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http://www.popmatters.com/pm/news/article/56069/fast-chat-with-married-life-star-patricia-clarkson/
PopWire: News, Reviews and CommentaryFast chat with 'Married Life' star Patricia Clarksonby Lewis BealeNewsday (MCT)13 March 2008The next time anyone mentions the alleged lack of roles for actresses of a certain age, say this name like a mantra: Patricia Clarkson. The 48-year-old New Orleans native has been working steadily for 20 years, has never been pinned down as a certain “type” and is busier than ever. Beginning last week with the debut of “Married Life,” in which she stars with Chris Cooper and Pierce Brosnan as a happily married woman whose cheating husband wants to kill her, Clarkson is set to have a year most actors only dream of. Already in the can and ready for release are “Blind Date,” starring Clarkson and Stanley Tucci, about a couple trying to rekindle their relationship; “Vicky Cristina Barcelona,” Woody Allen’s latest; and “Elegy,” from French director Isabel Coixet, co-starring Ben Kingsley and Penelope Cruz. Plus Clarkson is about to start shooting “Shutter Island,” based on the Dennis Lehane novel and directed by Martin Scorsese. Despite her busy schedule, Lewis Beale managed to catch up with Clarkson during some down time in New York.
You fly in the face of the conventional wisdom that there are no great parts for women over 40. How come?
You’ve never married, yet you jumped on this role as a contented married woman in “Married Life.” What attracted you?
A friend of yours once suggested you’re so successful today because you have a lot of integrity, which means you don’t have a lot of stupid roles in your past to live down. True?
You grew up in New Orleans, but graduated from Fordham. What was it like for you to come to New York as a 20-year-old?
Speaking of plays, some people feel the Blanche DuBois you performed in a 2004 production of “A Streetcar Named Desire” at the Kennedy Center is practically the definitive interpretation. Personally, I can’t think of anyone better suited for the role.
Which brings us to New Orleans, your hometown, where the play is set. You returned there just days after Katrina hit to help your family, and have lately been involved in efforts to bring tourism back to the city. What’s your assessment of how things are going there?
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Review: Married LifeCynthia Fuchs06.Mar.08Richard's narration is exceptionally insidious, which makes Married Life at once fascinating and routine.
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