Skip to player
Skip to main content
Skip to footer
Search
Connect
Watch fullscreen
Like
Comments
Bookmark
Share
Add to Playlist
Report
Heather Graham | The Film That Lit My Fuse
Deadline
Follow
8/31/2024
Connect with Deadline online!
https://www.facebook.com/deadline/
https://twitter.com/DEADLINE
https://www.instagram.com/deadline/
Category
😹
Fun
Transcript
Display full video transcript
00:00
What film or series lit your fuse as a young person and made you have to tell stories on screen?
00:18
I loved watching The Wizard of Oz as a kid. I definitely wanted to be in that world. I wanted
00:25
to be Judy Garland. I remember watching Sound of Music. When I got slightly older as a teenager,
00:32
I remember watching The Godfather. Even though I was so young, I recognized Al Pacino in The
00:36
Godfather as like, this performance is amazing. And Sophie's Choice and French Lieutenant's Woman.
00:43
Such a dark movie, but I just thought, oh, I want to do that. Also John Hughes movies like
00:49
The Breakfast Club and Sixteen Candles. I definitely loved. But what first gave you
00:54
the confidence that is, in fact, you should be doing this and you could belong? They did a play,
01:00
The Wizard of Oz, in my elementary school and I was cast as Dorothy. So that was a really exciting
01:06
moment in my life. So that gave me confidence. And then when I was in high school, I would audition
01:11
for the school plays. And I love musical theater and I would, you know, practice singing all these
01:17
different musical theater numbers in the living room of my parents' house. And I don't know,
01:22
I love just going into a fantasy world and pretending to be other people. You know, as a
01:27
kid, I was insecure. I was struggling with some different things. So escaping into a fantasy world
01:32
seemed like a good idea. And, you know, my mom did encourage me to be an artist. And just the
01:39
fact that whenever I auditioned for the school plays, I would get cast in roles. And I think
01:46
I really wanted to be independent. And I had this fantasy of becoming a movie star and being able to
01:51
pay for my own life and be this independent person. And so I started to audition for roles
01:58
and things when I was 16. I lived outside of Los Angeles as a teenager. I lived in Agora.
02:03
So I was able to audition and it just felt like such an exciting way to be independent and to be
02:10
creative. And, you know, of course, I had a dream of being a great actress and being a movie star.
02:17
The influence that you've mentioned, a lot of them have been musicals and they've been,
02:21
they were these old classic studio extravaganzas. But you've really found a niche in independent
02:29
films. How did that happen? The late 80s, 90s, that was a very exciting time for independent movies.
02:36
I just got cast in Drugstore Cowboy. That was really exciting to be on the cusp of that
02:41
independent movie movement at that time. And I love watching independent movies. I mean, I grew
02:47
up really in the suburbs and it wasn't really a culture where a lot of people were watching
02:51
independent films. But as I got older and got more and more into film, I learned that I love
03:00
independent movies. I can still remember the first time that I saw Boogie Nights and it was
03:07
just such a sprawling, crazy tale. You just couldn't take your eyes off of it. And I remember
03:15
the late Burt Reynolds, you know, he didn't really embrace the movie until he was nominated for an
03:21
Oscar. When you were shooting that movie, did it seem, did it kind of seem like a hot mess? Did you
03:28
see where it was going? What do you remember about making that film? When you read that
03:36
script, did you think, wow, this is going to be a classic? Can you tell? Well, at that time I was
03:44
not famous and I was just auditioning for roles. I was trying to get jobs. I was going on a lot of
03:50
auditions. So, and I think that they had offered the role to a more famous actress than me. And
03:57
and I auditioned and I guess she turned it down. So what I did think the script was great and,
04:02
and, you know, it had big actors in it and I did think it could be amazing. But, you know,
04:07
you never really know for sure. But it did feel exciting. Something about it felt, felt really
04:11
good. What would you say was the biggest obstacle that you had to overcome to allow you to turn
04:18
all these influences into your own language as an actress? I think that I had a drive to want,
04:26
I really wanted to be independent. So I wanted to support myself financially. And also I really,
04:33
you know, wanted to be an actress. I had a fantasy about, you know, being a movie star,
04:38
certain things in my life that were challenging. It felt so good to pretend to be a different
04:43
person, to be in another world, to like let out all these feelings that I had no outlet for. It
04:49
felt kind of cathartic to just express emotions as a different person. So all the feelings I had,
04:57
you know, it was an outlet for me to let that stuff out that I didn't know how to deal with.
05:03
Well, and I mean, I don't mean to prod, but maybe is there any sort of specifics of things that,
05:12
that this was an escape from? Well, I think that my family was dysfunctional and I feel like,
05:25
you know, my father was abusive. And I think that, that, you know, being in movies felt like
05:34
an empowering way that my voice would matter, that I could be a separate independent person.
05:40
Well, now what burned in you on a place of bones to, to tell that story? Tell me about a little
05:48
bit about that movie and, and, and why it's important to you. Well, I really liked the
05:53
script and I really love female filmmakers telling stories from a female perspective.
06:00
I love the idea of taking the Western genre and having a female protagonist in that kind of film.
06:06
It was really exciting to me. Besides the fact the script was very well written and the character
06:11
was really complicated and interesting and tough and she's a badass and gets to fight and, and
06:18
challenge the men and she's really smart. It was just a really exciting character to get to play.
Recommended
1:31:04
|
Up next
2002 Kiling Me Softly FULL HOT MOVIE Heather Graham
Channal Nostalgic Movies
8/21/2024
1:30:26
Adrift in Manhattan 2007
Movie Majesty
10/16/2024
1:40:24
Killing.Me.Softly
MediaEntertainment
4/13/2025
1:45:56
La Amante '' The Lover ( Jane March -- Cine Erotico En HD Latino
TV LATINO 1
11/5/2024
1:24:44
2017 О любви FULL HOT RUSSIAN MOVIE
World Cinema
8/22/2024
32:48
Heather Graham Being Nude In Movies 3/3 Appearances In Chron. Order [HD]
KimKim16927455
8/12/2017
10:36
Her Hobbies went Too Far and Led to Terrible Consequences
TOO CINEMA
9/9/2023
0:16
Street Fashion
ansari-578
7/27/2024
1:36:38
Tagalog Filipino sex movies hot 2016 ღ Pinoy Movies Latest 2016 ✔
Indian Web Series
10/17/2024
49:39
Aval Oru Vasantham - Tamil Glamour Full Movie HD-Actre Visithra Hot Tamil Movie
sharphollywood
1/21/2019
1:28:02
1995 Private Obsession Hot Movie
Channal Nostalgic Movies
1/7/2024
1:28:36
Boogie Nights (2022) Watch HD
Seyran3521nasuh2489comm
2/21/2023
2:04
Killing Me Softly (Heather Graham, Joseph Fiennes)
Shadows
10/28/2016
1:41:09
Wir (2003) Filme Deustche HD
Cengiz3322cagil3354comm
3/13/2023
39:49
Tornado Girl2 Ep 04 ( whrilwind Girl 2 )
Irawatycai
8/16/2016
11:51
Wedding Night Hindi Short Film First Night Romantic love story
DoseOfLaugh
4/21/2024
1:34:47
Faithfully Yours (2022) - DUTCH movie
World of Online Movies
5/17/2023
1:26
Alex Cooper's "Call Her Daddy" just landed a $100 million deal —see inside her studio
Fortune
8/22/2024
24:17
The 20 Dumbest Video Game Controversies
MojoPlays
8/31/2024
26:37
The Film That Lit My Fuse | LaKeith Stanfield
Deadline
1/25/2024
14:40
Gregg Araki | The Film That Lit My Fuse
Deadline
9/11/2023
29:22
Brian Helgeland | The Film That Lit My Fuse
Deadline
12/27/2023
27:21
Lee Child | The Film That Lit My Fuse
Deadline
12/27/2023
10:45
Bill Pohlad | The Film That Lit My Fuse
Deadline
8/28/2023
19:03
Jeff Nichols | The Film That Lit My Fuse
Deadline
6/28/2024