Saturday, May 30, 2009

Badass musician Amanda Palmer

The fact that Amanda Palmer is fucking awesome has long since been firmly established. She is perhaps most noted for being half of the Dresden Dolls, but since the band decided to take a break a couple years ago she has been carving out a solo career on her own... with the help of a mind-bogglingly dedicated fan base that has helped her weather storm after storm. Most intriguing was the incident in which her label wanted to cut clips featuring her bare belly from the video of her first single because they "thought I looked fat", as she said on her blog in a post that sparked a ReBellyon: legions of her fans took photos of their own bellies, sent them to her record label, and even started a website. Any artist with fans like that has got to be of at least some interest, and Amanda Palmer, with her theatrical leanings, does not disappoint.

Where are you at the moment?
I’m at home.

Where do you live?
I live in Boston.

Oh, cool! I know you’re coming down to NYC next week for the Liner Notes event, which you’re co-headlining with Neil Gaiman. How did you meet him? I know you two have collaborated.
We were first introduced by Jason Webley, who is a good friend of mine, and Neil found out about him online; one of Jason’s videos got sent to Neil, and he really loved it. We were introduced through email and we found that we really get along.

I know he’s done the text from your book Who Killed Amanda Palmer?, right?
Yeah, he wrote stories to go with the photos in the book.

How exactly did that project develop? Was it directly correlated to the album?
Yeah, it came about in a funny way. Um… I had this small collection of dead photographs of myself, and I was going to use them in the album artwork but then I was told I didn’t have a packaging budget.

Oh dear.
[laughs] Which ended up being really lucky, because that’s what inspired me to do the book instead.

Well, your label has a bit of a history at this point of being less than kind to you. [laughs]
Yeah, they really suck. So I had learned at that point that it was pointless to argue with them and that it probably wouldn’t get anywhere. So instead of arguing, I said, “Fine, we can have a four-panel thing with that booklet, but I’m going to go and make a book and sell it on my own.”

Well, clearly in this scenario it turned out for the best. You took lemons and made lemonade.
Yeah, I’m trying to do that in general. [laughs] So that’s what originally got me thinking about doing the book, and Neil had really loved the record so I asked him if he would write the stories and he really surprised me by saying yes. So one thing led to another and it turned into this whole thing.

Obviously you had the photos and that’s how you decided to make the book, but how did you decide what form the content would take, what with the stories?
You know, I never did, actually. [laughter] I actually never did. I just took the photos that I had and started taking new ones and decided that, you know, the book would shape itself. And Neil would help shape it, and the photographers I invited to work on it would help shape it, and it would just be what it was going to be.

And now, again, you’re co-headlining the Liner Notes event with him. How’d you get involved with that?
Well, they asked. And we said yes. [laughs] It’s pretty simple.

But, I mean, was it just a coincidence that the two of you ended up co-headlining after he worked on your book?
Um… well, we’ve been trying to spend as much time together as we can, and that has meant kind of following each other around in different cities. We did a similar event in Dublin several months ago where we just went to a bookstore and showed people teaser photographs from the book and Neil read some stories. And I had a show in New York to do this week and Neil had some stuff to do, so we just decided that we were both going to be in New York and we would want to do something together. Then the Liner Notes thing popped up as a possibility and we grabbed it.

Tell me a little bit about what the event actually is.
It’s a benefit for Housing Works, so all the money raised from the tickets is going to go to Housing Works.

Yes, Housing Works is a really great organization. I’m excited to check out the bookstore because I’ve never been.
Yeah, it’s wonderful, and actually Neil and I were just watching footage of Augusten Burroughs doing an event a couple months ago or something. It just seems really great. I’m looking forward to it, and I think Neil and I both feel more at home in a bookstore than at a rock show. [laughs]

Would you say that you’ve sort of always had literary influences on your music?
Well… yeah, I’d say for as long as I’ve been reading books they’ve probably been influencing me—for as long as I can remember. [laughs]

Well, I know your album was released in September 2008 but considering it’s your most recent I was wondering if you would discuss how your sound developed as you took a break from the Dresden Dolls to do solo work.
Well, the break from the Dresden Dolls was a necessity because we were making each other really unhappy, and it had gone on for too long with neither of us being happy enough, so we decided that taking a break was essential. But I never want to stop creating, so it just made sense to me to keep moving forward with a solo record—but at the time my solo record was just going to be a dinky little project of solo piano and voice, and that’s what I was working on when Ben Folds got in touch and offered to produce it, so that sort of upped the ante. And what was supposed to be an acoustic record turned into a full-on rock record.

And thanks to numerous controversies, the hype inevitably grew.
…Yeah, the hype wasn’t my fault. [laughter] But it didn’t hurt. And, you know, it was interesting: I had a really wonderful and difficult year with the record. I was terribly broke because of the situation with the label, because I basically spent my life savings and then also went into debt making the record. Then I also chose to tour with a lot of people, so even though we were not touring luxuriously there were a lot of people to get around and pay for. And my fans really stepped up and were incredible and donated money to pay the actors every night, and… it was a really… fucking… beautiful DIY/punk-rock thing. You know, after having done expensive tours with the Dresden Dolls, it was just totally back to basics: eight people to a room and stuff.

The thing is, you might not be on par with, like, Christina Aguilera in terms of name recognition but you have something most other musicians don’t in the level of dedication from your fans. It’s astounding.
Well, I think huge stars like that don’t realize it’s an actual relationship. I really try not to look at my fans as fans so much as a giant collection of friends who are helping me out and whom I’m helping out in my own weird bizarre way. But it’s a really committed relationship, and you can’t go on grabbing things and taking things from it without expecting to give things back, which I think is what a lot of celebrities expect. I think a lot of them expect people to continue worshipping them and taking care of them because they’re awesome. [laughs] And it doesn’t really work that way!

I think another side of that, though, is that even among the stars with good intentions it must be hard to keep up with so many people.
Yeah, but it’s doable. There are definitely bigger bands out there that manage to keep up with their fans, and it’s easier than ever nowadays because you can get direct contact with them. And if you know how to organize and prioritize, I really think you can do so much more than you used to be able to do, and it’s essential now because all the musicians and artists in general—if funding dries up, we’re all going to be going directly to our fans for dear life. They’re going to be paying our rent. [laughs] The money’s not going to be coming from anywhere else.

Well, given the state of the music industry—I mean, the record industry’s just in a shambles these days.
Yeah, but something beautiful is growing out of the ashes. Things are just getting reorganized.

Yeah—well, sometimes things have to get really bad before they can get really good again.
Well, given the fact that we’ve entered into an economic hellhole, on top of the fact that it’s done what it has done to the music industry—but that’s kind of beautiful. That sort of thing can herald a real golden age. And it weeds out the musicians and even the fans who aren’t really committed, because it just won’t leave any room for them. So I think it’ll only be those who are really dedicated to wanting it and to loving their fans and loving the process even when it’s really hard and being willing to make a living wage as a musician, instead of assuming that if you play the right cards you’ll finally get that stretch limousine and be snorting coke off a hooker’s ass. The sooner that image disappears the better off we’ll be. [laughs] People need to realize that it’s just like a job—if you want to be a hard working musician people will love you and take care of you, but it really is work. It’s not like if you work hard enough you get to not have to work; it’s that if you work hard enough you get to keep working! [laughs]

The reward isn’t getting to slack off later; it’s to be able to make a living doing—well, work, but work that you really enjoy doing.
Yeah, exactly. You know, I think that’s going to change. I mean, I think what it means to be a musician, what it means to be a rock star, what it means to be a successful musician and artist… I think it’s gonna change completely. I think it’s going to become much more realistic. I think it kind of turned into a cartoon for a while, and now it’ll hopefully back down. And I think that’ll be great for the art and for everybody.

I think there’s a chance we might see a second coming of the punk/DIY aesthetic—which has never really fully gone away, but I think we might see it coming back in a bigger way now because that’s what has to happen if you want the community to keep going.
Sure.

Another artist known for having a good relationship with her fans is Margaret Cho, whom I know you’re friends with. Didn’t you tour together recently?
Yeah, we’ve done a bunch of different things together. We did the True Colors tour together, and she was on the last Dresden Dolls DVD, and we just stopped by SXSW together because we both share the same publicist now. We have a lot in common, is what we keep finding. [laughs] And, you know, that’s one of the things I’ve been loving about my life recently: finding and capturing and nurturing these relationships with people you’d never thought you’d find. You move through this lifestyle thinking that it’s only you, and how could anyone else possibly understand the weird, complex, strange problems of your life? And then you meet people like Neil and Margaret. [laughs] And I praise, uh, I praise Jesus that I’ve finally begun to find my own freaky little family. They’re people all invariably like each other, too, which is really fun. There’s something wonderful about that, especially when they aren’t musicians. Neil and Margaret and I, if we had anything in common it would really be that we love our fans and we love nurturing them and that can be a real bonding experience.

That and the fact that you all have similarly off-color aesthetics.
Yeah, we’re all weirdos. [laughter]

Exactly. That’s probably the easiest way to bond with someone.
Yeah. Yeah, there’s definitely been a sense of “weirdos unite”, and strangely a lot of that’s been happening over Twitter, which is really awesome because not everybody knows about it yet, and I think it’s just reaching that critical point where it might tip and fall over.

It feels like it came out of nowhere and completely changed the internet.
Well, it still kind of has the feeling of being like a clubhouse. You know, not everyone is on it yet. And I’ve just had so much fun fucking around and seeing what’s possible, you know? I had an entire party spontaneously two Friday nights ago where I was supposed to be packing because I was going away, and I made one joke about calling all the people on their computers on Friday night to order, and after two hours I had gotten no work done and I had not cleaned my apartment and I had gotten thousands of people following the party on the internet and I made these cool T-shirts! As I pointed out to a journalist earlier today, I made more on the sale of those T-shirts than I have all year in record sales! [laughs]

For more about Amanda Palmer, her record, her book, or the Liner Notes event, try checking out her website.

Read the rest of the article.

Saturday, May 23, 2009

'Repo! The Genetic Opera' creator Terrance Zdunich

Imagine a world wherein reconstructive surgery, made prevalent by rampant organ failure, has become a fashion statement affordable for everyone thanks to organ financing. Surgery has become such a massive industry that there is even a massive black market revolving around Zydrate, the painkiller employed for all such surgeries; this black market is populated by surgery addicts (termed "scalpel sluts") who have also long since become addicted to the drug itself. Surgery drives the world; designer organs are available for purchase. The catch? If you miss a single payment on your organs, the company will send out a repo-man... and you can kiss your life goodbye. This is the world of Repo! The Genetic Opera, a delightfully culty musical film that follows the journey of Shilo, a seventeen-year-old who because of her rare blood disease has been kept in her room all her life by her overprotective father—who, unbeknownst to her, is a repo-man. I got to speak with Terrance Zdunich, who not only is co-creator of Repo! but also portrays Graverobber, the quasi-narrator of the piece. Enjoy...

So how are you?
I’m good, I’m good, I’ve been running around quite a bit myself so I’ve had some momentary exhaustion.

I heard that Repo! just got a permanent theater in LA.
Yea well actually we have theaters popping up all over the country. We’re actually playing right now in more theaters than we were when we were released. So it makes Repo! more of a shadow cast and I think LA is one of those cities.

Oh yeah, yeah. I think the closest comparable set up is The Rocky Horror Picture Show—it’s not the same exact thing, but for Repo! people go see it dressed as the characters and they shout out quotes and everything.
Well I think the major comparison is that both movies have a community that surrounds them. And they feel that the movie belongs to them and not the studio or the Hollywood actors or what have you, they actually feel, “Oh, it’s our movie.” And they’re very protective of it and they’re very social about it. To me, as a writer, I don’t think you can get a better reward—I mean, obviously you can make more money, but artistically speaking, the notion that people are literally embracing your artwork so passionately is great for them.

Yeah, and the type of cult—because that’s what it is, there’s a cult following around Repo!, it’s not a mainstream sort of project—it spreads by word of mouth, it’s very much about the community. As you said it’s very much about the community as opposed to about how many people you can get into the seats on opening.
Exactly. Can I ask how you found out about it?

How I found out about it? Well, I didn’t hear about it till after the movie had already been out in New York but had closed, and so I waited patiently for the DVD release.
Well I think the good news is we’re playing in upstate New York. Well, you’re New York-based right?

Yep, Brooklyn, New York.
I believe we’re in talks right now to have a permanent show right there. And if not New York than New Jersey. And I’m pretty sure I have you on my email list but I’ll make sure to keep you informed.

So, speaking of which, I understand that you and Darren Smith came up with the idea when you two were putting together mini operas in cafes and bars.
Yes, we met at an acting class, and we were both the only two musicians in the room, so naturally we had a connection. And we sort of both were talking about how we used to play in bands and do our thing, and we both got really burned out and came up with the idea to lay down three minute songs, and so we both talked about doing something a little bigger, a little more. And as a profession we were both doing operatics and so we started playing and looking at what we called ten minute operas. And they were just little ten minute stories with music and one of those stories basically became Repo!.

And it was called The Necromerchant’s Debt, right?
It was the beginning of Graverobber because “necro” means death.

I identify with the fact that all of this almost came out of an impulse to create your own material, because a lot of the time if you want to be creative it’s so much more helpful to be willing to create your own outlet if you’re an actor or a musician or whatever than to just working within someone else’s work.
Well, yeah. I think one of the things a lot of people are hung up on is that they put a lot of energy into trying to create or do things that they feel it’s the way you have to do it. And when you put a lot of energy into that it’s really a distraction from what you started out to do in the first place. Why you picked up the guitar and wanted to sing or wanted to draw or wanted to write. And I know for me one of the big things is that’s what made Repo! so cool. This wasn’t easy. We were doing something that was sort of unconventional for rock clubs. We were trying to book a room, make demo tapes, and we were ultimately always a little bit disappointed by the fact that we had to fall into someone else’s layout. You had to play right after an audition or you might have to play right before a hip hop artist. Or you might get there and the microphone levels would be all crappy. Lighting isn’t working. Or they bump you. You’re supposed to go on at 9:30 and you don’t go on till midnight. So I think one of the things with Repo! is that as a group we had the ability to make it more of a theatrical production. We actually designed a space and we put it on ourselves and we’d design the lights and we’d be the ones controlling the sound. We’re putting in a lot more responsibility and obviously we had to figure out how we’re going to pay for all that stuff. But I think, because of that, Repo! has always felt like a couple of people with a couple of ideas pushing along with the initial project and even through the filmmaking it’s always been toured more as a concert than a typical movie. That kind of spirit is in this project and I hope that whatever we do in the future can have that same spirit.

Speaking of which, I’d like to also talk about the fact that so many times with stage shows with plays or musicals or operas the objective is always the stage show itself—but with Repo!, you have said yourself that the movie feels like what you’ve been working toward the whole time, which is unusual to hear about something coming from the stage.
Yeah, and I think that’s actually why Repo!’s better than a lot of filmed musicals or operas. With other musicals, what was done onstage is considered the Bible. The movie ultimately is a snapshot of that. It’s a version, in many ways a lesser version than the original. With Repo! a couple of things happened. One, we were writing this in a way that was much bigger than what we could ever pull off on the stage. When you’re a in a black box theater you don’t write a screenplay with people who can shoot projections out of their eyes or people who can change their face from scene to scene, and Repo! is full of that. To actually pull it off onstage would be impossible. Even if you had millions of dollars it probably would be nearly impossible. So I think we always wrote it as though it was a movie, even thought we were doing it as a stage play. I think we were doing that more because it’s what we could afford to do at the time. And the second thing is, I think because Repo! and the stage play never reached the mainstream audience, it always was underground, it always was in tiny black box theaters. So most people’s experiences of Repo! is from the film, not from the stage play. And so I think we made a bit of an impression as a movie as opposed to a movie of an opera.

That definitely comes across. And by the way, I didn’t realize how small your budget was until I watched the DVD movie with the commentary. It’s extremely impressive. As you mentioned, the movie was all incredibly ambitious, and the visuals of the movie were excellent, and I was very impressed to see that your budget was extremely low.
Yeah, by Hollywood standards, our budget was very low—especially when you consider our movie takes place in the future, so you can’t just walk outside and see it. And I’m really proud of it, and everyone that was involved really continued on with the special effects and everyone gave 110% and figured out ways to go the extra mile, as opposed to just “I’m getting a paycheck, I’m going to do my 8 hours, I’m going to clock out when I go home.” With Repo!, I think everyone—the costumers, the choreographers, the effects people—they all felt like it was theirs and they were proud of it so they gave their all. I know our costume designer, for example, she was pretty much going out of stuff that she had at home and calling in favors from friends just to make it work because she was so exited about the project. And I think that kind of love not only shows in the fact that things looked more expensive than they were, but that sort of creates the feeling that it was created out of passion as opposed to out of some Hollywood system that was trying to market research to make money.

Right. For example, you mentioned on the commentary Paris Hilton bringing in a couple of suitcases of her own clothes that could be used as costumes for the movie.
Yeah. Some of the things in the movie are very different from what we did onstage. Some of them are exactly the same. Like Zydrate, for example. It’s nothing more than a vial full of glow-stick juice. That’s exactly what we did onstage, and the reason we did it onstage is it was inexpensive. And it was something that was visually striking in a dark club. You could buy a glow stick for a couple bucks, and you open it and you have magic liquid Zydrate for the night. And a lot of the stuff worked like that. Like even my makeup is very simple. It’s pretty much a white face with a little bit of eyeliner. And that’s what we did onstage. And we contemplated doing something more elaborate for the movie and then ultimately decided, “Well, there’s something to that original look. It’s a little trashy, it’s a little culty… if we tried to make it all slick it would be a mistake.”

Well, now Graverobber’s sort of the iconic character.
You know, I’m sort of happy that happened, obviously, but I had no idea that character was going to be as popular as it is from the movie. I mean, I’ve been doing the role for years. Almost a decade actually. And it didn’t always work live. You go up there, you scream “GRAVES!” or whatever, and sometimes it would work, sometimes it wouldn’t. We never felt when we were doing the stage show that I had any sort of the cult reception that happened with the movie. I hope it has something to do with my performance and that I’ll be able to make some other like-minded works in the future, but it’s really flattering to see people embrace the character as much as I have.

Well looking at the fan community, it’s definitely Graverobber. All of the characters are embraced by the fan community, but Graverobber is really the one that has the most devoted fans out of all of them
Well, yes, I think you’re right. Although I think part of it is that Graverobber is fun and you need a character—they’re all kind of wrapped up in human drama, even Shilo, and they’re all kind of like the tragic characters that are flawed, many of whom pay for their mistakes in blood. But Graverobber tends to just be there, look cool, not get wrapped up in the drama, and so I think that’s why in many ways he’s the face of Repo! because so many of the other characters are wrapped in tragedy.

And through the move Graverobber is the storyteller, kind of. He frames the narrative.
Yeah, he’s the court jester in many ways.

And you’ve mentioned also that throughout the development of the show you tried incorporating him in different ways, putting him more of the narrative, taking him further out, and this is kind of what he was in the beginning, and that this is how he has ended up again but this isn’t how it always was.
No, and it’s funny for me to watch the movie or even to watch my scenes because when we started filming the script, and even when we finished filming, Graverobber did have the narratorial persona that the final movie contained and also some of the involvement with the audience, and there was also some involvement with Amber, the character that Paris Hilton plays, and there was some more involvement with him and Shiloh, played by Alexa Vega, but there was the problem of getting the film shorter, which needs to happen. The opera, the stage show was well over two hours long and we thought for the movie we needed to contain it to more of a mainstream format, more to 90 minutes. And so we ended up cutting a few things, and one of the things that was more superfluous that was cut was Graverobber interacting with the main characters, because he wasn’t as wrapped up in the family drama and everything and the tragedy. He was there almost like comic relief in some cases. So when we started cutting away all that stuff, all that remained was Graverobber as a narrator. And so we ended up essentially re-shooting a couple of scenes, or adding a couple of scenes where Graverobber is speaking directly to the camera and acting like a narrator, and I think it works. From an actor standpoint, if I knew it was going to be a narrator from the get-go, I probably would have done some things differently. As a performer these were little things that only I noticed and nobody else would be able to pick up on.

What’s interesting is, from the standpoint of someone who’s just getting into Repo!, I don’t think it could have worked any better than it does now with him as a narrator. But once you become a fan, you kind of wish there was more of the—not that he be part of the drama, but to see more interaction between him and Shiloh and him and Amber. If you’re seeing it all for the first time then it might be too much, but once you’re familiar with it, those are the parts that are really fun.
That’s a good point, and there are a couple of the scenes that were cut that are available. I know they’re on the Blu-Ray and they’re all over YouTube, so some of the earlier stuff is out there.

Well, half the fan fiction involves Graverobber.
[laughs] well you know it’s really an awesome experience to go and sit in the audience all over the country and even in the UK and see people dressing up like the characters and interacting with the movie. And the other great part is I get to meet the fans personally. I meet people who are dressed up like Graverobber. That’s so wild to think that something that I created so many years ago is living in other people. But I get a lot of cool gifts too, from fans, and one of the things people hand me is fan fiction.

People just go up to you and they go, “Here’s the latest copy of my Graverobber-and-Shiloh fanfic; read it”?
Well I think a lot of the people who hand it to me are trying to embarrass the person who’s written it. They might be there and the person that actually wrote it is behind them and they’re like “Here’s a fan fiction that so-and-so wrote,” and I look over and I see the writer turning beet red. But of course it’s awesome and I’ve very flattered by it and I’ve read a lot of them. And some of it is very well written and some of it is just porno. But it’s flattering and exciting. The fact that someone would be motivated enough by my artwork to create their own versions of it, even if it is X-rated.

Well some fan fiction can be really good. There are some really talented people out there who can be writing really good stories with other people’s characters.
Well, what’s especially awesome for me is that fan fiction and the like, and blogging, is not something that was there when I was in school. But for a lot of the audience, which is younger than I am, that’s a huge department of life, and as an older generation the assumption is always that the younger generation is losing touch or that nobody reads anymore. And I’m happy to say that, one, some of the fan fiction I’ve read is really well written, and moreover, I’ll post a blog—for example, I have a website where I embrace that and I’m always posting updates and sharing my travels—and I’ll find that I’ll write something that might be a ten page story and people are actually reading all ten pages. And I know this because they’re picking up on little things and little facts that were in that blog and they’re making fan fiction around that blog. And it’s kind of… wow. It’s kind of scary on one hand but it’s also really flattering because you’re realizing, crap, you have influence. As an artist, I have influence in a form. I can bring a person along and for me that’s completely exciting.

Well, you know, give a member of a fandom some fan fiction and they read for a day, but teach them how to write and, well, there you go.
[laughs] Exactly.

So, about the development of what was originally The Necromerchant’s Debt to what is now Repo!—from my understanding the basic story of The Necromerchant’s Debt is that there is a prototypical graverobber who has a heart that he has bought, and at the end of the story his heart gets repossessed. So how did that grow and how did the story of these other characters come into play?
Basically, Necromerchant was one story of many that Darren and I were performing. It was one of our ten minute operas. And we’d do several ten minute operas in one set, in one performance, and the Necromerchent’s Debt was just one of them. And you’re correct, it was basically about a graverobber, and it did take place in the future the same way Repo! does, and it also talked about the repo-man who comes and kills the graverobber at the end of the story. But out of all the operas we were doing, that was the one that the audience always seemed to talk about. They’d come up to us after the show and say things like, “Wow, that’s a really cool idea,” And they’d ask us questions like “What does the repo-man look like? Where does he live?”, those type of things, and it made us go, “Well, maybe this story is more interesting than the graverobber story.” Because the graverobber was basically just a narrator. So we started exploring that and thinking, “Maybe this repo-man lives a double live. He might have a job in the world and pretends to be a doctor.” And we got him a daughter, and that was the main thing, hiding her. And the story kind of bloomed from that and ultimately it became Shilo’s story, which it needed to be. We had versions of the opera where it was more based around the repo-man, and the thing is when you’re telling a story the main character needs to change, at least in a typical storytelling sense. The main character needs to go on a journey and by the end of that journey have learned something and have changed, hopefully for the better. So we tried doing that with the repo-man character. We tried making it so that it was his story and he was conflicted and he did bad things and by the end he sort of changed his ways and lived happily ever after. And it never worked. It always felt fake. Sort of the reason it didn’t work was that you wanted the repo-man to be bad. So it was only cool when he was sort of evil. So it became more about Shilo because, really, she’s the one who has to go through all the changes. All the characters around her, with the exception of Graverobber, have lived their lives, have made their choices, and most of them have made really bad choices. It’s she who actually has the chance to look around her and explore the bad choices and the good choices and try to make her own life. And so in many ways it became about Shilo and Graverobber was more of a side character and Repo-Man was more of a figure for Shilo as opposed to she for Repo-Man. It’s really more Repo! the Genetic Opera of the Repo Man’s Daughter.

Well, I think the thing about Repo-Man, [whose name is] Nathan, is that’s really the type of character you can only get away with redeeming if he dies in the process. I can easily see how redeeming him without killing him off at the end would feel fake because it’s kind of hard to reconcile in the mind of the viewer.
In the mind of the viewer and I also think in the mind of Shilo. To me one of the main levels of the story is that you aren’t your genetics, you have choices. So I think that how at the end she’s literally left alone, as traumatic as that is, is the best thing for her. And she’s able now to succeed as an individual, as opposed to a dependant.

To go back to fan fiction for a brief moment, I believe there was one circulating in which Graverobber’s mother is Dakota Fanning, and I was wondering if you’d read that one.
[laughs] No, I hadn’t read that one. But I saw that movie she did recently [called Push] where she had greasy punk-rocker multi-colored hair, and I’ve seen that picture next to Graverobber where they both have multi colored hair, and I’ve seen those jokes where they say she’s Graverobber’s daughter, so you know. I didn’t know that it extended into full on fan fiction stories, but it doesn’t surprise me

Well, if you look at the story, at first you’re kind of like “What?” but then you look at the timeline of the story and you go “Oh, wait, that actually does kind of make sense.”
Well, you know, maybe if there’s a sequel of a prequel we’ll have Dakota Fanning as the mother to Graverobber. How freaky would that be?

That would be scary.
Yeah, it would. I like it!

You seem to be drawn toward whatever squicks out potential mainstream viewers the most.
I try, you know. My next project is a graphic novel— it’s written already. But I’m very excited about it and about the particular format of a graphic novel because, well, one, we talked earlier about having creative control and trying to do things that are perhaps not conventional and not having as much outside influence in the process, and I think a graphic novel is a great way to go. You don’t need millions of dollars and thousands of people to create it. It’s something that I can literally create for the most part by myself. I might need a printer. I might need a couple of assistants. But the final thing is we can tell a complete story, an original story, and have cool visuals and cool characters. But the reason I bring it up is it’s not Repo!. It’s not set in the future. It actually deals with the early path, with like caveman. That’s part of the story. There’s a main story that’s happening in the 1990s as well.

Oh. I was going to say, “Maybe they’re like the great great-great-great-great-great—thousands of great—grandparents of the characters of Repo!. Is that what you’re going with, their ancestors or something?
Well, in a sense, they’re the ancestors of everyone.

Well, yes, I’m poking fun.
[laughs] Well, the point is there’s a lot of dark and macabre stuff in this one and also I think people who like Repo! will appreciate this story as well.

I actually so want to ask you about that but I just remembered another thing that I wanted to talk to you about regarding Repo!. What’s really remarkable is the extent to which you have these musical themes, like leitmotifs, that represent each character and their relationships. There’s a post on the fansite that is trying very hard to catalogue all of them and it’s like twenty-five motifs long.
Well, that’s awesome that people are picking up on it. It’s an operatic term, leitmotif, and it basically means that there’s a theme, in this case musical or lyrical, that represents a character, emotion, or connection that re-occurs. And a famous example is Jaws. Every time you hear that theme you think of the shark. So Repo! has a lot of that and some of it’s out there and some of it’s very subtle. For example, a line for Shilo—and that line may appear very subtly, and that might be with some of the instruments repeated. Like with the character played by Paul Sorvino, we had the idea that he was this old Hollywood Italian mob boss and so we’re like “What kind of sounds like old Italy?” and so we came up with this old sound of the accordion. So we have this happening oftentimes when he’s singing or when he appears on screen, so it’s not only that there’s a melody, but sometimes an instrument. And I think that’s what makes Repo! different from most musicals. And hopefully, even if you don’t recognize them at first listen, they move you through the story subconsciously. Doing that sort of stuff is the most fun part for me when composing. It was conceptualizing something larger.

Well, one thing that was particularly striking that blew my mind when I found it was the motif of “I can’t feel nothing at all”, which is repeated at several points throughout he story, mostly by the scalpel sluts. And during the song “We Started This Op’ra Shit” there is one part, I forget where it is, where while the ringleader is talking to the audience you hear this thin female voice say “I can’t feel nothing at all”. But it’s so quiet you might completely miss that unless you were really paying attention.
Can I just say that I love you? [laughs] That’s so awesome that you discovered that, because I know exactly what part you’re talking about, and it’s something that even I forget exists.

Well, now that I know that it’s there, every time I hear that part of the song I hear it without even trying to listen to it just because I know that it’s there. When I found it, I was like “Dude!”
I know what you mean, and it’s kind of cool on a couple of levels, because it’s like a little buried treasure. And, also, the notion that you’re so drugged up and so cut up that you don’t want to feel anything more is a tragic notion. And I think that it works on a psychological level. All your emotions, all this human experience will be numbed. But thank you for noticing! You are a fan, are you not?

Well I think by now you should be able to tell.
Well… yeah.

For more about Repo!, visit the official website. For more about Terrance Zdunich and his other projects, visit his website.

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Saturday, May 16, 2009

Local Brooklyn band Fiasco

I have never come across a more perfect embodiment of the chaos traditionally associated with all bands and musicians until I was confronted with that which accompanies Brooklyn math-punk-ish band Fiasco. I interviewed them late in 2008, when they were opening in NYC for Vampire Weekend, and it was a mess: they were meandering in and out of the room; their friends stopped by; there were chips and dip, which was awesome; and it was just so clear that these guys were completely in their element. Nor have I ever conducted a more bizarre, random interview... we talked about, like, what, David Bowie and octopi? The conversation is erratic, fragmented, and wildly fun, which makes sense, because it's clear these guys are having the time of their lives.

So you guys have been interviewed before but this is going to be a little bit different. Tell me your opinion of Ron Paul in five sentences or less.
LUCIAN BUSCEMI: Five sentences or…

I’m kidding!
LB: What?
JULIAN BENNETT HOLMES: Aw!

But if you want to, go ahead.
LB: [counting words on his fingers] Ron Paul is....
JONATHAN EDELSTEIN: That’s words.
LB: Oh. Five sentences? [laughter] I like Ron Paul. His views on certain issues are very good, but on some things I disagree with him.
JBH: I think he’s a little crazy. But he’s pretty cool; I’m glad he’s not our president, but he was a good candidate. That was one sentence.

No, it’s three, actually.
JBH: Three? Well, that second statement wasn’t a sentence. There was a semicolon.

So you said that this is the first time you’ve played a venue this size. That’s really exciting. So how did you get on the ticket for this?
JBH: Vampire weekend just asked us to play. Their agent called our agent. Like, “Can Fiasco play?” “Yeah.”
LB: And also you know the singer.
JBH: Yeah, I know the singer and he was like, “Yeah, I like your guys’ music video,” and so I guess they like us.

Well, presumably, because you’re here now. So how long has Fiasco been in music?
LB: Well, actually, we’ve all been playing together since 2003, ‘cause we had a different band before this one.
JBH: [checking his phone] Someone bought the polo shirt!
JE: Sweet!
LB: So Fiasco has been around since 2005, but we all went to school together at one point, we’re all friends, and all decided to make music together.

Yeah, do you all live in Park Slope?
JBH: Yes.

I actually found out about you guys through Sophia Warren.
JBH: Right. How do you guys know each other?

Through school. Yeah, we both go to [the same school].
JBH: Awesome.
JE: What grade are you in?

I’m a junior, so I’m one ahead of her. [other people walk into the room]
A FRIEND OF THE BAND: Are we being recorded?

Yes. Anything you say can and will be used against you in a public medium.
JBH: [in a funny voice] Nice shoes!
LB: [in a funnier voice] Thanks, they’re white!
JBH: Like pure souls.

So since 2003 you guys have been making music, and you started in a different band?
LB: Yes. It was called Stun Gun.

When did Stun Gun turn into Fiasco?
JBH: 2005.
LB: Stun Gun officially broke up in January of 2006. And Fiasco formed while Stungun was still happening.

With different people?
JBH: One extra member.
LB: Who played guitar.

What’s your philosophy on life?
LB: Life is a beach. Wear a towel when you go to it. [laughter]
JBH: Life is a chandelier; hang it on your ceiling. [laughs] Um… that’s a good question. I was talking to my friend the other day whom I’m also in a band with, his name is Mark Dinardo, and we were saying that we had a philosophy for playing music and for business and you should always say yes to people. And never turn things down.

So your philosophy is yes?
JBH: Yes.
JE: When you’re young it’s important.
LB: [in a funny voice] Wanna share a needle? Yes! [laughter]
JBH: That’s my philosophy in life: always say yes!
LB: You should see that movie with Jim Carrey, Yes Man, where he decides to say yes to everything.

Well he always says yes and it lands him Zooey Deschanel.
LB: I feel like at the end he learns you can say no sometimes.
JE: Who’s she?
LB: The girl from Elf.
JBH: Can someone hand me that white paper? [they begin drawing up a tracklist for the show]

I thought you would say something more musical.
JBH: “Always say yes” applies to music!

Well, “always say yes” applies to music. [laughs] “Life is a beach” doesn’t really apply to music. What are your idols in terms of sounds?
LB: Well, I know that we all started out kinda hardcore, we naturally grew out of it and started listening to different things, and I could say now that we… we’re very eclectic. But for the new album that’s coming out at the time we were realty into the Hella, Don Caballero… like stoner metal.
JBH: What’s stoner metal?
LB: And Pelican… Yeah, that’s about it.
JBH: Jazz… [to Jonathan] what were you into?
JE: Uh… the Beach Boys? I don’t know when.
JBH: No, but August 2007.
LB: That was like the center point of this album, of us writing the songs.

Yeah, you guys got signed recently to a new label, right?
LB: New Clothes Records.

So how did that happen?
JBH: I’ll tell you the story. I’m in this band called Orphans, and we played a show in Long Island at this place the Ghost Squad and Impose Magazine sent out some writers to do a feature on it. And so they heard a song and were like, “Oh, you’re Fiasco!” and we’re like, “Yeah!” And they were like, “Call us, we have a record label,” and I called his editor-in-chief on the spot and we were like “Yeah, let’s have a meeting.” So very fast. And then it took us like three months to sign the contract. But basically it was like a done deal in two weeks.
JE: We had a plan to send our demo to all these different labels.
JBH: But before we could this happened.
LB: It was great.

Before this didn’t you release some albums on a self-run record label?
LB: Yeah, one CD. And that’s the only other release material. But yeah, we had a record label but it's now dormant.

Dormant like a volcano waiting to erupt or...
JBH: Dormant like Latin the language. [raucous laughter] It might come back some day, but probably not.
LB: No, I would go with volcano.

Oh, nice to hear that even Fiasco is not a fan of my choice in languages. I take Latin, but it has no practical use whatsoever except for talking to the Pope, which I don’t plan on doing.
JBH: [working on the song list] That’s not gonna help.
LB: I don’t care.
JBH: You’re going to be asking me what song to play next.
LB: I’ll see a picture of a monster and be like, “Oh, that’s Oh You Horny Monster up next.”
JBH: You’re gonna be like, “Oh, a cat?”
LB: That’s not a cat.

[looking at pictures representing songs on the tracklist] Okay so what is this? You’ve got a monster. Is it a fish?
JBH: The song’s called Fishing.
LB: Well, it’s like fishing with a hook and expecting to catch fish.
JBH: Wait, you wanna not sing three in a row?

So the track list is mostly songs from your album?
JE: Four songs from the track list are off the album and then a couple are just songs we wrote and there’s no album for it yet. And then one song is off the old record.

So a couple of it is testing out the new material?
LB: Kind of. There’s no new songs.

Remind me, have you played Sophia’s?
LB: Yeah we were the first band to play Sophia’s house.
JE: We played there like four times this weekend.
JBH: In Perspective, when you’re playing “Do-do-do-do” we’re going to do a little noisy thing and then you should join in.
LB: Perspective?
JBH: At the end of Perspective you know how you go “Do do do do”?
LB: Oh.
JBH: So we’re going to start and then you can come in.

So you’ve been playing shows around New York?
LB: Well, the first place we ever played that wasn’t New York City was Westchester County.
JBH: It’s true. White Plains.
LB: And then we played- the next place that wasn’t New York City was Bosnia. So that was really awesome.
JBH: We didn’t even go to New Jersey first!
LB: So now we’ve played mostly around the East Coast.
JE: We went around the Northeast.
LB: Northeastern Tour. And then the farthest West we’ve ever been was Texas for SXSW.
JE: We’re hoping to go to Europe at some point, later in the winter.
LB: This Christmas break we’re doing a four-day tour to four different states and then in LB: March we’re going to go down by South by Southwest and then make our way back.

Oh yeah, I heard you guys were playing at South by Southwest. And Sophia told me about Bosnia too isn’t that where you guys decided to make your email “thefiascoband”? I heard that you guys were always introduced as “The Fiasco Band”.
LB: Oh yes. There was this really funny flyer for one show and they have the different dates of things that would be on a TV loop on different stills and one of them was “The Fiasco Band USA, this date this time” and in retrospect we actually should have changed our email to “The Fiasco Band USA”, but we didn’t. But, yeah, so that’s how we got the email. We just thought it was really funny.

So now it’s your new name in Bosnia. You’re Fiasco except when you go to Bosnia, and then you’re The Fiasco Band.
JBH: The Fiasco Band, USA.

The Fiasco Band, USA. Okay.
JBH: We should have changed our email to that.

So in Europe what are some places that you are trying to arrange to play at?
JBH: This agent would book it for us. So wherever he wants to put us. I expect Germany, France, and London.
LB: I know a lot of bands do a UK tour and then a European tour.
JBH: Unless they’re a European band.
LB: And I’ve never heard of like a “France tour”.
JBH: But some bands do Europe and they include the UK.
LB: We do want to go back to Bosnia cuz we had the greatest time there. We were talking the other day but we decided that we want to play every place that we can. Like if someone’s like “Let’s do tour of India!” like, “Fuck yeah we’ll do a tour of India!” “Wanna do a tour of Mongolia?” “Sure!”

There’s Julian’s philosophy, always say yes.
JBH: And then I think like a pretty realistic thing that I think we’ll be able to achieve is go to Japan. Which I really want to do. Really badly.

What if a classical musician were to ask “Hey, can I play on a track?” What would you say?
LB: Maybe. We’d say maybe.

So always say yes except sometimes maybe?
LB: Sometimes no too. We have different philosophies.

So tell me a story.
LB: So this guy has an octopus and he’s an Englishman. And the Englishman goes into a pub with his octopus and he says “I bet my octopus can play any instrument given.” So a Welshman says “Okay, here’s a guitar,” and the octopus plays a beautiful sonata, everyone in the pub is weeping. And an Irishman gives him a violin. And the octopus plays it beautifully and everyone’s sobbing, weeping, and going crazy. And then a Scotsman goes “Play this,” and he hands him some bagpipes and the octopus kind of touches it, looks it over, looks at it, stares at it. And the Englishman goes “What are you doing? Play it!” And the octopus goes “Play it? Once I get its pajamas off I’m going to fuck it!”

[laughter] All right, I haven’t heard that one before. I think I’ll keep that one away from my twelve year old brother. Um, so tell me about some of the stuff that you’re playing tonight.
LB: Thirsty is a song where we switch instruments. Oh You Horny Monster is a song named after this monster stuffed animal that lives in my basement.

So it’s that kind of horny.
LB: It’s the opposite of an innuendo. It sounds like it would be sexual but it’s actually not. Threshold is new, brand new. We played it once before.
JE: Wild Goose is really old.

All right. So how do you guys collaborate for songwriting purposes?
JE: Well, we usually don’t collaborate at all. Usually one person will have like an idea and they’ll have written the whole thing or one person will make up something and the other two will make up something to that.

You said that the album that’s coming out is predominately metal or math rock. Do you get influenced by or listen to music that’s completely far away from that?
JE: Yeah, definitely. We all really like rap music. My philosophy is that there’s good stuff in every genre, you just have to dig deep to find it. A lot of people will say that a given genre, like country, sucks, but they haven’t heard it every single thing in the genre. Everywhere you look there’s bound to be something good.
LB: I know that there are some artists that I really like, their lyrics tell a story instead of writing something poetic or whatever. And there’s a song that I wrote where there’s nothing you can analyze. You shouldn’t analyze it, I feel. You should just listen to the story. So stuff like that. And, like, the music that I’ve heard that idea from sounds pretty much nothing like our music. And also, like, we have a song called “David Bowie’s Balls”. It actually has nothing to do with David Bowie either. [laughter] But, say, with rap, we’re definitely influenced by the culture of it. Like our new album, the album that we’re planning on to be the next one—
JBH: This is exclusive, by the way.

Is this off the record?
LB: Oh, nah. No. Our idea is our cover is going to be us all wearing suits with chains.
JBH: We might re-enact a specific shot from Goodfellas. Which is actually in our neighborhood, fortunately.
LB: And there’s going to be gold cursive and a nice gold frame.
JBH: I want to press the record on gold vinyl.

That might be hard to engineer.
JBH: Oh, it’s been done.
LB: There’s an all white record.
JBH: My dad actually has a single of White Rabbit on white vinyl.

That’s amazing.
LB: But also back to the whole thing, there’s definitely some classical music that I really like and it’s more of, like, not the way it sounds but like “I like those notes he’s using.” Like we don’t have a string section. But there’s this dude named Argo Perry, and he’s amazing. And I love the way his music sounds and the notes he uses and sometimes I’ll be like “Hmm, that’s a cool note.” Stuff like that.
JE: I feel like only to us it would be cool. Those outer influences…
LB: No one’s going to be like “Oh my god it sounds like Argo Perry!” [laughter]
JE: I know some stuff I’ve written that people would recognize, but no one knows who he is.
JBH: And if you use a jazz line no one knows it.

Well, in response to what you were saying earlier, I’ve noticed that musicians tend to either focus on personal experiences or emotions or something like that or they tell stories about characters. Most music can be divided up into those categories.
JBH: I would say that lyrics could go into those two categories.

That’s what I was referring to.
JBH: Which one are we?
LB: Both, I guess.
JBH: Yeah, because we have a song about Star Wars.

I didn’t say that certain artists are one or the other, just that certain songs are.
JBH: Yeah, cuz I was thinking, my drumming isn’t telling a story about myself.

Yeah, I’m not reading that much into it. It kind of reminds me of all the people who would write five page essays on the meaning of “I am the Walrus”. And it’s like...no. I feel like they probably wrote it when they were so beyond high. “Oh… these words sounds nice”.
LB: It would be cool to be in the Beatles.
JE: That would be cool, yeah.
JBH: Yeah, at the time. It must suck to be Paul McCartney and be like “I’ve done so much stuff and I never topped what I did like forty years ago.” Unless maybe he thinks he did, but probably not.

Well half the band is dead now.
LB: I think we still have a bet on—I remembered in 6th grade we bet on who would die first.
JBH: I bet that Ringo would die first and you bet that Paul would die first.
LB: Yeah.

And now they’re both still alive, so neither of you have won yet.
LB: It was when George was still alive.
JBH: And now every member of the Jimi Hendrix Experience is dead.
LB: Oh, that’s sad.

Well, the world scorns me when I say this because everyone’s like, “Oh, they’re an ersatz Beatles! They’re not worth anything!” But I’m personally still happy that all of the Monkees are still alive. [laughter]
JE: Nice.
LB: They had some good songs.

I grew up on their TV show.
JBH: My dad always tells this story about like when he was young and the Beatles were around and there would be magazine covers around that would be like “Who’s better, The Beatles or Herman’s Hermits?” Stuff like that. And then Sergeant Pepper’s came out and everybody was like “Okay, the Beatles are the best.” And we don’t think about it that way because the Beatles are remembered differently, but it was like, “Who’s better?”

Well you don’t really know who’s going to have lasting impact until like ten or twenty years later. In music, in politics, in literature, in anything. You don’t know what’s going to stick around. Even if it seems like it’s going to stick around forever.
JE: I wonder if Sarah Palin’s gonna stick around.
JBH: I don’t think so.
LB: I think it’s going to be like twenty years.

I hope to god she doesn’t stick around.
LB: My theory is that like twenty years from now some TV show is going to make a reference to her and everyone’s going to be like “Oh, yeah, her! What a crazy bitch that was!”

I should hope that’s the reaction. I don’t want people to be like “We missed out on such a good thing!” I’m praying that that’s not the reaction. Either way, though, people are going to remember this election.
LB: That’s definitely true.

Did any of you vote?
LB: No. I just turned 18 so I could have in theory.
JBH: I’m still 17.
JE: Only one of the people who goes to our school got to vote.
LB: One girl could have, but she just didn’t.

So we’ve already talked about music that you’ve listened to. Do you guys get influenced by literature and film?
LB: For me, film more than literature. Obviously, because we wrote two songs about Star Wars.

Yeah, but Star Wars is an exception. You can not be into film and still write two songs about Star Wars.
LB: Yeah, but I feel the way film would influence me would be like, “I like that story, I’m going to write about it.” Not like, “This shot makes me emotionally happy.” Like that’s really cool and fine but that’s not the way I think about things. Also like the imagery in film I could see being an album cover. Like the Goodfellas reference. Like stuff like that. So I would say we’re influenced by film, but like in a certain way. Actually our friend’s band, they broke up, but the Machetes—I would say about 80 percent of their songs were about films. Like the plot of films. Like they would just write about being a character in that film.

Any particular films? I mean, Star Wars, obviously.
LB: Goodfellas. Labyrinth! That movie made me come up with the title of David Bowie’s Balls. Cuz you could see his balls, basically.

That follows a logical thought process.
LB: Yeah. We’re very logical.

Yes. Very straightforward. Good to hear. [laughter] I won’t have to write a five page essay on one of your songs.
LB: Excellent.
JBH: Don’t! We don’t encourage that. Leave the thinking to the indie rock bands. [laughter]
LB: Most of our songs are mostly instrumental, anyway.
JE: I have no problem with really complicated lyrics, but it’s that talking about it. Like, you should form an opinion on it, but not take it to this whole new level.
LBH: Pitchfork does that.
JE: I love Pitchfork, I think they’re really good writers.
LB: But they just press Pitchfork to talk about their feelings and, like, “You say there’s no hope for the future, you say your band plays up the future of this thing, like, with the election of Barack Obama, how does that make you guys feel?” He was like, “We’re hopeful for the next four years, but that’s about it.” [laughter] “History of man is kinda of pretty much a big downer. It’s because our lives aren’t a downer right now that we could elect a black president.”

Despite the fact that we’re talking about not over-thinking shit, I’ve just finished a unit on the great philosophers of the Enlightenment in my history class, and now I’m aligning that statement with, like, a philosopher. [laughs] But it’s like what we were talking about, how people write five-page essays on I Am the Walrus—especially with huge bands, they overanalyze every song, as though it has to have meaning. Maybe it just sounds good.
LB: Well, for me, English class is—I like it, it’s not a bad subject, something that I can whiz by and it’s like nothing. Like I’m interested in it but I have to take it slowly cuz I’m new at it and I don’t really focus on it because it’s not my favorite class. Like one year I got rushed into it and basically the teacher overanalyzed everything and everything and everything. It was really horrible actually.

There are some books that can stand that, and some books—I mean, for me, The Great Gatsby, like, Catcher in the Rye, I loved those books anyway, but then you’ve got something like One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest or Lord of the Flies, and overanalyzing just ruins it for me.
LB: Well, like, I read Catch-22 over the summer for school and I was so happy I got to read it by myself over the summer ‘cause I really enjoyed it and I don’t even know if I would have if I had been reading it in school. I probably wouldn’t even have read it.
JE: I remember when I first admitted that I knew that overanalyzing stuff was ridiculous was in 10th grade when Jonathan Lethem came to my school and people were all over him and this English teacher was like, “There’s an obvious reference to blah, blah, blah.” And he’s just like, “Oh, I hadn’t thought of that. I was kind of just… writing.” And you could see my teacher’s face was just like “Oh, fuck. I wasted so many classes.” And then no one had any questions for him. All the questions were supposed to be like, “What was the motive behind this?” And he’s like “…I wrote a novel.”
LB: And, oh, my god, The Book of Ruth was the shittiest thing. But it was funny because we would overanalyze it so much that the class came to the decision that one of the central themes into the book was sandwiches. And it was like, are you kidding me? No one thinks of that. The teacher even brought it up! Like, “there’s a sandwich here and a sandwich here. What does that mean?” And she was going over the word trapped, like, “The P’s are trapped in the word ‘trapped’.” Like, who the fuck thinks of that?

To get a hold of Fiasco's music, check out their MySpace.

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Saturday, May 9, 2009

'The Tudors'-alumna actress Natalie Dormer

Natalie Dormer is so cool it might just blow your mind. Her portrayal of Anne Boleyn on the Tudors already has much of the television-viewing public loving and or lusting after her, but it was undeniably excellent to be able to interview her if only because her answers have made me love her even more than I already did. She is historically aware, erudite, etcetera, etcetera, and her answers are really great to read, so, well, go forth and do so.

The bulk of your career thus far has revolved around historical projects. Why is this?
It just worked out that a couple of high profile historical projects were offered to me in the early years of my career. You don’t turn down a great job because it requires a corset and you’ve worn one before. I consider each project on individual merit.

Which of those eras do you prefer: that of the Tudors or that of Casanova?
I love all history because it’s storytelling. But, I will always have a special place in my heart for the Tudor dynasty. It comes from having studied a significant length of it so thoroughly for the show. So many defining characteristics in British identity originate from those years - political, religious, artistic, military.

How is a historical project different from a modern project—in terms of both approach and execution?
Well, it doesn’t take 3 hours to get ready on a modern piece. For a lavish court scene Anne was at least 40 minutes in hair, 40 mins in make up and half an hour in wardrobe. That’s an early morning! And for anyone wondering – those headpieces are heavy. Physical movement is varied by clothes and contemporary etiquette, of course, but human emotion and its execution (no pun intended) is timeless.

Are you much of a history buff? Diaries from centuries past are just fascinating.
Diaries are wonderful, be it Anne Frank, Samuel Pepys or Casanova. It’s fascinating having direct primary evidence of a personality, especially when the way they are trying to present themselves is as informative and entertaining as the events they relay.

Speaking of which, what was it like working with Tom Stoppard on Casanova? I hear he expanded your role for you.
I was listening to ‘Sir Tom’ on BBC Radio 4 a few months back (his play Every Good Boy Deserves Favour was on at our National Theatre). He is an outstanding playwright and has been a shrewd, humorous voice on many political, social issues in our modern history. I would feel incomplete as an actor if I never walked on stage in one of his roles.

You don’t at all have to answer this if you would prefer not to, but what was your reaction when you heard that Heath Ledger passed away?
I think Christopher Nolan said it best at The Globes: ‘After Heath passed on, you saw a hole ripped in the future of cinema’.

All right, your character Anne Boleyn just died on The Tudors. What is your conception of Anne Boleyn?
I can’t reduce such a complex, misunderstood, courageous woman in a few sentences…. Unless I just did?!

How did you like playing her?
I grieved her and the joy of playing her upon finishing The Tudors. It surprised me how fond I’d grown of her company.

Will you miss the show?
I miss a lot of the people I worked with. I miss people bowing at me...Joke! But it was time to move on. Hopefully, she will be one of just many characters that I grow a strong affection for in playing them.

What did you think of that recent movie on Anne Boleyn, The Other Boleyn Girl?
I didn’t see it. Watching a talented actress play a completely different artistic interpretation of the same historical figure would only have addled my brain.

Speaking of film, which films are your favorites? Are you much of a buff?
My boyfriend is very definitely a film buff. He continues to ‘educate’ me (translate as ‘moans if we don’t watch at least 3 movies a week’). New Year’s day was spent at the cinema for the double bill of Steven Soderbergh’s Che if that counts.
I am a Mark Kermode acolyte. He’s a well-respected British film critic and I would encourage your audience to download his podcast with Simon Mayo from BBC5 LIVE.

I have to ask, what other musicians do you listen to?
I listen to a wide range of music. The albums on repeat at the moment on my ipod are Radiohead, The Kings of Leon, U2 (I’m with an Irishman) and a bit of Kanye West.

I hear that you are very cerebral, which you have said is the writer’s or director’s role rather than the actor’s, so how do you approach a role?
Cerebral is fine, often useful, as long as you stop doing it as soon as you step on stage or the camera turns over. “Acting is Re-acting”- I had that stuck to my fridge door for years, until a friend teased me “Why? Do you forget?”

And I hear that you’re well-read, as well! What are some of your favorite books?
Again, can’t do ‘favourites’ (except for A.A Milne) as it changes. But I can tell you I’ve just finished Kazuo Ishiguro’s Never Let Me Go and started Diana Athill’s autobiography. I’m very keen to read Shantaram by Gregory David Roberts, which has been looking at me from my bookshelf for weeks so I’ll take it to set with me for the next job.

Just because I would like to know, and because they’re my two favorite books, and because they are absolutely wonderful, and because you seem like you might enjoy them, have you read either Special Topics in Calamity Physics or The Unbearable Lightness of Being? They really are magnificent!
Special Topics is duly put on my reading list then! I really enjoyed Philip Kaufman’s film of The Unbearable Lightness of Being but have yet to read it.

You recently made the film Fencewalker, am I correct? Could you talk a bit about that movie and your role in it?
It was a passion project for Chris Carter and a great experience to work on. An unforgiving analysis of suburbia. I liked playing Yasny because she was an ‘old soul’, beyond her teenage years in philosophy and perspective. But ultimately she was just looking to be rescued without knowing it. A lot of us are.

Tell me a story. Any story. Your favorite, your least favorite, yours, any story.
Read Alice in Wonderland/Through the Looking Glass and Winnie-the-Pooh. Read them again now as an adult. A lot would have gone over your head the first time around I promise you.

Tell me about your upcoming film City of Life and about your character Olga.
Olga is chasing something. A dream- materialistic… emotional- that she believes can be realized in the incredible, ambitious crucible that is Dubai. Whilst playing her I realized the extent of her humanity and the core good spirit behind her bravado. I brought that unexpected realization to the writer/director Ali Mostafa as well I think, which I’m glad about.

For more about Natalie Dormer's upcoming projects, visit her page on IMDb.

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Saturday, May 2, 2009

Up-and-coming indie actress Summer Bishil

Summer Bishil is a relative newcomer to the independent film world but the minute she appeared in Alan Ball's Towelhead she began wowing critics and audiences everywhere, so much so that nobody even realized she had previously been doing bit roles for Disney Channel and Nickelodeon. No wonder she never stuck around DisNick; her talents and intelligence are far better suited to the projects she is tackling now. Here is what she has to say for herself.

What is your life philosophy? I have no idea yet; I’ll spare you some trite answer like “I take every day as it comes” or “live life to the fullest”. I feel like a fish that's suddenly sprouted legs. I'm twenty so I'm still figuring things out. I know I'm learning that life doesn’t owe you anything and that that isn't the tragedy. The tragedy is not being able to see beyond on that, and I know I don't want to be that person. I try to allow my life to change shapes without too much resistance or objection; I don't want to make transformation painful if that makes any sense. I feel like there are things in life that are painful but transformation shouldn't be the source of the pain.

When did you decide you were interested in acting? I was really young when I decided I wanted to act. When I started acting I was 15 and I didn’t really know what it would entail. Some of it I loved and other things I loathed, like being in front of people. I was always shy so certain things were more difficult than others. I've always had a love hate relationship with acting and I think it's because I might possibly have needed it in my life at some points and that's scary for me. Acting was an impulse, a spasm I couldn't really control, but I understand its place and value in my life more now. Now I feel like I want it, I don't need it, but I could be lying to myself. It probably has more power over me than I'd like to think. But I'd rather have this companion living in me than be vacant.

In what manner did you pursue your studies? I wound up at John Robert Powers and took some classes and then I went to other acting classes around LA, workshops, stuff like that. I'm not a studied actor by any means though.

It’s interesting to see that you went from small roles on Disney and Nickelodeon to being the lead of an Alan Ball film. How were you chosen for Towelhead? I went on tape for Alan and I was called back to read for him and then I tested with Peter [Macdissi].

In Towelhead you played a thirteen-year-old, although you were eighteen at the time, and Jasira was put in situations that many thirteen-year-olds weren’t. How did you immerse yourself in the character? I immediately attached to Jasira—it was instinctual and natural. My experience was limited and I didn't know what would work in terns of developing a character so I did everything I could. I was like an octopus: I would pour over my memories of when I was her age. I read the novel over and over. I studied the script; I dreamed about it. It became all consuming, and then I remember having a dream as Jasira and suddenly she was living inside of me and I was like "Okay, I guess that's a character." It was a true gift in my life to have had that opportunity to just be indulgent and go on a journey with that character. It doesn't get any better than that.

You’re also in Crossing Over, more of an ensemble piece, in which you play Taslima Jahangir, a Muslim teenager who sympathizes with terrorists. How did you get involved with the project? I became involved with Crossing Over the same way as Towelhead. I went on tape for Wayne [Kramer] and then had a meeting with him, at which point I suppose I was chosen.

How did you develop and get into your role?
I did a lot of reading for the role of Taslima. I read the English translation of the Qur'an. I read several books on Islam and its impact on the world and how the western world views Muslims. Taslima was really just an American girl that didn't have citizenship. She was Muslim, yes, but I don't know that her infatuation with Islam was anything more than a phase for her.

Are there any projects you would truly love to do—any types of original projects or any adaptations? I loved A Thousand Splendid Suns. It would be such a dream to audition for the film adaptation. It is an amazing book.

What films do you particularly like? I absolutely love Edward Scissorhands, Nightmare before Christmas, Willy Wonka and the Chocolate Factory, and I just saw Coraline and loved it.

Are there any specific actors that you admire? I admire Kevin Kline, Dianne Wiest, and Jessica Lange.

Are you a big reader? What are some of your favorite books? I am big on reading. It's a great love of mine. Plus it's the most accessible nourishment for my craft when I'm not working. I don't have a favorite book yet. I love Tropic of Cancer; I am obsessed with Henry Miller. His writing affects you physically. My stomach literally moves at the mercy of his words. I love We The Living by Ayn Rand. I'm reading East of Eden and cannot put it down.

What advice would you have for those who are interested in pursuing acting? I am in absolutely no place to give advice. I'm still figuring out what shape acting has in my life. I think that what works for someone else does not have to work for me and that's okay. There's a place for me and I'm at peace with that. I never forget this is an industry either. Television and film have the potential to make a great deal of money and there's nothing wrong with wanting to make money. That impulse isn't unique to Hollywood. It's not personal, it's business, and it being a business doesn't take the heart out of making a movie or the people making them.

Keep an eye out for her newest film, Public Relations.

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