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Keep Your Fingers Crossed: Uma Thurman Doesn't Rule Out Going Gay

by Brandon Judell


Check It Out:

  • "The Golden Bowl"
  • "Henry and June"
  • "Even Cowgirls Get the Blues"
  • Henry James' "The Golden Bowl"

    Also on PopcornQ:

  • More Interviews



  • Whoever said you can't turn a gay man straight has never had his left hand grasped by Uma Thurman. I've already started watching football.

    The stunning Ms. Thurman, wife of Ethan Hawke and mother of Maya Ray Thurman-Hawke, showed up at the Essex House in Manhattan this week to promote her part in James Ivory's adaptation of Henry James' "The Golden Bowl." (Gay director! Gay author! Unreadable book!) She was attired in Jean-Paul Gaultier leather -- as we all should be.

    In this exquisite-looking costume drama, Uma stars as the very unhappy Charlotte Stant. Impoverished, she is forced to marry a school friend's billionaire father so she can commit adultery with her pal's spouse, who happens to be an Italian prince. Can you blame her?

    PlanetOut: Could you get through the book?

    UT: Never completely. I'd skim: Charlotte ... Charlotte ... Charlotte ... Charlotte. Oh, here. Okay, Charlotte ... Charlotte ... Charlotte. My little joke is that the movie is for all those who began "The Golden Bowl" and would like to know how it ends.

    PlanetOut: How did you grasp this lovesick damsel's character?

    UT: You know, I suddenly realized Charlotte's behavior is a total mirror reflection of Scarlett O'Hara's. Actually the book is very similar to "Gone With the Wind" in its Rhett Butler/Scarlett kind of dynamic. And when I figured that out, I then understood everything the character did. It's that love excuse, as I like to think of it. It's that thing of a woman's simple inability to believe that she's given herself to a man who didn't love her. It's that self-delusion, that one key misrepresentation of the truth to herself, that allows her to fall further and further away from any type of moral center or any type of sense of reality, really.

    PlanetOut: According to my boss, who's sort of an expert on the matter, more lesbians dream about you than Anne Heche. What do you feel about your gigantic lesbian following?

    UT: [Smiles.] It's nice work if you can get it. I'm thrilled. I don't know what to say. I'm very happy. It's a door that I haven't yet opened in life. But you know, if my marriage doesn't work out, I just don't know. But it makes me very happy.

    I've played a lot of characters who are sort of sexually ambiguous, either lesbian or bisexual. I've played two, in "Even Cowgirls Get the Blues" and "Henry and June." In "Cowgirls," I was omnisexual, and in "Henry and June," I was sort of omnisexual, too. So I think that may be part of the reason. Also, I don't have any discrimination. I don't have any problem embodying that. ...

    PlanetOut: But by taking on those roles, parts actresses might have rejected 10 or 20 years ago, you are making it easier for young lesbians to come out. Do you understand that what you are doing has political significance at times?

    UT: Yeah. Well, you do when you go to do something, and people say to you, 'You shouldn't do that.' And you go, 'Really? Why not? ... Oh, that's a good reason. That's exactly why I will do it. Thank you so much for cementing my decision.'

    So these things are very obvious. There are many actors who wouldn't play a homosexual part, and there are many actresses who wouldn't want to play a lesbian part. I needn't say any more.

    PlanetOut: Has it gotten to the point now that people who advise you just figure, "That's Uma. Just let her do what she wants"? They've given up resistance?

    UT: No, I'm very persuadable. I get hustled all the time. I'm open to suggestions. I always like to poll everybody. I think people kind of understand my taste. I've been working with the same people for like 10 years, and they're good people. I love them. It's always an exploration.

    People usually will be able to guess. If they're presenting me with something that either I haven't done before or if it totally opposes the last thing I did, they're going to have a really keen audience in me because I'm such a contrarian.



     
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