|
Film > Neil LaBute | Kerry Washington > Lakeview Terrace
(Michael Allen Jones/Sacramento Bee/MCT) ‘Lakeview Terrace’ actress Kerry Washington flies under the radar[22 September 2008] By Carla MeyerMcClatchy Newspapers (MCT) SAN FRANCISCO - Kerry Washington might be the most famous actress whose name you don’t know. She played the wife of Forest Whitaker’s Idi Amin in “The Last King of Scotland” and Jamie Foxx’s Ray Charles in “Ray.” For those movie-goers who prefer popcorn to prestige, she also played blind artist Alicia Masters in the “Fantastic Four” films. Yet Washington, despite being one of the most stunning and talented young women in Hollywood - and a cosmetics spokeswoman to boot - lacks the name recognition of less-accomplished peers. That’s partly because she inhabits characters so fully - and partly because she’s more apt to appear at a Barack Obama rally or on “Politically Incorrect” than at a paparazzi photo op. The daughter of a real estate broker and a college professor, Washington grew up in the Bronx and attended Manhattan’s elite Spence School before moving on to George Washington University in Washington, D.C. She broke through in the film world in 2001 with memorable roles as teenage characters in the gritty “Our Song” and the glossy “Save the Last Dance.” She has alternated between Hollywood and the independent world ever since, with the two schools occasionally intersecting, as they do in Neil LaBute’s “Lakeview Terrace,” which weaves in commentary on race relations within a Hollywood thriller framework. In “Lakeview Terrace,” which opened Friday, Washington and Patrick Wilson (“Little Children”) play a couple from Berkeley who, upon moving to the Southern California suburbs, promptly are terrorized by their next-door neighbor (Samuel L. Jackson), a conservative LAPD police officer who apparently disapproves of interracial marriage. (The real reasons are more complex.) Washington, 31, who was once engaged to actor David Moscow, is single again and “dating,” she said during an interview at a San Francisco hotel. An active supporter of the Obama campaign and a board member of Hollywood’s Creative Coalition, Washington is friendly, quick to laugh, and forthright and thoughtful on matters personal, cultural and political. What attracted you to the role in “Lakeview Terrace”? The other thing that really struck me when I read the script was this idea of the abuse of power. I just think it’s just so relevant that the people who are supposed to protect and serve us are actually the people who are causing us the most anxiety and pain. I have a girlfriend who grew up in Vermont, and we used to laugh about the fact that when she was a kid and saw a police officer, it was an immediate sense of release and comfort. For me, growing up in the Bronx, you saw a cop, and it was like, “Uh oh.” It could go one of two ways, and you never quite knew how it was going to go. ... That idea that the people you are supposed to trust might not always be that. ... I think it’s really relevant on a national scale. We have this president right now who we - I didn’t personally, but we as a country - entrusted with the responsibility as our commander-in-chief, and we wound up in a war for no good reason. ... I just think there’s been a gross misuse of power in that office. That issue for me is really fascinating and relevant. What about assumptions made by characters in the film that seem solely based on race? Could you relate to the script in terms of your own romantic relationships? Have you ever received unwelcome commentary or reactions? You seem to work almost constantly. Have there been occasions when doors in Hollywood were closed to you, as an African-American woman? I have been able to play Ray Charles’ wife and Kay Amin, things that are unique to the experience of people who look like me. So that’s a gift as well. I feel like I have come along, but there is a lot of work to do. ... But I’m not going to point the finger at Hollywood and say, “Look at how horrible it is.” I think Hollywood is a microcosm of the United States. We don’t have a sense of equity in our nation. ... What I face as an actress is not that different from what my mother faced as a professor trying to get tenure, and being a black woman. It seems as if you tend to vanish into the roles you play, and that you don’t have a screen “persona” you carry from role to role. Do you get recognized much? Because you’re an actress as opposed to a celebrity ... I now have this kind of “pretty face” identity which is so weird to me, because I have never thought of myself in those terms. Why did you decide to become a spokeswoman? But I remember being a young girl and seeing Vanessa Williams in a beauty campaign - she was the first black woman I had noticed, because I was just starting to look at magazines - and I remember that feeling of, “Oh, somebody thinks she is pretty enough to sell things to everybody. She is not just pretty to one person, she is being accepted by the world as a beautiful person.” If just my presence in the campaign can help any young woman who feels outside of the norm of traditional beauty - whether she has freckles, or curly red hair, or is Asian, or Middle Eastern, or biracial - then I want to be a part of it. Related Articles
Lakeview TerraceBy Jesse Hassenger04.Feb.09 The movie doesn't stay fixed on its well-drawn sociological cul-de-sac; the score becomes ominous.
Lakeview TerraceBy Cynthia Fuchs19.Sep.08 Lisa (Kerry Washington) is Lakeview Terrace's most dislocated figure, caught between an overbearing father and a frenzied husband. |
|
Comments