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OUR LADY GUINEVERE - Limbo Magazine
April/May 1999 (Canada)
Arriving at New York´s Park View restaurant in her
roommate´s blue velvet suit, the unmistakable Guinevere
Turner joined Limbo´s art director and publisher for
some lunch and a lot of conversation.
Int:The
first thing I want to ask you about is "The Taxi Cab
Confessions"?
GT:Oh damnit, god damnit! (laughing) Okay, July `94´Go
Fish´has been out for two month´s, and I´m
in Crazy Nannies - a lesbian bar in New York - one of the
only ones. Being in the bar at that time was like... well,
you know. After about twelve scotches I decided it was time
to go home, and I was getting a little melodramatic with
myself in the cab thinking I can meet a cute attractive
girl instead of everyone liking me for being in this movie.
I get in the cab and there´s this woman who´s
so butchy looking to me and she´s sitting outside
of a dyke bar, at four in the morning and she´s looking
like that I start to thinking she´s never even heard
of `Go Fish´ or any of this, so I´m gonna pick
her up. No one will believe me to this day, but that is
so NOT in my nature. I give it my best shot. I remember
her saying no, having a good laugh. I woke up the next morning
called my friends, "God I can´t believe I tried
to get a cab driver to come home with me last night."
Funny story ha-ha. Six months later, my friends walk into
this bar where I´m hanging out looking like someone
died, they asked if I remembered the taxi driver. I was
like "Is she here? Is her girlfriend here? What´s
happening?" It was on T.V. and it was going to be on
5 more times! I just curled up into a ball, now it´s
a good story. I don´t remember signing the release,
this woman has been on all the talk shows and she said that
when I signed the release all I said was "Does this
mean you´re not going to come home with me?"
I actually wrote a short story for a British anthology about
it.
Int:Between writing or acting which do you like better?
GT:They are really two different things. Writing is what
I´ve always done. Writing is what I did when I was
a kid. It´s what I´ve always imagined myself
doing, but it´s so solitary, so lonely. You get so
little attention. Acting, you go to a movie set, work with
a hundred people for four weeks or eight weeks. It´s
so much fun, so interesting:I love it.
Int:Are you comfortable with the title "Guinevere Turner
- lesbian actress"?
GT:It´s great, I love people to know who I am, but
maybe not a lesbian actress, because I think that makes
it harder for me to just go and do whatever as ´just
an actress´.
Int:Do you think you´d ever not be "out"
just to get a part?
GT:I couldn´t really and sleep well at night. I would
love to prove that I can play non-lesbians. Prove to myself
and to the world that acting is acting. I did a film this
time last year that is just getting finished where I´m
not a lesbian, I´m straight. I am the exact opposite
of Preaching (to the Perverted);I´m wide-eyed, so
innocent.
Int:`Go Fish´took a really long time to film, starting
and stopping... how long was the filming?
GT::A total of 45 or 50 days over a three year period. There
were two weeks where we actually shot all day... mostly
on weekends and nights, almost everyone had full time jobs,
myself included. It was rough.
Int:What was your full time job?
GT:I was the assistant editor of a management consultant
firm in Chicago. It was a full-on heels and stockings, get
there at eight in the morning and work your ass off until
5:30 kind of job. That was great, because I would spend
part of my day writing the script and photocopying the script
- secretly- and getting calls, organizing stuff. It was
good. It was like I had an office.
Int:The next film in your credits Cheryl Dunne´s ´The
Watermelon Woman´, an excellent film but not a large
box office draw.
GT:I thought it was an excellent movie too. It was a good
story and a good script, I was very proud of it.
Int:in your latest film ´Preaching to the Perverted´there
are piercing doubles listed. Which are actually yours?
GT:I only have my ears and my tongue pierced. In the movie,
she had her nipples pierced so I had these latex nipples.
That glued on to my real nipples. It looked really real,
but they come off. For the rolling around in bed scene,
they would have to cut (filming) to find my nipple. At night
I´d be back in the hotel room trying to get glue off
my nipples. The piercing double... actually the martini
of the shoot, the final shot; they had a piece of chicken
that they pierced. So we were all standing around wondering
who was in the shot and it was this piece of chicken.
Int:There were some mixed reviews on PTTP´s ending.
How do you respond, if at all, to the negative critics?
GT:I thought it was really good, that it wasn´t just
there´s the baby, bye see ya later and take the baby
away. They really had built this family that worked. If
you´re a woman and you´re acting you will eventually
have to do a pregnant scene, a rape scene, and a wedding
scene. I´ve got two down.
Int:What do you think of the possibility of playing a rape
scene?
GT:I wouldn´t go near a rape scene; it would be so
traumatic. I don´t care if you´re best friends
with the actor, sex scenes are the weirdest things in the
world. Rape scenes, I can´t even imagine.
Int:Which are you more like, the good girl or the bad girl?
GT:Bad girl, only I´m a bad girl in good girl clothing.
People ask me which was my favourite outfit form ´Preaching
to the Perverted´and I´m like ´Remember
the scene where I´m in the suit? That was definitely
my favourite outfit.´ For the first three weeks it
was fun, I was in London, working on this movie, and on
about the fourth week it was 5:30 in the morning, the rubber
was cold, all the make up... I was over it.
Int:What are you currently working on?
GT:I actually just left Mary (Harron, her Canadian writing
partner) this morning. We are trying to finish up our script
about Bettie Page. We hope to make right after she does
`American Psycho´ which is another script that we
wrote together that she´s just about to settle casting
for. I moved to LA in May and I´m doing a lot of meeting
- six different projects that I´m meeting on. They
do love to meet in LA, they love to meet and meet and meet.
One of them eventually will be something that I write next,
I go to two or three auditions a week, and hope that it
all works out.
Int:How did you get hooked up with the Bettie Page story?
GT:I was in London with ´Go Fish´at London Gay
and Lesbian film festival. Rose (Troche, her co writer)
and I were travelling with the movie. I went downstairs
and was waiting for a car and Mary was sitting with Christine
(Vaschon the producer on `Go Fish´) and we started
talking. In Mary´s true fashion she kept going on
and on about Bettie Page; damn Canadians (laughs). She turns
to me and says "Wow you look a lot like Bettie Page."
From there we just got along.
Int:What are your vices?
GT:I have a million... drinking, the phone - I can´t
get off the phone. I can´t not call people. This cell
phone is going to be the death of me, I think I´ve
used up my 500 minutes in the last 48 hours. Saying mean,
but funny, things about people and uh... flirting with no
intent. It´s a really bad habit that I have.
Int:Which take us to the relationship topic, are you currently....?
GT:In a relationship? No, no, I couldn´t be more single
and I have been for quite some time. It was fun for a couple
of years and then I got sick of it.
Int:What was your longest relationship?
GT:Four years, I loved her; I still love her.
Int:Lesbians get a really bad wrap of having an army of
ex-lovers as their best friends what do you think?
GT:I think it´s good that you can be friends with
your ex-lovers. Otherwise it´s really depressing and
alienating that you can spend a certain amount of time with
them, but when you stop having sex the relationship is over.
I´m friends with everyone I´ve been in a serious
relationship with. Call me old fashioned... or new fangled.
This
is the article in Limbo Magazine has one of our favourite
Guin quotes in it:
"I´m a bad girl in good girl clothing"
Limbo
Magazine courtesy Max's Collection
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