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Claire Danes goes retail with ‘Shopgirl’
David germain
TORONTO—What
if Angela Chase, the fragile teen Claire Danes played on the short-lived
TV drama “My So-Called Life,” had gone on to take a few more hard
romantic knocks into her mid-20s? What if she found herself on her own,
a continent removed from her parents, sharing only a superficial family
relationship with her folks?
And what if Angela, who always seemed like a good candidate for Prozac,
found herself diagnosed as clinically depressed and dependent on
antidepressants to keep the blues at bay? She might resemble Mirabelle,
the sad-eyed wallflower Danes plays in “Shopgirl,” a romantic comic
drama co-starring Steve Martin and adapted from his best-selling
novella.
Danes acknowledges the similarities between her first big role and her
latest. “I think they’re both inward-looking. That’s the most obvious
parallel between the two,” Danes said in an interview at September’s
Toronto International Film Festival, where “Shopgirl” premiered.
“Thoughtful and kind of raw, emotionally. The feelings are very close to
the skin.
“That’s pretty easy for me to play, I guess,” the 26-year-old Danes
added with a long laugh. Danes herself comes across as anything but a
sombre, brooding wallflower like Angela or Mirabelle. Gabby, lively,
even a bit goofy, Danes chatters earnestly about relationships, her
forays into action films and her first nude scene.
In “Shopgirl,” Danes’ Mirabelle lives in the slow lane as a sales clerk
at the tranquil glove counter at Saks in Beverly Hills. Longing for
love, Mirabelle finds herself pursued by a chivalrous older man (Martin)
and an awkward young slacker (Jason Schwartzman).
Danes took her clothes off for Mirabelle’s first love scene with
Martin’s character, a moment that left the actress uneasy. A friend told
her, “It’s good you’re doing it at 25. When you’re 80, you’ll look back
on this and think, I was pretty firm, so there’s that,” Danes said.
“Firm at 25. That’s a feat.
“It was uncomfortable, I have to say, but I did think that it was
relevant and useful,” Danes said. “Also, it’s erotic. There’s no reason
to pussyfoot around that. I thought it was vital, so I stripped.” Danes
felt similarly anxious with her romantic scenes in general, and not only
because the 60-year-old Martin is more than twice her age.
“It’s just as weird doing it with Steve as it is doing it with somebody
my own age,” Danes said. “You’re not supposed to be kissing somebody
who’s not your boyfriend. You’re just not. I don’t know when I’ll become
more comfortable with it. You have to depersonalize it.”
Martin, who wrote the screenplay and was a producer on “Shopgirl,” had
some difficulty articulating the ethereal quality Danes possesses that
he wanted for Mirabelle. “It’s hard to find the right expression for
this, but her beauty that she keeps within, you know?” Martin said. “The
character of Mirabelle really requires stillness and no artifice, and
that’s what she has.”
“Shopgirl” director Anand Tucker recalled going to Sunday tea with
Martin and Danes as they were casting the film. Almost instantly, he and
Martin shared a glance and knew Danes was right for the part. “She has
this incredible capacity to be beautiful and plain. She allows you to
see right into her in some extraordinary way. She’s not frightened to be
vulnerable,” Tucker said.
“This film really happens on her face. She’s in 90 percent of the movie,
and a lot of the time, she doesn’t say anything. You’re just watching
her face. She has that ability that allows you to put yourself into her.
That’s a very rare quality. That’s what great movie stars have. That’s
what Ingrid Bergman had.”
Danes grew up in an artsy home in Manhattan’s SoHo district and began
studying acting in grade school. In her early teens, she landed the lead
in “My So-Called Life,” and though the show lasted only one season, it
was a critical darling. |