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Huffman hits the road in Transamerica
From David Germain
LOS
ANGELES—Felicity Huffman wasn’t supposed to win the Emmy over her more
glamorous and talked-about “Desperate Housewives” co-stars. But she did.
Now, she’s an Academy Award favourite for her performance in
“Transamerica” - in which she plays a man prepping for sex-change
surgery.
Not bad for an actress who was thinking a few years ago that maybe she
wasn’t supposed to have a Hollywood career, after all. Through the few
ups and many downs in her career, Huffman often thought about quitting,
pulling into her driveway and crying with her head on the steering wheel
after bad days and failed auditions.
Huffman managed to fleetingly catch the eye of audiences with bit parts
“The Spanish Prisoner” and “Magnolia,” and she endeared herself to a
cult of fans who caught her as the slightly flighty producer on the
acclaimed but short-lived TV series “Sports Night.” To those who
wondered why Huffman did not steadily rise to bigger and better parts,
the answer is easy.
“No one offered them to me,” Huffman, 43, told The Associated Press over
a salad at a cafe near the home she and her husband, actor William H.
Macy, share with their two daughters in Los Angeles’ San Fernando
Valley.
“I’d get three lines here, four days in a movie there. When you’d drive
on to the set, you don’t know where you’re going, there’s no chair for
you. They’re going, `Who are you again?’ This was the first time that
I’d been considered for a major part, much less a lead.”
Huffman’s two breakthroughs came almost simultaneously. After
reluctantly meeting with ABC about yet another TV project she figured
would go nowhere, she was cast as the overwhelmed homemaker Lynette in
“Desperate Housewives.”
As she was doing an early cast reading of the show’s pilot script,
Huffman got a call from her agent that she had gotten the part of Bree
in “Transamerica,” playing a transsexual whose final surgery to become a
woman hits a snag after she learns of a teenage son, a cynical street
hustler (Kevin Zegers), she never knew she fathered. The character, who
began life as a male named Stanley, is a definite “she” to Huffman,
though Bree still has the manly plumbing.
“It’s an interesting question, where does gender start?” Huffman mused.
“Always before, we’ve gone, `If you have a penis, you’re a man. If you
have a vagina, you’re a woman.’ It’s what they tell you in nursery
school and kindergarten. Now there’s a whole other level brought into
it.”
“Transamerica” writer-director Duncan Tucker had first seen Huffman on
stage in David Mamet’s off-Broadway production “Cryptogram.” Later
catching Huffman in bit movie roles or guest spots on “Frasier,” Tucker
found himself wondering:
“Why is this woman not a star, like Frances McDormand, or the
girl-next-door Meryl Streep?
“She reminds me of actresses like Rosalind Russell or Carole Lombard,
those kind of good sports you could imagine hanging out with and having
a beer. Really smart and fast-talking. I just had this gut instinct that
she was the kind of transformative actress who would totally disappear
inside the skin of somebody created from scratch. She wouldn’t become
Felicity Huffman playing Felicity Huffman as a transsexual but a
completely new human being.”
Huffman came up with Bree’s look and deportment mostly on her own - hair
and makeup stiffly applied by a hand not yet skilled in such feminine
trappings, body language ungainly as she grows accustomed to changes in
her body. The actress worked with a vocal coach to develop Bree’s deep,
throaty voice, which took Huffman an hour to slip into each morning and
which she maintained throughout the day, finding that she would lose the
thread if she slipped into her own voice between takes.
Bree’s voice so unnerved Macy, who stayed at home with their children,
that he finally told her only to call before work in the morning or
after shooting at night, when she was back in her own persona.
The youngest of eight children, with six sisters and one brother,
Huffman settled on acting by age 10, after her mother sent her off to a
summer theatre camp. After initial stage success in New York, Huffman
got by in Hollywood on parts in such movies as “Hackers” and the odd TV
role until “Desperate Housewives” made her a star.
Though critics say “Desperate Housewives” is in a sophomore slump,
Huffman and co-stars Teri Hatcher, Marcia Cross and Eva Longoria grabbed
four of the five Golden Globe nominations for best actress in a TV
comedy or musical, and the show was nominated for best series. (Huffman
also earned a Globe nomination for best actress in a dramatic film for
“Transamerica.”) |