Irish America October 01, 2003
Cate Blanchett Goes Irish
An acclaimed Australian actress known for tackling tough
parts, Cate Blanchett takes on her first Irish role in
Veronica Guerin. Smart, provocative and down-to-earth,
Blanchett spoke to Louise Carroll just before the
movie's U.S. release.
Cate Blanchett has played a range of characters in her
career including the Queen of England, the elf queen
Galadriel of Lothlorian, an American housewife, and now,
an Irish journalist. She has starred in The Gift, The
Lord of the Rings, Charlotte Gray, and Pushing Tin. She
was nominated in 1998 for an Best Actress Oscar for her
performance in the title role in Elizabeth. At 33 years
old, she is in the prime of her career and her life. She
is married to Australian screenwriter Andrew Upton and
they have a two-year-old son, Dashiell. Blanchett
discusses the challenges of playing Veronica Guerin, an
Irish crime journalist who was murdered in 1996 by drug
dealers who wanted to put a stop to her work
investigating them and the Dublin criminal underworld.
Louise Carroll: How were you first approached about the
story of Veronica Guerin?
Cate Blanchett: I had always wanted to work with Joel
Schumacher, the director of Veronica Guerin. He was one
of the first people I met when I went to L.A. for the
first time in 1998 when I was doing Oscar and Lucinda.
Through my agent I was sent the 60 Minutes tape about
Veronica Guerin. I was intrigued by watching her speak
and the way she spoke and the circumstances under which
she worked. That was before there was a script, and I
had never read an article that she had written. The
great irony is that I knew her because she died and I
didn't know her as a living, breathing figure.
What was it like working and living in Ireland?
I just had a little baby who was nine or ten weeks old
when we started to shoot, so it wasn't really a time to
travel, but we did go to Galway at Easter time. I had
five days off and we went out to Galway, which is just
gorgeous.
It's a very strange experience working in another
country, because on one hand you're incredibly
privileged because you're not a tourist at all, and
particularly with a film like Veronica Guerin you're
going straight to the heart of a really Dublin subject.
So I was speaking to T.D.s [members of parliament] and
family members and going through the newspapers. You're
going to the heart of something that a tourist can't,
but you're in such a beautiful place. And you don't get
to have the simple joys of visiting because you're
working. It's a very different mindset.
What was it like working with a completely Irish cast
and crew?
Strangely enough, Veronica Guerin felt like making an
Australian film, in that we work with relatively small
budgets and there's an ethos among the cast and crew in
Australia that's not hierarchical. Everyone just mucks
in and gets on with it. The atmosphere on set in Ireland
felt incredibly familiar to me. The crew was fantastic.
There was a buoyancy to it, and Joel Schumacher fit
right in. He is such a fabulous raconteur, and he fed
the buoyancy on set. There were a lot of laughs on set,
which was great because the subject matter was really
intense.
How would you fit the film into the grander scheme of
your career?
Having just had a child, there was a sense of get out
and do it. I was quite nervous because it was the first
time I'd gone back to work as a new parent and
negotiating all that stuff and wondering how it would
all go. Trying to get back and put Dashiell to bed was a
major focus of my day. I just had to trust that I had
done my homework and that I was 100 percent focused when
I was working. But every job has its own challenge or
problem. The initial one is always the matter of the
accent and finding your way into the character. There is
a particular responsibility that one has in playing a
character who has lived and died so recently. She
existed in the media and there's a strong sense that she
has been claimed by the Dublin public. People know what
she looks like, what she sounds like, what she
represented, and they know what she did. So they are
either going to believe me or not. I just had to make
sure that I had the accent right to start with!
What was your reaction to the script?
I first read the script in 2001. The script is a very
organic beast. When someone has had such a short, sharp,
extraordinary life as she did, you could tell a thousand
different stories about her. Joel had to settle on what
the angle was going to be. There was some of that in the
original script. And as actors, directors and writers
you go out and do your research and [you listen to] some
of the extraordinary things that people tell you.
Soaking up the atmosphere of actually being there adds
to it. Then the script changes and expands. That's part
of my job, to bring the details that interest me into
the script. Like the little anecdotes that Jimmy
[Veronica's brother] would tell me, they all go into
fleshing out the character. I'm presenting a
three-dimensional human being. Her celebrity status rose
in the last years of her life. When someone is cut off
in her prime, the iconography of that takes over and the
person can get left behind a little bit. It's a matter
of me fleshing out and inventing, in a strange way, the
human being behind the façade.
Wasn't it hard to play a woman who so many knew so well?
I quite like hard things. I often like things that other
people think are difficult, because I like a challenge.
If something seems too easy I don't necessarily see the
reason for doing it.
Were you worried about meeting the expectations of the
Irish public and Guerin's family?
Of course that's something you think about when you go
into it. To be honest, I thought of that when I played
Galadriel [in Lord of the Rings] or Elizabeth or
Charlotte Gray. Because when you play a character from a
well-loved novel, you hope that you're going to be the
quintessential person from that novel; but you may not
be for some people. That feeling exists very often. I
think I pushed it [the expectations] far out of my
consciousness, or else I would have been a mess of
nerves and I wouldn't have been able to work.
But I've never been more nervous than the opening night
of Veronica Guerin in Dublin. Having the opening in
Dublin was so right because the story originated there
and in a way it's owned by those people who were there:
her family, friends, colleagues and her readers. That
was really nerve-racking for me because I suddenly
thought, "I'm an actress in a film and these people knew
this woman." It was almost like her memorial service.
What gave you satisfaction in watching the finished
film?
When I watch a completed film, I always have to cover my
face with my hands just in case something dreadful comes
up, and I always sit at the back! The best thing for me
was that before I saw it, Joel had shown it to
Bernadette Guerin [Veronica's mother] and some members
of the family and she gave it the thumbs up. She was
really pleased. She felt like I had done it justice, and
I breathed a huge sigh of relief. I knew that my Irish
accent must be alright! I know I don't look like
Veronica, and of course you try to look as much as you
can like the person, but that is not the point. The
point is that the audience, and hopefully her family,
has to believe that you are that person for the hour and
a half. That you have captured the spirit of the person.
And that's a much more ephemeral thing to do. I was
really relieved. And I thought, "OK, now it's just a
matter of whether people like the film or not."
Did you relate to Veronica Guerin because you are both
married mothers who are famous and in their thirties?
You always try to find the things that you can relate to
in a character. I was really unsure about having a young
baby and going back to work and that pull that you feel
because whenever you leave your child you miss them so
terribly. And my husband said to me, "Veronica had the
same pull, so just accept it." But that was the only
thing. I don't like to think too much about myself when
I'm working. So I look more for the differences, not the
similarities.
Do you use method acting?
I use whatever works. That's the great thing for me
having gone to a drama school. You use technique when
you need to solve a problem and it's a great thing to
fall back on. It's like a dictionary. And you don't
think about your technique. I've been doing it for a
while now and you get used to the process of it, and
ultimately, it's about your instincts. If a scene is not
working, then I will use any technique that will work to
realize that moment.
Would you say you share Veronica's attitude about doing
something of worth in your career?
Yes. What I admired her for is that when she saw a major
problem, it wasn't in her nature to dance around it. She
went up to it and dealt with it. It's that idea that if
you can understand a problem, then you can solve it.
When you start a new role as an actress, you think, "I
can't possibly do this. I have no idea how to do this."
Part of playing a character is to understand a different
way of thinking and you go into something head on. You
have to be fearless in your work. But she and I had very
different jobs. I could never have done that
doorstepping stuff she did. I'm in awe of that kind of
fearlessness.
What's your opinion about her employers at the newspaper
not having done enough to protect her?
I think it's a very complicated thing that we all have
in the wisdom of hindsight. A moral and political
judgement is so much easier for those who don't
participate, who are on the sidelines of it. She was a
really passionate person who was at the center of life.
She didn't have a desk at the Sunday Independent, she
was a lone wolf operating on her own terms.
She was taking John Gilligan to court. [Gilligan is a
Dublin crime boss believed to be responsible for her
murder. Guerin had doorstepped him and he viciously
assaulted her less than a year before she was killed].
There was no coordinated approach from the Gardai, the
revenue commissioners, and the government to prosecute
these guys for what they should have been prosecuted
for, which was drug dealing. To put Gilligan away and to
prevent him from attacking and threatening her or anyone
else, [she had to] get him on assault, which is what she
was going to do. In the film -- the Sunday Independent
-- I mean who knows what went on at the time, but in the
film, the Sunday Independent asked her, Do you want to
write a story about it [her attack] or do you want to
prosecute him? And she chose to prosecute him, although
he got let off.
It would be a great thing if she were still alive. Maybe
if she hadn't been Veronica, she would still be alive. I
think it was partly in her nature and partly, until she
died, that everyone including herself underestimated the
danger she was in. Because these guys made threats to
everyone. The Irish crime journalist Paul Williams was
threatened when we were in Dublin last month. It's an
ongoing thing. I also think that she believed she was
doing something important and she didn't want to be
bullied.
Would you consider the film a Hollywood thriller or an
Irish biopic?
I think no matter the size of your character, or the
name of your character, the story is always a biopic of
your character because you have to look at it through
your character's eyes. But objectively, I don't think of
it as a biopic at all. I don't see Elizabeth or
Charlotte Gray as biopics. They're always about a
character in a set of circumstances, and it was the
circumstances that interested me as much as Veronica.
I think the film is unique in that watching the film
feels like a car crash. You know at the beginning that
this car is crashing and then for the next hour and a
half you watch it crashing and you know you're powerless
to stop it. I don't invest in genres, except as a
reference point. A good film these days tries to find
its own niche. So I always saw it as being a dance of
death between Gilligan and Veronica.
It's unusual for a movie about Ireland to be from
Hollywood and aimed at a mass audience.
I think that it's a mistake that people make to think
they can find a mass audience that everything appeals
to. There is no such audience. I think that if you make
a film that has a weight behind it like Jerry
Bruckheimer [the producer] -- he really fascinated me
about the whole thing. This is a departure for him, and
there's a female lead and I think that's fantastic! If
Jerry's behind it, then hopefully it will find an
audience. The film has to be interesting. One of the
things I did like about it is that it wasn't about the
IRA, and yet it was a film coming out of Ireland with a
really Irish subject. Like all great stories, they
translate across cultures. Journalists are dying,
globally, everywhere, and this movie feels strangely
timely.
Is there a responsibility that the media should shoulder
in making heroes of characters who fight crime like
Veronica Guerin as opposed to making heroes of
criminals, such as The Sopranos?
I must admit it's not something that I thought about.
But quite a few people who've seen the film have said to
me that they're really pleased that the criminals are as
sleazy as they actually are, as opposed to making heroes
of them. The interesting thing to me is people
criticizing Guerin and saying, "How could she, as a
mother, do what she did?" I think that we live in quite
cowardly times when anyone who has idealism and is
prepared to fight for it is considered foolhardy. Most
heroes who we see are people who get away with things or
gangsters, or they have a lot of money, and it's not
about a sense of idealism. And that's what I found quite
inspiring about what the film was dealing with.
But I think you need to educate people to read images.
The role of art is to inspire and to allow people to
fantasize. It's not about moralizing and ethics. That
should hopefully be instilled at home, school and
whatever your church is.
I also wanted you to know that you're the first
non-Irish person on the cover of our magazine.
How exciting, I'm the first non-Irish person on the
cover of Irish America? Fantastic. So the next time I go
to Dublin, if I can't get into a restaurant, I'll just
pull out the issue of the magazine with my picture on
the cover!
Article copyright Irish America Inc.
Copyright Irish Voice, Inc. Oct/Nov 2003 |