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'The Fabulous Ms Turner' from Planetout.
Interview by Steve Pride.
Guinevere Turner on American Psycho and life as a lesbian
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Guinevere
Turner is a stunningly beautiful woman with a quick wit
and mischievous eyes. She was the writer, producer, and
star of the classic 1992 lesbian film Go Fish and has acted
in such queer fare as The Watermelon Woman, Chasing Amy,
Kiss Me Guido, and Treasure Island.
Meanwhile, Bret Easton Ellis's American Psycho is perhaps
the most controversial and hotly debated novel of the last
decade. The story of Patrick Bateman, a rich handsome, materialistic
psychopath who makes a literal killing on Wall Street with
his hatchet, butcher knife, nail gun, and chainsaw, has
been uniformly slammed by feminists around the world as
an unapologetic ode to violence against women.
So how did a nice lesbian like Guinevere Turner end up not
only as co-writer (with director Mary Harron) of the new
film version of American Psycho, but cast as one of the
victims? Inquiring queer minds want to know! So when I caught
up with the fabulous Ms. Turner in West Hollywood, I did
my best to get the 411.
Steve
Pride:
Which do you consider yourself first, a writer or an actress?
Guinevere Turner: I
consider myself a writer until I get lonely. I consider
myself an actress until I don't like to get up early. So
I do both. I've been a writer since I was born, it seems.
I started writing stuff when I was kid, so I suppose writing
is where my heart is. When I need to work something out
I don't go out and act, I write. But I'm a compulsively
social person and writing is such a solitary profession
that I really need them both to keep myself sane.
SP:
Your
latest film American Psycho is a departure from the past
projects. Is there a pressure to keep your work specifically
lesbian?
GT: I don't feel the
pressure, I feel support and I think that people who liked
my past work are just happy to see me working. I guess I
could be wrong. I certainly don't feel the same wrath Rose
Troche, the director of Go Fish did when she did Bedrooms
and Hallways. People came down on her for its lack of lesbian
content. I think I get away with it because I'm a writer/actor
and not a director. So I can be all over the map without
the lesbian community having expectations.
At least I hope that's true. Maybe everyone is secretely
saying I'm a sellout Nazi (laughs). But even if there's
a whole group out there who wishes I'd just do gay- or lesbian
-specific work, I personally feel that the real power is
in just being myself -- to say openly that I am a lesbian
while accomplishing any number of other things. That's more
of a statement. Also, it's less predictable and more fun.
SP:
Why aren't there more lesbian stories making it to the screen?
GT: One thing that's
as free as it's ever been is that it's harder for women
to get anything done in Hollywood. And I'm sure you'll agree
being a lesbian is... woman-specific.
SP:
Back
to American Psycho. How did you tackle writing the film
version of a book that has been vilified as overly violent?
GT: First, I read the
book. The director (Mary Harron) and I agreed that it had
to have a lot less violence. Then we just started making
the list of scenes we liked, stuff we thought was funny,
horror we thought we could film suggestively, rather than
showing an axe going into someone's head. Then we made a
list of those things we liked and tried to make it into
a coherent narrative. And we decided early on that we wanted
it to be clear that Patrick Bateman is really killing people.
But talking to people over the last few days I realize that.
Because everyone tells me they think it was just a dream
that murders didn't happen.
SP:
So you are saying....
GT: All the killings
happen in American Psycho are real. Those characters certainly
did die. But if they don't seem real it's because some of
the details exist only in the mind of Patrick Bateman. He
glamorizes the murders and it is through his eyes that the
story is told.
SP:
Was
there a concern about two women helming a project like American
Psycho?
GT: On the contrary.
I think it was a very deliberate choice so that we would
bear the brunt of the feminist outcry. The producers wanted
to defleet past criticism that the story was misogynist.
It's amusing to me because, if anything our version is anti-male.
By toning down the violence and turning up the satire the
men just look so foolish or beastly. And then there's the
way the male characters see women as commodities! I think
the film ends up a sharp poke at men. And I have to say
that so far the reaction from women has been really good.
Women who hated the book have told me they love the film.
SP:
But very few of the female characters live to see the credits
roll. Even the character you play ends up in a number of
pieces...
GT: I wasn't thinking
this at the time, but now I think it's good that I play
a woman who gets killed in the film. It shows I'm truly
committed.
SP:
There was a lot of publicity last year when Leonardo
DiCaprio expressed interest in playing the lead in American
Psycho and the project almost derailed. Is there a lesson
to be learned from that experience?
GT: Money and fame can
roll right over you and take anything you have away. I had
people stopping me in the streets and asking if I could
get a script to Leonardo DiCaprio. The frenzy around it
was amazing. People I hadn't talked to in years were calling
me in the middle of the night and I was like "Leonardo
DiCaprio? God, this guy is famous!" But he was totally
wrong for the role.
SP:
American Psycho initally had a rating problem. Tell me about
that
GT: There is a sex scene
between Patrick Bateman and two prostitutes. He's looking
in the mirror and says, "Christy, bend over so Sabrina
can see your asshole," and we had to take out the word
"hole" to avoid an NC-17 rating. There was no
problem with the other three way sex scene during which
I get killed with a chainsaw. Go figure.
SP:"Go
figure" or Go Fish. Ok that's a horrible segue, but
your first film Go Fish is being released for sale on video...
GT: I am gratified that
so many people loved that film. It was an intoxicating time
in my life. I got laid a lot.
SP:
I have no follow-up to that, so I'll just ask: What's next?
GT: A film about Bettie
Page. She was a pin-up girl in the 50s who did a lot of
what at the time were sort of racy, bondage photos, but
when you look at them now they are kind of goofy and sweet.
She was a maverick of her time. Living alone in New York
City doing whatever she wanted, having a good time, and
then one day she just disappeared. We are finishing up the
script and should start shooting in about six months.
SP:
So Guinevere Turner, the ultimate lesbian icon, will be
playing an object of heterosexual male lust?
GT:
Yes, isn't life...fun?
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