+ Interview with Anjelica Huston
director of Agnes Browne
It's Not Unusual
Back in 1990, some years after Prizzi's Honor won Anjelica
Huston all kinds of accolades and publicity, I saw her for a
minute, in person. I was standing on line at an American Express
office in Cannes, during the Film Festival for which she was
serving as an official jury member. She came in behind me, and
stood on line like every other person there, chatting with a
companion about some movie they'd just seen that afternoon. She
was tall and striking, dressed in a stylishly unflashy black
jacket and jeans: several of us turned to look at Huston, some
discreetly, some not so, but she didn't seemed to notice either
way. For all her presence and it was considerable Huston was
completely regular, by which I mean, she never called attention
to herself, stepped ahead in the line, or asked for special
service.
This two-minute memory has stayed with me for a long time, in
part because Huston was so plainly different from most of the
movie stars in town, so busy schmoozing and limousining and
performing for the omnipresent cameras every second of every day.
She seemed substantial, serene, and self-assured.
You see this self-assurance in her movies. Whether playing the
ghoulishly romantic Morticia Addams, the desperately unhappy
Gretta Conroy (heroine of The Dead), or Vincent Gallo's Buffalo
Bills-obsessed mother in Buffalo 66, Huston conveys a kind of
dignity that eludes most movie stars. In her latest film, Agnes Browne, which she has also directed, Huston plays the title
character, a mother of seven in Dublin 1967. Written by John
Goldsmith and Brendan O'Carroll, and based on O'Carroll's best
selling novel, the movie is an ode to working-class stoicism and
female endurance. Unlike Angela's Ashes, which covers similar
narrative ground (poor Irish widow overcomes unbelievable odds to
raise her kids), Huston's film is unabashedly corny, embracing
all that mushy stuff that cool, cutting edge movies can't be
bothered with.
Agnes Browne opens as she and her best friend Marion (Marion
O'Dwyer) try to file for Agnes's widow's pension just hours after
her husband's death. While the clerk at the pension office is
startled and a bit offended by Agnes's apparent haste, it soon
becomes clear that Agnes is just being as painfully practical as
she needs to be: she has to pay for the dead man's funeral, feed
the kids, and pay for her daughter's (Roxanna Williams)
communion, costs which the meager proceeds from her fruit-and-vegetable
stand won't begin cover. When she has to borrow cash
from a local loanshark, Mr. Billy (Ray Winstone), Agnes refuses
to be tractable or properly deferential. Her fellow vendors
applaud her pluck, but of course, Mr. Billy then has it in for
her (since you can't have rabble-rousers acting up in front of an
audience).
Such films the difficult life of a single mother, set during
historical periods or not are becoming a bit of a subgenre,
which means that there are certain predictable plot and character
points to be touched. Here, Agnes works hard to pay back the
loan, while running into family problems that threaten to derail
her efforts and enhance her admirability quotient. Agnes must
deal with her fatherless pre-teen sons (sober Mark [Niall O'Shea]
has hairs growing on his "willy"; red-headed firebrand Frankie
[Ciaran Owens] is smoking cigarettes and gambling on street
corners instead of going to school), as well as the younger kids,
who, for all their fine patience and faith in their mammy, are
increasingly needing attention, for which she has precious little
energy at the end of her long days.
Though she steals a few moments to go drinking with Marion and
have one date with a solicitous French baker named Pierre (Arno
Chevrier), the bulk of her time is spent dealing with crises,
full blown and minor. By the time Marion is diagnosed with breast
cancer, you have to wonder what else might go wrong. Agnes has a
good sense of her life's limitations: she loves her kids and her
most fervent and immediate dream is to see Tom Jones in concert,
who happens to be coming to town for one night only. (Given that
he's listed in the film's credits, you might imagine the broad
outlines of how this part of the plot turns out.)
The best parts of the film have little to do with plot: they are
all about Agnes and Marion. You see them smoking cigarette after
cigarette (though I suppose a link might be found here to
Marion's illness...); laughing uncontrollably when they find that
their stick-up-his-ass-looking driving instructor is named not
Dick as they suppose, but... O'Toole; or discuss the possibility
that one might actually have an "organism" during sex with a
husband. The friends share everything, from their joy and
frustration to their stubbornness and saintliness. Everyone
around them suitors, gangsters, kids, dead husbands is just
window dressing, a way to develop the women's relationship, which
is defined by their giddy joking as by Agnes's penury or Marion's
cancer.
And so, the most important question raised by Agnes Browne
might be, just how does a film like this what you might call
literate melodrama get made at a time when moveable product is
all the rage? It's clear that the film has a certain "adult"
aspect, meaning that viewers, as well as distributors and
advertisers, might appreciate that this is not a film made with
fast-consuming teenagers in mind. At the same time, it also makes
assumptions about what "women" (as in, those who go to see
"women's pictures," to use that quaint mid-century term) want to
see, much as the Lifetime Channel might make assumptions: Women
want to see misery and survival? Women want to see triumph over
adversity? Women want to see smart women and foolish men? Women
want to see children appreciate their mothers? Women want to see
Prince Charmings, even if they are self-consciously silly as
hell?
Despite and because of its reductive fairy-tale-ish finale,
Agnes Browne is slightly less didactic than other recent single
mom pictures (for high-profile instances, Tumbleweeds,
Anywhere But Here, Anna and the King, in which strong-willed
women learn to be humble from their kids or kid-like companions).
Agnes learns humility from her best friend, or rather, they learn
together. Moreover, the sheer excessiveness of Agnes Meeting Tom
Jones is so ridiculous that it both undermines and underlines the
previous hardships, and gives the lie to melodramatic conventions
per se, those society-sustaining conventions which suggest that
women need men, institution-sanctioned monogamy, or community
approbation to be happy. Agnes Browne does suggest these
things, but in a way that makes them secondary to what makes
Agnes admirable or, as played by Huston, self-assured.