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I Could Never Be Your Woman (2006)
Now on DVD (USA)
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Stardust (2007)
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Hairspray (2007)
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Personal Effects (2008)
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Aging Gracefully

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Spotlight
Michelle Pfeiffer by Helmut Newton for Vanity Fair - April 1984
Michelle Pfeiffer in "Voices That Care" Music Video & Documentary (1991)
14th Screen Actors Guild Awards - January 27, 2008
'Enos' (1980) series. Guest Star: Michelle Pfeiffer
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QUOTES: Michelle has said...
 

About herself and her own nature

VANITY FAIR - September, 1993
"I always have this nagging fear of failure-that I am going to be found out, that I am an impostor, that this is the movie they will discover it on."

VANITY FAIR - September, 1993
"I'm not a sunny kind of person. My basic nature is rather serious. I've never found that to be terribly interesting. I've always wanted to be more lighthearted, and I've become more so-with a lot of effort."

Esquire - December, 1990
"What can I say, I'm a mess"

Esquire - December, 1990
"I'm really impatient with myself. I've always been this way. I've always wanted everything yesterday. My basic nature is dark. My essence. That doesn't mean that I'm that way all the time, but that's where I work from most often in my life. I always believe that I can do everything, and handle everything, and keep all these balls in the air, and then I don't understand why I'm hysterically crying at the end of the day and why I feel overloaded and can't sleep. It's my greatest asset and my greatest curse-that I'm so fucking self-sufficient."

VANITY FAIR - September, 1993
"I always felt a little like an outsider looking in, even with my family. There are participants in life and there are observers, and I've always been an observer. I've been working to try to become less so, because I think it's terribly lonely and isolating to be an observer all the time. Being famous works against you when you're trying to change that."

VANITY FAIR - September, 1993
"I try to protect my own tendency to be affected too much by other people's opinions. It's like the fact that I never discuss my character, my work, with the people in my life, with my boyfriend or my best friend. It's because I know how easily influenced I am, and I know that when I put myself in that kind of situation it will lead me astray from my own instincts. So I go overboard to protect that."

Esquire - December, 1990
"Nothing is halfway with me. If I were Sean Penn, I would have killed someone by now. If I had the male instinct, the male aggression, I would be in jail. I have shoved these people-the paparazzi. Really shoved them."

LIFE - June, 1982
Promoting Grease2
"It's important that people not think I'm stuck-up"

Harper's Bazaar - October, 1999
About her rest od acting
"I'm not going into hiding like Greta Garbo, besides, I can't ?my husband's famous, what am I gonna do?"

 

About her physique

INTERVIEW - August, 1988
"When I was a child I looked like a duck... I still look like a duck. I should have been Howard the Duck"

INTERVIEW - August, 1988
"My eyes are always bloodshot"

Premiere - September , 1988
"I have to be really honest, and I don't know how this is gonna sound. I don't know that I've ever felt that I was extraordinary-looking. In fact, I know that I'm not. If anything, I've always felt that I was conventionally pretty, which is an asset in some ways, and in some ways now. It's a really hard subject to talk about, you know, it's like one of those things where you're fucked either way."

People Weekly - May, 1999
"A person's looks are a double-edged sword. Sometimes it works in your favor, sometimes it works against you. Some people peak when they're 12 and some when they're 30."

People Weekly - May, 1999
"Ten years ago I did nothing beauty-wise, I smoked cigarettes, ate whatever I wanted and used bar soap on my face. People were horrified by how I treated my skin, the maintenance is just way out of control. I'll use sunscreen and have regular manicures now, and I never used to do that. Now it takes me so long to go to bed or get out of the house."

People Weekly - May, 1999
"I'm not unhappy with the way I look now, I have a few more lines and things, but fortunately my husband likes old women!"

People Weekly - May, 1999
"All I really care about is that I'm able to age gracefully and that I don't ever look like a wax figure of myself."

 

About acting

Esquire - December, 1990
In her moment of destiny, while she worked as a checkout girl at a Vons supermarket in El Toro. She was eighteen
"I was frustrated and aimless and asked myself, What are you going to do with your life? And the answer I came up with, the only thing I really wanted to do, was acting."

INTERVIEW - August, 1988
"I'd like to play a bag lady"

Premirere - September, 1988
About playing comedies, in estance Married to the Mob (1988)
"I like Married to the Mob a lot. But I don't think I'm funny. I never think I'm funny, and I'm always in these comedies. See, I don't know how this happens, or why this happens, but I always end up playing the heart of the piece. Like, in a comedy, I always end up playing the anchor, the person whose job is to be believable. And not necessarily funny. Happens to me all the time."

INTERVIEW - August, 1988
"If there's a lot demanded of you, working can be very sexually fulfilling. It depends on the movie, on the part."

INTERVIEW - August, 1988
"Almost daily I say to myself, why are you doing this? There are movies that I have done, people that I've worked with, performances I've given that make me say, "That's why I'm doing this." There are certain scenes you do in a movie that are like catching a wave, and you leave work feeling elated--almost as though you've purged something. That's rare, but you do live for those moments."

INTERVIEW - August, 1988
"I think I have a sadomasochistic streak, because acting is kind of brutal"

INTERVIEW - August, 1988
"I can be a difficult actress, but most of the time I'm not. I think I was difficult on The Witches of Eastwick, but I feel there have been very few times when I've been difficult"

VANITY FAIR - September, 1993
"Our whole society is so geared toward youth. If you're not young and hot, it's very difficult. There are exceptions to the rule, but generally speaking that's the attitude, and you can't be blind and stupid. I have to think about my future, about retirement, about putting my child through school-and if I think my career is always going to be at this pinnacle, I'm crazy. I am very lucky to have had the wide range of opportunity I have in regard to the roles I play. At what point that starts to peter out, I don't know. I don't have anything to complain about, given the state of my career right now. I feel very fortunate."

Harper's Bazaar - October, 1999
"There are lots of things I can do, but I don't think I can play an ingenue; I can't be 20 anymore."

Harper's Bazaar - October, 1999
"I'm at an age now where I'm right to play a mother and have a family; it would make sense that those things would reoccur. I don't really feel limited, or that I can't be sexy. I don't. I take projects because I like them. And I can certainly do a love story."

 

About the stardom

Esquire - December, 1990
"I acts for free but demand a huge salary as compensation for all the annoyance of being a public personality."

Esquire - December, 1990
"I earn every fucking dime I make. I can afford to go anywhere in the world I want to go. On the other hand, I have no idea who's going to be there waiting for me when I get off the plane. Am I going to have to be self?conscious of how I look because I've been drooling or something and my eyes are all puffy and red?"

Esquire - December, 1990
"Your life doesn't belong to you anymore. Every minute of every day, you feel as if a million eyes are on you. You're never allowed to just be yourself. And, for me, it's not worth it I hate it I don't know how long I can take it. I don't even know if I want to."

 

About Interviews

Esquire - December, 1990
"I become paralyzed when I have to make small talk. I'm really horrible at it. All I can do is hope that I won't run out of questions to ask the other person, so I can keep the conversation off myself. Which is why I'm not good at interviews. I tend to go right into the heart of things, and get really personal. Then afterward I read them and I think, Aw, shit. Why the fuck can't you just shut your mouth?"

 

About Hollywood

INTERVIEW - August, 1988
"I don't really know what Hollywood is. I've never really known."

Harper's Bazaar - October, 1999
"People have this notion that Hollywood is sort of wild and crazy and amoral, but it's tame compared to what I see going on in some of the neighborhoods I grew up in."

 

About the roles she's done

INTERVIEW - August, 1988
About working in Scarface (1983)
"It was a hard movie for me because Grease 2 had been my last credit, and I was really terrified. I was very excited to work with Al Pacino, but I was also intimidated by him. Other than me and Mary Elizabeth Mastrantonio, it was all men. I had to play a very cold and aloof woman--very different from my personality and a difficult character for me to hold on to"

INTERVIEW - August, 1988
About the Ladyhawke script (1984)
"When I read the Ladyhawke script, the idea of playing a beautiful princess romping through the woods was not my idea of a good part. That's the way it was written. I didn't want to be running around in a flowing white gown, with long tresses hanging down. Initially, Donner wanted I did that, but then he changed his mind, I think.

Premiere - September, 1988
Her doubts to take the part in Ladyhawke (1984)
"I almost didn't do the movie, I didn't want to play this little princess running around in the woods. Then I spoke with Dick Donner, and he said that wasn't how he saw the character. He wanted to cut my hair off real short, like Joan of Arc, and I thought that was interesting; and I just loved the script so much. I agreed to do the picture because it was one of the most charming, sweet scripts I had ever read."

Premiere - September, 1988
About The Witches of Eastwick (1987)
"The first time I saw it, I hated it. It was so different than the way I had envisioned it. The original script was more of a dark comedy, as opposed to… there were no special effects; there wasn't all of that flying in the air. For me, what was interesting about it was how it played on a psychological level: the power play between men and women."

Premiere - September, 1988
Capturing and learning her Angela's role in Married to the Mob (1988)
"I met some great gals out in Long Island. They're fantastic. The Press-On Queens." [She shifts into her Angela voice.] "Cawla and Anna Maria. They were sistuhs. And Cawla was a hairdresser, and she was going to be getting her own chair. We talked about nails, we talked about hair, we talked about makeup." [She goes back to her own voice.] "They were great. I wanted to be more like them after I'd met them. There's a certain art in really enjoying life that's in everything they do."

MARRIED TO THE MOB Press Kit - 1988
About her role, Angela De Marco, in Married To The Mob (1988)
"I frankly like Angela more than I like myself. She's a lot more fun than I am. I am so disgustingly serious"

Esquire - December, 1990
About her experiencie in Russia filming The Russia House (1990)
"I understood for the first time in my life how people could just give up. I've hit some lows in my life. But I never gave up hope. I was only in Russia for six weeks. But just getting from point A to point B was such an ordeal. Just to get home, you had to negotiate with the cabdriver. Just the feeling of not having any control."

Esquire - December, 1990
About her leared in Russia filming The Russia House (1990)
"What I learned was that a Soviet woman is still much more passive than an American woman. It's still a very patriarchal culture."

VANITY FAIR - September, 1993
About her role Laura Alden in Wolf (1994)
"I'm the love interest, of course-the rebellious daughter, a wanderer, the black sheep of the family."

 

About her partners at the movies

INTERVIEW - August, 1988
About Matthew Broderick in Ladyhawke (1984)
"I never knew what a goofo Matthew was until I met him"

INTERVIEW - August, 1988
About Jack Nicholson in The Witches Of Eastwick (1987)
"Jack was an angel. Jack, with all the knowledge he has, never oversteps the boundaries of his job"

 

About the directors she's worked with

INTERVIEW - August, 1988
About Brian De Palma in Scarface (1983)
"Well, there's a lot of talk and a lot written about Brian's views on women and all that, in his movies he's always killing women. People tend to think that means he has a warped view of women, but I found the exact opposite to be true. I found him generous and very gentle; I liked working with him very much."

INTERVIEW - August, 1988
About Jonathan Demme in Married To The Mob (1988)
"Jonathan has, first of all, a great deal of respect for every single person working on a movie. He lets everybody contribute, and I think that's because he's secure enough so that he doesn't think that everything has to be his idea. He allows other people's ideas to come in. At the same time he never loses his overview or control of the picture, so I never feel like I'm out there all alone, and I don't end up mistrusting him."

Esquire - December, 1990
About Robert Towne in Tequila Sunrise (1988)
"What I look for in a director is freedom, and that's not what I got from Bob. It was a matter of chemistry."

 

About being a producer

Harper's Bazaar - October, 1999
About the box-office of One Fine Day
"One Fine Day was the first time I allowed myself to get caught up in numbers and expectations, I don't usually do that. I'm always waiting for the other shoe to drop. When that happened, it was such a shock. I learned I was right not to buy into hype. But as a producer, it's hard to detach."

Harper's Bazaar - October, 1999
Reason to don't come back to produce.
"I feel more peaceful with acting; that's where I get my reward,"

 

About her childhood and teeneager

Esquire - December, 1990
"My life's ambition was to be Tina Louise."

VANITY FAIR - September, 1993
"I had a big mouth, and I used to mouth off to my mother all the time. But I'd make sure my father wasn't in earshot, because he'd let me have it. I was very strong-willed, very stubborn, and fairly dramatic, I guess. I remember my mother calling me a drama queen when I would be carrying on: 'Here's my little actress'. And I was a real tomboy. I wasn't a terribly feminine little girl. I never thought I was attractive to boys; I remember when the first boy liked me, I couldn't believe it. All the little girls with ringlets and crinoline dresses were the ones the boys liked. I was always beating them upwhy should they like me? I was always the biggest girl in the class, and if somebody wanted someone beat up, they'd come and get me. I was the school bully. No wonder I played Catwoman. It all comes full circle."

VANITY FAIR - September, 1993
"I was just a delinquent. I was always in trouble; I was never in school. The only class I didn't cut on a regular basis was theater. I was with the surfers. I went to the beach. The girls laid out and baked in the sun and the boys surfed. I was a party girl."

VANITY FAIR - September, 1993
"I never read all the things people were reading in high school; I was going to the beach and getting stoned. I just read The Catcher in the Rye five years ago. I always have this feeling like I'll never catch up, reading the classics and everything. It's not so much catching up with other people; it's more for myself, feeling like I'm missing out, and that I'll never get it all done in this lifetime."

VANITY FAIR - September, 1993
"I was never in school, but I graduated in three years, with honors, I just skated on through, because I knew how to manipulate the system."

VANITY FAIR - September, 1993
"I'm really glad now that I had that rebellious spirit, I think it's one of the biggest influences on my success. It's why I moved away from home"

LIFE - June, 1982
"I liked surfers. I spent most of my time hanging out at the beach. If a guy had a body like a V, blond hair and blue eyes, that's all he needed. My father used to get frustrated because I always went for love. None of my boyfriends had any money"

 

About her early years in Hollywood

Premiere - September, 1988
During the filming if Delta House (1979)
"I used to call up my agent, crying on the phone: 'They're putting me in hot pants again.' I had two sets of falsies on. Here they were presenting me like I'm this sexy thing, and I was thinking, 'What if people don't think I'm sexy? I'm gonna look like an asshole.'"

Premiere - September, 1988
"Even though the films that I was doing weren't exactly what I ideally wanted, each time I made a choice, I made sure it was something a little better than the last one."

Esquire - December, 1990
"I remember that I used to get on the phone with Ellen Barkin. We were both unemployed. Nobody would hire us. Every part that we wanted, Debra Winger would steal. We could not get a job and we'd be hysterical for hours on the phone, bitching and moaning and kvetching."

 

About her family

Vanity Fair - September, 1993
[About her mother]
"She always wanted me to have a career. She always said, 'I don't care when you get marr ied,' but she thought it was very important that I live on my own first and have a career. I was raised with a man's work ethic. My mother was really caught at the crossroads; I think that's a very difficult generation of women. When they got to be in their early 30s, it all changed on them: the life choices they had made weren't socially acceptable anymore, and certainly weren't socially valued. I have a newfound respect for my mother; she raised four children on her own, and she did everything. "

 

About David E. Kelley (her husband)

Vanity Fair - September, 1993
About how she told him that she had decided to adopt a baby
"When he started dating me, that wasn't part of the deal. All of a sudden, we're in bed one night, and I said, 'Oh, by the way. . .' He was a bit stunned, a bit awed. It took a little getting used to. But he respected what I was doing very much. He's completely besotted, utterly crazy about her. "

Harper's Bazaar - October, 1999
About the early times in their relationship
"He's always been amazingly patient with the sordid nature of being a celebrity. Sometimes you can be with someone who kind of resents you a little bit. David was never, ever like that."

Harper's Bazaar - October, 1999
"He doesn't really need advice from me. If anything, I could take a few tips from him."

 

About Fisher Stevens (her ex-boyfriend)

PEOPLE WEEKLY - July, 1992
[She told her father when she met Fisher Stevens]
"Dad, Fisher makes me laugh. The others made me cry"

 

About the adoption

Vanity Fair - September, 1993
Explaining the reasons to adopt
"I had been ready to be a mother for a very long time. I'm 35. I have spent more than a third of my life being independent and leading this narcissistic existence where everything is about me, and it's boring already. I was just ready for a change. Anytime I saw somebody with a baby, I started salivating. It was just time. And then I thought, even today, with men sharing in a lot of parenting, with all the women I know, the majority of the responsibility falls on their shoulders, even though they have a career as well. Men are like pinch hitters. So what's the deal?. I thought about all my options, and certainly one of those options was to just have a baby with somebody, which I guess is the obvious option. But when it came right down to it, I just couldn't do it. I thought, I don't want some guy in my life forever who's going to be driving me nuts. And I always wanted to adopt-always. I want to have my own children too; I want to do both. "

Vanity Fair - September, 1993
About the decision before to adopt
"When I made the decision, I didn't sleep for two weeks. I thought, Holy shit! Are you nuts? This is not like a house you decide to buythis is something serious! But the last month I was like an expectant mother: I'm ready, the nursery is ready, I have all my books, I want the baby here now. Every day was like Chinese water torture. And every step of the way, everything pointed to the fact that it was such a right decision."

Vanity Fair - September, 1993
"It was the most important thing I'll ever do in my life, and I wanted time by myself to get used to it,"

Vanity Fair - September, 1993
Then adoption of Claudia Rose
" It's absolutely, positively the smartest and best thing I've ever done for myself. Nothing comes close. It's changed my life, but it's moved me in a direction that's more natural to me. I tend to want to stay home anyway, and this is a great excuse: 'Sorry, I can't get a baby?sitter!' 'Time to get home!' 'Sorry, the baby's sick, can't go out!'. I'm a homebody, to a fault; I nest. I just nest in a different way now. I ran out of room; I needed a family room -I got tired of tripping over Claudia's toys- and the only room available was the dining room, so I got rid of the dining-room table and chairs. We have no place to eat now. We eat on the floor, but it doesn't matter. The aesthetics are out the window."

Vanity Fair - September, 1993
"I wanted this child to know who her mother was"

 

About her children

Vanity Fair - September, 1993
About Claudia Rose
"She's the most beautiful child I've ever seen."

Vanity Fair - September, 1993
about the different racial identityher of Claudia Rose
"It will become an issue for her later, and that's something I certainly have to think about and prepare myself for. It will take a lot more education on my part to know how to help her deal with certain prejudices that may arise and certain situations that may arise that I haven't had in my own experience. But I love what she is and what she represents, and I think it's something we need to see more of."

Harper's Bazaar - October, 1999
[About her mother]
"Everyone tells you how great parenthood is. It's harder than you ever imagined; it's also better than you ever imagined."

 

About Armani

First Rodeo Drive Walk of Style Award - September 9, 2003
"Giorgio is a man who graces the fashion world with his style and dignity, prioritizing class over outrageousness. In a day when so many designers want you to notice their creations, with Giorgio it's always been about flattering the people who wear them."

 

About the surgical intervention

Esquire - December, 1990
"Now, that's pretty scary. I don't get it. I really don't. I mean, my face is completely crooked. People accuse me of having a nose job. They accuse me of having my lips injected. First off, I would have gotten a straight nose instead of this thing. My lips are lopsided. It's very strange. I was thinking the other day how everything is cyclical. When I was in school, I was so ruthlessly teased about my lips. I used to run home weeping. I used to tell people that the reason my lips were so big is that I fell off my bicycle facefirst, and they swole up and they never went down. And I so convinced myself that this was true that when I was about twelve my mother had to say, 'No, Michelle. That's not what happened.'"

Esquire - December, 1990
"You know, I said my whole life, I'll never have a face-lift. Oh, how horrible, I always thought. But I understand the desire. I mean, when I'm sixty years old, are they going to let me do Russia House? With a thirty-two-year-old leading man? I don't think so. So when I hear an actress say, 'You know what, I'm gonna have my face done, get my tits raised, and I'm going to get another ten years out of this business,' I say, 'More power to you. Go do it.' Even though for myself?well, I say, 'Never say never.' Otherwise you're sure to wind up on that table."

Vanity Fair - September, 1993
"So far I haven't succumbed, but I'm very conflicted about face-lifts and all that, I understand the pressure to do it. You look in the mirror and think, She's 40, and she looks so much better than I do!-and then you remember all the work she's had done on her face. I used to say, 'Absolutely not! Never, never, never!' But people say, 'Never say never.' I don't judge women harshly anymore who have done it, and yet it perpetuates the pressure. If you can get another five years from a good face-lift. . . "

 

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