faint smile.
- Full name: Kevin Delaney Kline
- Date of Birth: October 24, 1947
- Birthplace: St. Louis, MO
Life as a House (2001)
When a man (Kevin Kline) learns he is dying he sets out to fulfill his
dream of building his own house. For help he turns to his estranged son
(Hayden Christensen) and his ex-wife (Kristin Scott Thomas) in an attempt
to salvage relationships with them before it's too late.
- Release Date Oct. 26, 2001 (limited) Nov. 9, 2001 (expands)
- Starring Kevin Kline, Kristin Scott Thomas, Hayden Christensen,
Jena Malone, Sam Robards, Mary Steenburgen
- Directed by Irwin Winkler
- Written by Mark Andrus
- Running Time 124 minutes
- Studio New Line Cinema
- The Anniversary Party (2001)
- Wild Wild West (1999)
- William Shakespeare's a Midsummer Night's Dream (1999)
- Fierce Creatures (1997)
- In & Out (1997)
- The Ice Storm (1997)
- The Hunchback of Notre Dame (1996)
- French Kiss (1995)
- Princess Caraboo (1994)
- Dave (1993)
- Consenting Adults (1992)
- Grand Canyon (1991)
- I Love You to Death (1990)
- The January Man (1989)
- A Fish Called Wanda (1988)
- Cry Freedom (1987)
- Violets Are Blue (1986)
- Silverado (1985)
- The Big Chill (1983)
- The Pirates of Penzance (1983)
- Sophie's Choice (1982)
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