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Rachel Griffiths, The Rookie, Six Feet Under
Interview by Paul Fischer in Los Angeles.
It has been quite the year for Aussie
Rachel Griffiths. Starring with Dennis Quaid in the biographical
baseball pic The Rookie, she directed her second short film and,
oh yes, there's that gig she has on US television in something called
Six Feet Under, for which she became one of a handful of Aussies
to take home a Golden Globe for her emotionally rich performance.
It was an ecstatic night for the Aussies and she laughs when asked
how exciting it was." Don't I sound happy?
Is there one photo of me all going
'woe is me?' "Griffiths, dressed in a pin stripe suit, admits
to having been "just ridiculously surprised" and loved
"partying with all my friends". Though she does admit
to having been "pissed off when some prick complained that
my Aussie accent was exaggerated. Does this SOUND too much?"
Perhaps it's because on Six Feet Under she is so seamlessly Californian.
In The Rookie, Griffiths dons a Texan
accent. The film is a bittersweet baseball yarn about true-life
science teacher Jim Morris (Dennis Quaid), who had to drop out of
minor league baseball because of an injury to his pitching arm.
Twelve years later, inspired by the young men on the championship-winning
high school team he coaches, Morris is convinced to fulfill his
own dream and try out for a professional team. With perseverance
and confidence, he finally steps up to the plate, and after his
pitching is clocked in the high nineties, he is signed to a minor
league contract with the Tampa Bay Devil Rays, and soon after, moving
onto his lifelong dream - the major leagues. Griffiths plays his
supportive young wife and knew going in, that she wouldn't be the
'token wife'. "I don't think a director casts me in a movie
because he wants the wife in the background, as there are so many
other actresses you would cast if that's all you wanted;
I think you cast me if you want other textures at play
and I just have to trust that," Griffiths explains.
"It told me something about the
movie that he wanted to make that he even wanted to CAST me, that
I even came into his mind, which made me think that he wanted to
do something that I didn't necessarily see in the script."
For Griffiths, The Rookie
"was a great story, but I think
he made a better movie than the story might necessarily have inspired,
and he's really made something very authentic. I think this is the
kind of film that's gone back to the original Americana, not the
kind of copy of a copy of a copy of Americana." Griffiths likens
the film to such classic portraits of small-town America as The
Yearling and To Kill a Mockingbird. "We grew up as kids watching
those movies and we were exposed to themes of civil rights, unfairness,
bigotry and fathers struggling against the kind of mob of the town,
so you remember how you felt as a kid being taken seriously, that
you are part of the human drama," the actress elucidates.
"So if you think about kids, they do grow up scared
that dads are gonna lose their jobs in the other end of town and
they grow up so sensitive.
They see their parents' marriage play
out as a big drama.
They see everything, and so to me I
just loved how seriously The Rookie marked return to that."
Griffiths sees this as "such an American story, like the average
American's savings and the American's debt, this is more the real
America than those movies where there are, you know, fancy cars
with a big white fence and the biggest Christmas tree, and it's
all so goddamned rich, and kids have everything," says an fiercely
passionate Rachel.
Griffiths thrives on the challenge of not being repetitive.
And she relished going to The Rookie's Lori "moving from Brenda
in Six Feet Under where I played a character that has such difficulty
in loving. I mean, she kind of WANTS to love, but she's got so many
things that stop her from being able to love, so many hurts and
damage, that stop her just being clear about the fact she loves
and then to play a character like Lori, for whom love is so clear
that love is an action, love is what you do when you wake up and
you change your baby's nappies, you make toast for your other two
kids, you get everyone ready to go to work, you go to work to make
money to keep the family afloat, you come home, that's love for
her."
Yet in its study of the mythology of
baseball, which remains so symbolic of American folklore, Griffiths,
who remains very much Australian, understood that side of this story
without relating to it too directly. "It was like a fantasy.
Could I relate to it? No.
Was I charmed by it? Yes.
Sometimes I did feel like an alien, but I think the portrait
of the marriage and of the struggle are universal. I mean we used
to talk all the time about the Australian experience of the smaller
towns emptying into the cities and the young people going, the bush
dying and everything, and the town that we shot this film in was
that kind of town. So on some level, as an Australian, I could relate
to this."
Griffiths has been steadily impressing
audiences from Hilary and Jackie to Blow, so it must have taken
a lot to persuade her to do a television series, on which she remains
under contract for five seasons. She is not surprised by the critical
reaction [not to mention high ratings] that this often morbid black
comedy has attained. Griffiths says that it's due to writer Alan
Ball, who also wrote the Oscar winning American Beauty. "Somehow
this guy is someone that can go places that no other writer can
take people, where they stay with him and go back for more.
He explores their kind of darkest neuroses,
and I think it's his discipline of being a sitcom writer that he
just knows when to give us a scene or a line that takes the pressure
valve and lets our steam out; he's so original."
Griffiths admits that her only reticence about taking
on a series "was not about being bored or being in the position
where I couldn't get home for six months. I had a fear of being
away from Australia so I've gotten home four times this year, during
this season, which is basically every seven weeks." Home, explains
Griffiths, is both Sydney and Melbourne. "I live in Sydney,
but my partner lives in Melbourne, and my family is in Melbourne."
Home is important to the 34-year old actress as is her need to work.
"I've been working like a Trojan this past year but I love
it." She just finished shooting an Australian comedy, The Hard
Work, co-starring friend Guy Pearce and is about to return to the
stage in the Australian premiere of Proof. Griffiths also had time
to direct her second short film, Roundabout, which she laughingly
describes as "kind of falling down meets dark day afternoon.
It's about a man who has a nervous breakdown, which I call Anxiety
Has Arrived, as if I wanted to put you in the seat of having an
anxiety attack."
Directing, Griffiths says, represents
a different part of her psyche. "That is a really groovy part
of me, maybe even better part of me I think; I'm so creative in
that environment.
I'm so motivated to collaborate with
people and help them realize the kind of collective vision. I love
to work with the team and the problem solving - It's problem solving
in a really vigorous way that acting.
Acting is like playing, while directing
is really fun, sort of like an orgy," she cheekily adds.
Rachel is not one of being shy, but
then all one has to do is examine her body of work to know that
Rachel Griffiths continues to challenge and astound. Look at The
Rookie and Six Feet Under side by side and you get the message,
and she wouldn't have it any other way.
Release Date TBA 2002
Synopsis: The story follows three bank-robbing brothers who
are stuck in jail and try to find a profitable way of passing their
time. They begin to manipulate things and witness the "fatal
consequences of sex and greed coming between bad cops and good criminals."
Starring Guy Pearce, Rachel Griffiths, Joel Edgerton, Damien
Richardson
Directed by Scott Roberts
Written by Scott Roberts
Genre Comedy, Crime
Filming Location(s)Melbourne, Sydney, Australia
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Released
|
Movie Name
|
VHS
|
DVD
|
1st wknd
|
Total Gross
|
|
3/29/2002
|
Rookie, The
|
VHS
|
DVD
|
|
Coming Soon
|
|
2002
|
Very Annie-Mary
|
VHS
|
DVD
|
|
Unknown
|
|
4/6/2001
|
Blow
|
VHS
|
DVD
|
|
$52,964,509
|
|
3/7/2001
|
Blow Dry
|
VHS
|
DVD
|
|
$637,769
|
|
4/7/2000
|
Me, Myself & I
|
VHS
|
DVD
|
$28,030
|
$565,193
|
|
6/25/1999
|
My Son the Fanatic
|
VHS
|
DVD
|
$38,399
|
$428,287
|
|
3/26/1999
|
Among Giants
|
VHS
|
DVD
|
$13,276
|
$64,359
|
|
12/30/1998
|
Hilary and Jackie
|
VHS
|
DVD
|
|
$4,874,838
|
|
11/13/1998
|
Welcome to Woop-Woop
|
VHS
|
DVD
|
|
$35,471
|
|
6/20/1997
|
My Best Friend's Wedding
|
VHS
|
DVD
|
$21,678,377
|
$126,813,153
|
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4/30/1997
|
Children of the Revolution
|
VHS
|
DVD
|
$31,562
|
$845,391
|
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10/18/1996
|
Jude
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VHS
|
DVD
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$31,850
|
$405,144
|
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3/10/1995
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Muriel's Wedding
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VHS
|
DVD
|
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$15,185,000
|
D
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