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Salma Hayek nurses
a bottle of Ice Age mineral water between her knees while wildly Rather than relate to Frida on a direct and personal level, Hayek simply says that she would like to learn from her, adding, that "she's definitely an inspiration" adding that she is working on "trying to take it in."Hayek immersed herself into the role, including an attempt to shave her upper lip in order to accentuate a specifically physical aspect of the character "but it didn't work and now, I'm stuck with it," she laughingly concedes. "I had a shoe that was one centimetre taller than the other one to stress her limping." It is this degree of commitment that remains Hayek's mantra. Her determination to succeed where others have failed is what impresses one about the Mexican-born actress, who is unconcerned at the so-called 'race' to get the Frida tale on the screen. Most notably, Madonna was anxious to try. While Hayek has never spoken to Madonna about the project, Hayek seems genuinely pleased that the Material Girl was keen to tackle the complex film "Madonna is a woman with very good taste and I think that she truly and honestly admires and loves Frida. I actually think she would like the film."Years of working with screenplays that didn't work, it was finally her boyfriend, Edward Norton, who came to the rescue. "Julie [Taymor] had come on board and now we needed to shape the movie to her taste, to rewrite the movie and do the movie that was Julie's vision. We had been working with a writer we liked very much, Rodrigo Garcia, who was so talented and such a lovely man. But at the time he was directing a film, so Edward offered to do it." The key word here is 'offered'. Hayek insists she never asked Norton for help. "I would never say that," she defiantly insists. "For me the most painful part of the process was finding a new writer. You don't know what it's like," she says, her voice rising in |
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frustration. "You have to read 100 scripts or samples. I never like any
of them. I have to pick 10. Then you meet all of them and you like them
all because they're all so nice and smart but you don't know which could
do a better job than the other. Then you pick one. This with a lot of
people deciding with you. Then, you decide on one after many fights. Then
you spend weeks with this person, telling them your vision of your film,
giving them research, calling and tormenting them with all this information.
And you have such high hopes and they go away. They're never on time.
So you have to keep waiting and then they give you the script and it's
terrible. Then you have to go to the rewrite and they're very upset because
you didn't like it. I went through that for seven years." After being
on board producing, fighting and enduring pain and anguish for close to
eight years, Salma was able to finally let go and act, It was Norton's final rewrite that was shot, and as painful as it was, "it was worth it. For me it was a great learning experience." Hayek now surrendered to the film's director and allowed herself to just act. "I was 100 percent convinced and had 100 percent faith in this director," says Hayek, referring to Julie Taymor. "I knew that this director was perfect, and that she was going to make an amazing movie. So I said, here, take my child. Do something with it." Much was demanded of Hayek as an actress, including some graphic love scenes, including a nude scene with another woman. "That was no big deal. You have to be somebody and that was what that person was into. It's like when you have to get into somebody you're not attracted to. They have bad breath and you have to pretend you're in love," she explains, laughingly. Salma Hayek may have been considered Mexico's most alluring sex symbol,
often used as eye candy in films such as Fled, Fools Rush In and
The Faculty, but Hayek is far more than meets the eye. Beautiful
she is, but intensely passionate, and someone who has no doubt brought
that passion to her work as a director. Her directorial debut, The
Maldonado Miracle, will be out next year, and the actress admits
she could never have directed until after Frida was done. "They
offered me that film before I did Frida and I said, no, I'm not
capable of directing. Then after seeing Julie direct, I was inspired by
it. She motivated me to do it, because we don't have role models as woman
for directors." Asked how she would define herself as a director, Hayek
takes a swig of mineral water before contemplating a response. "Naïve,
new, passionate about what I do and lucky. It turned out pretty well and
I had a great time."Hayek may be a woman in a man's industry, but as ferocious
as she is to attain her own artistry, she remains non-completive in a
completive field, described by Julia Taymor as a 'woman's
woman'. Salma doesn't disagree, "because I feel a sisterhood with all
women. I don't see women and think of them as competition or with judgment.
Women really move me. I feel connected to all kinds of women. I am angry
because I think we've been mistreated throughout history in different
countries, including America. I admire women " There is, of course, life
after Frida and the actress/producer is already moving on, saying
that it is not hard to leave this once all-consuming Hayek has proven to be more than just a pretty face, and now there is
even Oscar buzz about the movie, something she was never expecting to
talk about. Nor does she want to think about it. "I don't want to get
excited about it. I have to stay clear in my mind and stay in the place
where I am today, which is that I'm proud of the film. If it does well,
then it's a good thing Next up for Salma the actress is a change of pace, a comedy called Murphy's Law, a film that she is relishing. "I'm Murphy and my job is to make everything that can go wrong, go wrong. I love it already," she says laughingly. No wonder, she adds with a glint in her eye. "Because I'm definitely a troublemaker." | ||