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| Curiosities |
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She hates talking about her beauty:
"at the risk of sounding like a jerk, part of me doesn't
feel like I am really beautiful, and part of me is afraid
to be beautiful, because there are repercussions. When I first
started acting, I got a lot of roles because of the way I
looked; I'm the first to admit that. But when you want to
move into larger roles, it can be a barrier. I remember downplaying
it very much, going in for interviews. " Indeed, there
were times when she was rejected for a part because she was
"too pretty."
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She think on herself that is is so disgustingly serious: "Maybe
I'm getting better... I just wish sometimes I could be more
like Michael Caine, you know--I wish that I could not take
it all so seriously, have more fun with it. If I do a movie
I don’t' like, I don't want to get so upset with myself
"
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Michelle usually hides, in the interest of privacy, under
a floppy hat, behind sunglasses and in T-shirt and jeans,
she certainly makes no effort to look like a movie goddess.
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Neither she doesn't like talk about her private life, she
hates interviews: "I am basically
very private, and I'm really nervous about doing publicity.
Every time I set up an interview, I say, 'That's it, this
is my last one. I'll do this because I committed to doing
it, but I'm never doing another one.' It was insane"
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Michelle is well known for turning down
some pictures that became huge successes:
"When I first went into the business,
someone told met hat being able to turn down a part was the
only thing that would ever give me power".
"I have turned down pictures and
afterward regretted it but also turned down some that became
huge successes, and when I've gone to see them I've though,
I know this is a huge success and that it would be really
great if I were in a big, successful movie, but I don't get
it and I don't like it. So I’m glad I'm not in it. I
never wanted to have to take a job because I didn't have any
money".
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She was little feminine in her infancy: "When
I was very young I never thought I was attractive, because
I was a tomboy and I was always the biggest girl in the class"
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She was known by a variety of nicknames. "Michelle
Mudturtle" is the only one she chooses to share.
"I was a rotten kid, just rotten.
I was always in trouble. I tried so hard to be good, but I
was incapable. just incapable. With the greatest of effort,
I would manage to get a C in citizenship. I was a bully."
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She skipped classes at Fountain Valley High School (where
she maintained a solid B average) to hang out at nearby Huntington
Beach with the surfers and lifeguards.
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She went to work at 14, lying about her age to land a job
selling jeans at a clothing store: "I’ve
been working since I was 14, and my father, being very conservative,
has always been strict about my having a savings account."
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Her firstest relationsihps were with Danny Jackson, a football
player, and then with Mickey Swenson, a handsome, funny athlete,
placed her squarely in cool territory.
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She totaled her first car, a red '65 Mustang, at 16
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When Pfeiffer found out she cold get English credits by taking
theater courses, she jumped at the chance. "I'd
always thought that theater people were really weird, and
I got into this class, and I just fell in love with the people
there. They were funny, witty; they were really interesting.
It was the only class that I made an effort to go to."
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After graduation Pfeiffer spent a "boring
year" studying to be a court reporter and then
dropped out
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She worked as a checkout girl at a local supermarket and hated
it. It's easy to picture her there, sullen and resentful,
snapping her gum and seething. In fact, it marked a fateful
turning point.
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One day when some lady was "bitching about her cantaloupes,"
as she recalls it, she had an epiphany. Standing there in
her nursing shoes and her little red smock, she asked herself
what, if she could do anything in the world, she would actually
want to do. The answer came up acting.
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She became Miss Orange County
in 1978. I won Miss Orange County, and
then I went to the Miss L.A. contest, which I didn't win.
I was very pleased, actually. I didn't want to win and be
opening drugstores. The reason I went was that I wanted to
meet one of the judges, who was a commercial agent. He became
my first agent in Los Angeles.
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Her agent got for her the first work as actress, a line on
Fantasy Island, "I'll
never forget it. 'Who is he, Naomi?' I practiced and practiced
that line. I remember being so discombobulated, because I
had to find my mark-you know, you don't learn that in acting
class. And the lights were so bright I couldn't keep my eyes
open. I remember showing up for work and having my name on
the dressing room."
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In 1979, at 20, she won her first series role, a jiggly undergrad
named the Bombshell on Delta House,
ABC's short-lived rip-off of Animal
House.
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Michelle paid her show-biz dues with bimbo parts-a shot on
the television series, she would call her agent, crying, "They're
putting me in hot pants again."
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She consumed drugs during her teenager years: "I
quit smoking, drinking and taking drugs and went on long fasts.
I never saw anybody. Then I met Peter. Peter drew me back
into the world. I was terrified my feelings for him would
leave because they were so wonderful, but they didn't"
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While an acting student in L.A., Pfeiffer joined a vegetarian
cult that she later claimed "brainwashed" her. According
to her, she was rescued, by Peter Horton
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She was 22 when she was married to Peter
Horton, a performance classmate, in 1981: "For
me it was too young. I think my husband and I were both too
young, and as we started growing up our needs changed. We've
always been close, even up to the separation, which was very
difficult on both of us because we have never stopped caring
for eachother. We didn't have an angry breakup--he even helped
me pack my car. [laughs] It wasn't bitter, and we talked every
day on the phone. It was, in that sense, really difficult
because we didn't have the anger to hide behind, the anger
that covers up all the pain. But we're like best friends when
we see each other". According Richard
Pfeiffer, Michelle's Dad: "Peter
was a very domineering person. One night we were all in a
limo on our way to The Tonight Show. Michelle was a guest,
and during the ride Peter was instructing her on what to say.
She was very obedient to him at the time. After she left him
her career took off".
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Michelle fired her agent, who was left with only his
memories of Pfeiffer and an autographed picture: "To
John, who has taken me from crayons to perfume. Thank you
for your hard work, never-ending faith & love. I love
you, Michelle." And she signed with Gary Lucchesi
and Alan Iezman at William Morris, and they promptly got her
big audition: Grease 2.
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Michelle auditioned, along with hundreds of other girls,
for the role of Pink Lady Stephanie Zinone in Grease
2 (1982), she got the part for her ability for dancing
and singing: "I didn't make myself
crazy because It seemed so farfetched that I'd get the part.
My agent said, 'It's a real cattle call, but it will be good
for you to go for the experience."' After singing
a couple of Linda Ronstadt numbers, Pfeiffer was asked to
read for Pat Birch. "That
was really weird for me. I'd been taking singing lessons and
I had taken dance, because I loved to dance, but I had never
considered myself a professional at all. I went on this audition
as a fluke, and somehow, through the process of going back
and dancing, and then going back and singing, I ended up getting
the part. I went crazy with that movie".
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On their honeymoon the big news came that she had gotten
the part of tough-girl Stephanie Zinone in Grease
2
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Ed Limato, who is now vice-chairman of ICM, met Pfeiffer
when he was at William Morris and another agent brought her
in to see him while he was on the phone. Within a week, the
casting director for Scarface
told him she was looking for a young actress to play Al
Pacino's cokehead gangster moll, Elvira. Limato said,
"'I've just met this fantastic
girl who's perfect for this,' I wasn't even her agent, but
I was really knocked out by her, so much so that I was selling
this woman I didn't even know for this role. There's always
been something different about Michelle."
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After Scarface, she ned
a change in the kind of roles. "I
got offered every bitch that has ever been." Instead,
she took Ladyhawke.
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Michelle got Isabeau´s feature in Ladyhawke
(1984) because she prepared and did the casting to get the
role with very enthusiasm. Donner
commented: "I had seen to Michelle
in Grease 2 and I thought she was a very good actress and
a very beautiful girl but I didn´t believe she was the
best candidate for the film. However, the casting director
sent to us a video-tape from Michelle´s proof. She wore
a wig and did a scene from the film that she had invented,
the video finished with a image of a flock of birds with her
voice saying 'This is the impresion I have taken from Ladyhawke'.
We enjoyed so much and we thought it was admirable that she
dared to do something completely creative and by her own.
So, we decided to take a risk and hired her".
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She started painting during the time off in the Ladyhawke
filming in Italy: "When I went
to Italy to do Ladyhawke I had a lot of time off. It was a
very difficult movie, and I was away for five months. It was
the longest and the farthest I had ever been away from home.
I decided I needed something that I could feel passionate
about as acting, and something in which I could completely
lose myself. I started painting, and I'm still doing it. I'll
be lying in bed and find myself thinking about how I could
have handled that shadow differently. Finally I can't sleep,
thinking about how to paint this or that, and I say to myself,
what are you doing? You got into this so that you wouldn’t
drive yourself crazy"
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Michelle had to test to get the part in The
Witches of Eastwick: "The
thing that was infuriating to me that director George Miller
wanted me for the role of Sukie all along. But the producers
wanted me to test. Then, in the middle of the testing, one
of the producers comes up to me and tells me that I have the
part. Then they asked me to stay and read another part because
there were other girls testing. So I have to read with this
girl who's testing for a part that I thought I had. I felt
it was awful. I was sore as hell. If I want to do something,
I'm really not that proud--I'll go in and read; I'll go in
and test. If I really want to do something, I'll go in and
do whatever the director feels that he needs me to do."
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Her first real character role was as the red-headed, gum-cracking
wife of a Mafioso in Jonathan Demme's
Married to the Mob (1988). Michelle
had to make up to look tarty, with dark hair and terrible
hairdo that only gets worse: "Isn't
it great?"
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To play to Angela De Marco, the wife of a Mafia second lieutenant,
in Married to The Mob (1988),
Michelle had to learn the Queens accent: "I
worked with a dialect coach called Richard Ericson who was
fabulous, and I also went out to Long Island. The crew was
fantastically helpful, too, because a lot of them were from
there, and I would pick up things from them. On Long Island,
Jonathan Demme's nephew introduced me to some friends of his,
who read all my lines into a tape recorder so I could hear
the way they should sound."
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Michelle played Jo Ann, the silky restaurateuse, in Robert
Towne's Tequila Sunrise.
While her performance in the latter was almost unanimously
praised, she remembers the experience only bitterly, deflecting
for her work by saying that she hasn't seen the film and has
no plans to.
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Pfeiffer was making her stage debut as the desirable countess
Olivia in a New York Shakespeare Festival
production of Twelfth Night.
To date, it has been her only experience on the theatre.
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Michelle Pfeiffer met her ex-boyfriend Fisher
Stevens during the rehearsal of the play Twelfth
Night.
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She lived in West Los Angeles, in a house, a sprawling Spanish
hacienda-style place built in 1917
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She struggled against the privations and anomalies of Soviet
society during the set of The Russia
House. She complained about the black market, about
the bureaucracy, about the ban against smoking in some jazz
clubs. "Jazz. Cigarettes. I mean,
the two are synonymous. And at that time I still smoked, and
I felt that I had been deprived of so much, that I was furious."
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One of the days while she was filming The
Russia House, she disclosed in response to a rule forbidding
Western film companies from feeding the Soviet extras they
hire. When Pfeiffer discovered this, she was furious and refused
to work. "In a country where you
can't get food, where you can't get soap, here they were watching
us shoveling down these platefuls of hot, steamy spaghetti."
So she stomped off, very dramatic, and refused to come back
unless they were fed.
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In 1990 Michelle Pfeiffer
and her friend Katherine Guinzburg
created a production company Pfeiffer-Guinzburg
Productions for the development of interesting roles.
The reason was so Michelle could have more control over the
kinds of roles that were offered her. The kinds of things
they've been developing were an actress's films, as opposed
to 'the girlfriend.'
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Michelle chose to make Batman Returns
not because it was going to be a blockbuster but because it
fulfilled a childhood dream. She'd always wanted to be Catwoman,
ever since she was a kid.
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During the shooting of Batman Returns
(1992), Michelle prepared her role to perfection. She walked
around the house practicing her feline avenger's antics (the
kickboxing close-ups onscreen are all hers, though a stunt
double did Catwoman's backflips), also she was constantly
cracking her Catwoman whip.
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In June, 1993, the 17th Annual Women
in Film luncheon in Beverly Hills seemed an unmemorable
awards ceremony until Pfeiffer took the podium and set her
sights on some of the very people who had turned out to honor
her. "So ... this is the year of
the woman," she said, her sarcasm scarcely veiled.
"Well, yes, it's actually been
a very good year for women. Demi
Moore was sold to Robert
Redford for $1 million, Uma
Thurman went for $40,000 to Mr.
De Niro, and just three years
ago Richard Gere
bought Julia Roberts
for... what was it? ... $3,000? I'd say that was real progress."
Although Pfeiffer's remarks elicited enthusiastic applause,
they were particularly pointed, given the company she was
in. Seated to the left of Pfeiffer was Sherry
Lansing, the chairman of Paramount Pictures and the
producer of Indecent Proposal
as well as the luncheon's mistress of ceremonies and a couple
of tables away was the movie's star, Demi
Moore.
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In June 1996, Michelle was the actress most loved by the readers
of FOTOGRAMAS magazine.
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Credits: Delta
House pic has been taken out from
The
Ultimate Pfeiffer Pfanspace; Grease
2 pic has been taken out from
Bond's
Michelle Pfeiffer Web Page. |
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