LOS ANGELES TIMES
Friday, March 8, 2002
Anouk Aimée: A Most Down-to-Earth Superstar
Movies: The French screen legend has no vanity or ego, says the director who enticed her to do Festival in Cannes.
By Susan King, LOS ANGELES TIMES
Anouk Aimée has been acting for the last 56 years. She's won a
Golden Globe and best actress honors at the Cannes Film Festival and was
nominated for an Academy Award. Last Saturday, the French beauty received a
Cesar France's counterpart to the Oscar for lifetime achievement. And
she's been the muse of many directors, including Federico Fellini (La Dolce
Vita, 8 1/2), Claude Lelouch (A Man and a Woman) and Jacques Demy (Lola).
But even with that legacy, Anouk Aimée doesn't seem to believe that she's anything exceptional.
She didn't even feel she deserved the Golden Globe for her
performance as a beautiful young widow in the 1966 film "A Man and a Woman."
"When we went to the Golden Globes, I remember I saw Fred Astaire," said
the still stunning Aim'ee.
"John Wayne came over to talk to me. Groucho Marx. These are people
I admired when I was a kid and here they are applauding me. I don't
understand. It's wrong."
Henry Jaglom, the writer and director of Aimée's new film,
"Festival in Cannes," reports the actress was surprised at the reaction from the
audience at last week's Los Angeles Premiere of the romantic roundelay.
"The audience went crazy for her," says Jaglom. "She kept saying,
"Why are they coming up and telling me [they love me]?"I said, 'You are
magnificent. Do you think every single person is making it up?'' And she
said, "No, no, no. I don't even know what I'm doing.' She is so genuinely
modest. No vanity. No ego."
In "Festival in Cannes," which was filmed in 2000 in the French
festival city and opens in limited release today, Anouk Aimée plays Millie
Marquand, an aging screen legend attending the Cannes Film Festival who must
decide whether to do a cameo in a Tom Hanks blockbuster or a meaty lead role
in a low budget independent film that will be directed by an actress (Greta
Scacchi). Maximilian Schell plays Aim'ee's notoriously unfaithful husband and
Ron Silver is a powerful Hollywood producer determined to get Marquand
for the Hanks film.
The actress, who lives in Paris, met Jaglom in Beverly Hills about
five years ago at an event at the Academy of Motion Pictures Arts and
Sciences celebrating the 50th anniversary of Cannes. "He wanted to do a film
with me," she says matter-of-factly.
Jaglom recalls attending the evening at the Academy with Candice
Bergen. "She said 'Look over there. That's Anouk Aimée.' My heart
stopped because 'A Man and a Woman' was this movie that had meant so much to me
romantically and emotionally. And the most important movie in my mind creatively is '8
1/2.' I was sort of starstruck. Candice took me over and introduced me and
this is what I heard myself saying: 'I have been looking all over for you. I
have a movie I want you to make.'"
Truth be told, he didn't have a movie for Aimée. But he knew he
wanted to work with her. So he sent her copies of his films and two days
later, she called him. "She said, 'I'll do whatever you want. Now, what
is the film about?' I said 'it's the kind of film where the person who plays
the lead shouldn't know too much about what it is about at this point.'"
Jaglom promised to call Aim'ee three months later with the film's
concept. Meanwhile, he racked his brains trying to come up with his idea
when he remembered an abandoned project from the 70s in which Gene Kelly was
to play an aging superstar who comes to Cannes.
"It suddenly occurred to me I could apply [that movie]," Jaglom
says. "It would also open up this whole subject I have been very preoccupied
with in my movies, which is how women are treated when they get older both
generally and specifically in our culture by the film world, which is a
metaphor for the whole world, and how women are discarded and dealt with at a
certain age. [The film] was born of my lie."
Aimée quickly took to Jaglom's unconventional, improvisational
directing style, having worked in similar fashion with Fellini, Lelouch and
Robert Altman ("Ready to Wear").
Plus, says Aimée, "I like the person. I like the man of Henry- the
way he explains things. I loved working with him. It's like an adventure.
We don't know where we are going."
Ageism, Aimée says, is just as prevalent in Europe as it is in
American cinema."I would say maybe it is worse," says Aimée.
"When I was young, a woman of 40 or 50 used to do parts of women 15
or 25. Now it is the contrary. It is the young woman of 18 or 20 doing the
part of a 40- or 50-year-old. They will take a girl, very young, to do a
part that is older."
Her most recent work was on "Napoleon," a European miniseries that
also stars Gerald Depardieu and John Malkovich. Christian Claview and
Isabella Rossellini play Napoleon and Josephine. The miniseries was filmed
in France and the Czech Republic.
Aimée, who proudly declares that she has had no plastic surgery ("She
is a great advertisement for natural beauty and trusting nature," says
Jaglom) began acting at the age of 13 in the film "La Maison Sous La Mer."
Aim'ee says she was walking down a street in Paris with her mother, a former
actress, when a director approached her. "He said, 'Would you like to make
a film?'"
Born Francoise Sorya Dreyfus, she adopted her character's name in the
film, Anouk, as her screen name. The following year, while she was starring
in a film for Marcel Carn which was never completed, the movie's
screenwriter, Jacques Prevert gave her the last name of Aimée. "He said
'when you are going to be 40 you cannot be called Anouk alone,'" she says.
Though she was much in demand in the late 40s and 50s, Aimée
didn't fall in love with her profession until she played the rich
nymphomaniac in "La Dolce Vita" (1960).
"Before I met Fellini I didn't realize what acting was," she
says. Fellini, she says, thought she was a cover girl. "He was always
joking and lying", Aimée says, laughing. "The story he told me was he saw
my picture in a magazine and said, 'I want to see her.'"
Fellini taught her not to take herself too seriously. "Acting was
part of our everyday life", says Aim'ee. "What embarrassed me before was
that a lot of [actors] think of themselves seriously. That bored me. But
with Fellini and [star] Marcello Mastroianni, it was a big festival, a
beautiful party. From then I began to love [acting]."
In between the two Fellini films she made Demy's first feature,
"Lola" (1961), in which she played a cabaret dancer and single mother. The
restored version of "Lola" opens March 25 at the Nuart.
"'Lola' is one of my favorites," she says. "I think 'Lola'
maybe is his best film. Jacques was good with actors. He was poetic. He liked
women."
Eight years later, they made a sequel in Los Angeles called "The
Model Shop." Aimée's leading man in the film was Gary Lockwood, fresh from
"2001: A Space Odyssey."
But Lockwood wasn't Demy's first choice. "You know who was going
to be the actor?" Aimée asks. "Harrison Ford. He was unknown and Demy was
very happy that he got him. I remember he said, 'I found a wonderful
actor.' I saw him on tape. But [the studio] didn't want him. They said he
wouldn't make any money."
But even with Lockwood, "The Model Shop" flopped.
Aimée vividly recalls the surreal experience of the "A Man and a
Woman" phenomenon. Aimée received an Oscar nomination for her haunting
performance as a widow who meets a widower (Jean-Louis Trintignant) at their
children's boarding school. They become friends, then closer friends and
then lovers until she realizes that her late husband is still too strong in
her memory and in her heart for their relationship to work.
"A Man and a Woman" won best foreign language film, and Lelouch and
Pierre Uytterhoeven picked up the Oscars for original screenplay. "It was
unbelievable," says Aimée. "It was an incredible adventure. I must say I
owe a lot to American films because I have always been received very well
here. People behave very well with me in America that's true.
I am one of the Europeans who love it [in America]."
"It sounds pretentious, but American film people behave so incredibly
with me. So nice. They ask me to work. It's wonderful. I have always
been lucky here."