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Tina Fey takes on film world
Christine Kearney
NEW YORK—She is known as the political and media-savvy comic from
“Saturday Night Live,” the sketch comedy show that helped her launch her
own award-winning “30 Rock.” Now Tina Fey hopes to parlay that
television success to the international big screen in her first major
film role in “Baby Mama,” a humorous look at a single woman who pays a
surrogate mother to give birth to her baby. It opens Manhattan’s Tribeca
Film Festival on Wednesday in its world premiere.
Fey, 37, has become a female comic sensation after winning Emmy and
Golden Globe awards. She became the first female head writer on
“Saturday Night Live,” wrote the screenplay and co-starred in the 2004
hit movie “Mean Girls,” and is credited as creator, star and executive
producer of “30 Rock.” But she said she is not banking on the same buzz
for her film, nor does she know whether her current success will last.
“Things are going well right now, but I am pragmatic and I am always
like, ‘Now I need to be ready for a long silence,”’ she told Reuters in
a recent interview. “The hard work part will hopefully continue. You
can’t be the new kid on the block forever.” The former self-confessed
high school “nerd” who grew up watching entertainers like Mary Tyler
Moore and Benny Hill said she was careful to not let popularity affect
her ego.
“You would be foolish to think, ‘Oh everyone has really discovered that
I am truly, truly wonderful,”’ said Fey, who honed her comic skills in
the early 1990s at Chicago’s famed improvisational comedy troupe The
Second City. “You can enjoy it without getting too high on your own
supply, as they say.”
FEMALE FINESSE
“Baby Mama” also stars Fey’s former “Saturday Night Live” castmate Amy
Poehler. It was directed and written by another of the show’s writers,
Michael McCullers. Fey, who is married with a 2-year-old daughter, said
it was natural to work with her “old friends” and wasn’t worried about
being criticized for making a commercial, mainstream film.
“It’s OK to make something people like. It is not entirely selling out,”
she said. Her sitcom “30 Rock,” which co-stars Alec Baldwin, is loosely
based on her experiences at “Saturday Night Live” and her role as a
conscientious television show producer is close to her real self. “I am
a lot like my character; I love rules. I guess I am the opposite to
other comedians in that way,” she said. With her trademark black-rimmed
glasses, she wins praise for her ability to create complex and farcical
female characters without degrading them. She said she considers herself
a feminist. |