When you think of Hollywood leading ladies you’ll be hard pressed to find one with a more diverse career than Kathleen Turner. She’s been on the silver screen for more than 30 years, starring in a roster of high-profile films, from “Prizzi’s Honor” to “The Accidental Tourist,” and “Peggy Sue Got Married”, which garnered Turner an Academy Award nomination for Best Actress.

Turner has a real-life role as the National Chair of the Planned Parenthood Federation of America (PPFA) Board of Advocates that will bring her to Naples next week. She’s extremely passionate about the group, and she’s addressing its annual luncheon Jan. 22 to talk about that passion. (For information, see accompanying box.)

Back in California, Turner is on the Showtime series “Californication,” a no-holds-barred “dramedy” about a down-and-out writer played by David Duchovny. Turner plays Sue Collini, a fiery talent agent who has no qualms about speaking her mind about sex, drugs and everything in between.

“I had a ball playing Sue Collini!” Turner says of her role.

And it shows in her performance. It’s the type of role many would shy away from due to the raunchy subject matter, and Turner agrees.

“I had a woman come up to me the other day,” she said, “and tell me, ‘I love what you’re doing on the show!’ and I wanted to blush.”

Sue Collini isn’t Kathleen Turner, she emphasized with a chuckle: “Not my style, baby. I’m an old-fashioned woman.”

Turner hasn’t only played over-the-top types. She recalls the toughest role she ever had to play, that of Mrs. Lisbon for the 1999 drama, “The Virgin Suicides.” In it, she is an overprotective mother to five daughters, one of whom attempts suicide in the beginning of the film.

Turner’s own daughter was roughly the same age of her character’s daughter at the time, which made it more difficult to do her scenes: “It was like a knife in my stomach every day.”

While roles like Sue Collini and Mrs. Lisbon would seem to be high-profile roles any actor would want to sink their teeth into, that’s not what drew Turner to them.

“What appeals to me is contrast,” she says. Turner enjoys having the ability to explore different characters, to question why they say and do the things they do, from the rancorous wife in “War of the Roses,” which won her a Golden Globe nomination, to the voice behind Jessica in “Who Framed Roger Rabbit?”

Turner can soon be seen on the stage in Philadelphia in a one-woman play about feisty newspaper columnist and best-selling author Molly Ivins, entitled “Red Hot Patriot: The Kick-Ass Wit of Molly Ivins.”

Turner knew the late Texas-based political columnist personally

“I’ve never done anyone I actually knew before,” she admits. “I found it extremely hard. But I’ve got more understanding of it now and will be all right.”

Will she return to the new season of “Californication” later this year?

“I’m not sure yet, honestly. I like to see some of the scripts before I greet things,” Turner says.

Turner is serious about all her roles, and that includes her role with Planned Parenthood. She’s been the national chair for the organization since 1995, but considers herself to have been involved with them since she was 19 years old and first visited a Planned Parenthood office herself.

“There is no women’s health care service in this country of the same standards accessible to women without insurance,” she says of Planned Parenthood

Anti-abortion activist has targeted the group, but Turner says that only drives her harder to promote it and to explain what it does: “Planned Parenthood is about planning, not about becoming a parent or being a parent.”

Educating people about sexual reproductive help, and the options they have should they become pregnant, is what Turner says she’s trying to accomplish by working with the group.

Be it on the screen or in real life, Kathleen Turner loves what she does. The secret to maintaining a level head through it all, she says, is to simply have fun: “That’s the point!”

Thanks Naples News.

[Ask] [Bloglines] [del.icio.us] [Digg] [Google] [Mister Wong] [MySpace] [Netvouz] [Newsvine] [OnlyWire] [Propeller] [Shoutwire] [Squidoo] [StumbleUpon] [Technorati] [Twitter] [Windows Live] [Yahoo!]

Kathleen Turner’s is BACK!

To be sure, Kathleen Turner today looks a lot different from the siren who made movie goers sweat in 1981’s “Body Heat.” Stalled for years by rheumatoid arthritis and the alcoholism that ensued, the 55-year-old actress has been to hell and back.

But in Showtime’s raunchy, rowdy, David Duchovny-helmed “Californication,” the girl prove’s she’s still got it — the power to enthrall audiences with her throaty drawl, the ability to make all other characters fade into the background when she steps into a scene.

Of course, it’s hard to focus on anything else when Turner’s Sue Collini, a middle aged Hollywood agency exec. with the mouth of a porn star and the sexual appetite of a college co-ed, sucks the finger of her favorite foot soldier and object of desire, Charlie Runkle (Evan Handler), and shoves it in her skirt with nary an explanation but a breathy groan. What she does say in the series can’t be printed here. Collini is over the top and out of line, and Turner loves it.

“I like doing outrageous things. I seem to be sort of making speciality of it, being this crazy middle aged woman,” she told ABCNews.com. “When I’m doing something, I don’t think about what other people are going to think about it. Just doing it is where I get my kicks. Then of course, to see it with other people, you realize how out there it is.”

The “out there” factor drew Turner to “Californication,” much to the delight of series creator and executive producer Tom Kapinos.

“I’ve grown pretty cynical at this point but when I come up with a character, there’s a prototype in my head, and for Sue Collini, I thought ‘Oh, Kathleen Turner,’” he said. “And when you’re doing TV, you think Kathleen Turner and you end up with someone far down the list. But we called her, and the deal closed within a day. I figured I’d have to call her and plead and promise that she wouldn’t be having sex with animals or something.”

Nope, though maybe it helped his case that “Californication” hasn’t broached bestiality (yet). Turner was hungry for a role with meat, something she said is hard to come by for middle-aged women in Hollywood these days.

‘Californication’ Character Parallels Turner

“If you don’t have stage training, you’re truly limited. They don’t write good roles for women. If you’re not immediately identifiable as the ingénue or sex symbol, they don’t know what to write. Write a character? I mean, a character? Who has thoughts and feelings and opinions? They don’t know how to do it.”

With Sue Collini, Turner’s found a role she can dig into, and a character that mirrors some of her favorite qualities.

“She’s ballsy, which I like. I would give myself credit for that. She’s unapologetic; I’ll go with that one too. She has a good sense of humor, and I like that.”

Turner’s funny as well, with a dry, self-depreciating wit that no doubt evolved as armor necessary to survive in the acting industry for so long.

She blew up with “Body Heat,” which still maintains its status as one of the sexiest movies ever, but after rising to the A-list and starring in a handful of movies, including “Romancing the Stone” with Michael Douglas and Danny DeVito and its sequel, “The Jewel of the Nile,” she was diagnosed with rheumatoid arthritis, and her career screeched to a halt. Told she would end up in a wheelchair, Turner went on an aggressive course of drugs that ravaged her mind and body. The woman who once said “On nights when I feel great about myself, if I walk into a room and a man doesn’t look at me, he’s either dead or gay,” became unrecognizable to her fans. As the disease worsened, she turned to alcohol.

“When you’re in chronic pain, It’s very hard to realize the effect it has on your mind as well,” she said. “It’s a constant depressant. It really mucks up your thinking. If you go to a restaurant, is the bathroom downstairs? Because I can’t go there if it is. So yeah, you try a lot of stuff, in my case, excessive drinking for a while to kill pain. And it does, it does kill pain, but it causes even more.”

Turner’s arthritis went into remission after years of treatment; it took longer to kick the drinking. She acted throughout — notably on Broadway in “Cat on a Hot Tin Roof” and on TV playing Chandler Bing’s gender-bending father on “Friends.” (Her comment on that role: “That was silly wasn’t it? I had never been a woman playing a man playing a woman before. It was amazing!”) But after wrapping filming on “The Graduate” in 2002, she checked into a Pennsylvania rehab center, and kicked the habit for good.

She’s thrilled to be working again in better health, but oh, how things in Hollywood have changed. Megan Fox is hot and all, but they don’t make ‘em like they used to.

“One of the things that’s happened over the last ten years is a kind of mean spiritedness about sex, sex being used as a weapon, instead of a glorious celebration of it,” Turner said. “There’s a mean spiritedness to humor now too. I just don’t think that’s appealing.”

“I think a lot of these young actors and actresses are in a really tough position,” she continued. “I always managed to keep my private life quite private. You never saw pictures of my daughter or my home. I don’t know that they can do that anymore, so they’re constantly on stage, as it were. I think that pressure must be awful. And I think they’re too skinny. I do, I worry. I have a daughter and when she was growing up, I was like ‘You look great, don’t listen to any of this s**t.’”

Asked if she saw a younger version of herself in any of the industry’s rising stars, Turner chortled and said she “would never be so arrogant as to think that. Everyone is themselves, everyone is unique.” She herself intends to keep playing the part of the sensual seductress so long as she’s given a set or stage.

“I’m not ready to say a middle aged woman no longer has sexual drive or appeal. That’s really offensive. We’re damn sexy, man.”

Thanks for the great article ABC.

[Ask] [Bloglines] [del.icio.us] [Digg] [Google] [Mister Wong] [MySpace] [Netvouz] [Newsvine] [OnlyWire] [Propeller] [Shoutwire] [Squidoo] [StumbleUpon] [Technorati] [Twitter] [Windows Live] [Yahoo!]

Early in the first episode of Season 3 of Showtime’s Californication, Kathleen Turner, playing Hollywood agent Sue Collini, sweeps into the office of her newly hired junior agent Charlie Runkle (Evan Handler), says several unprintable things, plants a few images in viewers’ heads that they’d probably rather forget and exits with a crisp, “Collini out!” She’s like a big, feral cat, with a growl that’s every bit as scary as her bite.

“I tend to look for something I haven’t done before,” says the star, who has wowed audiences for more than 25 years on film (Body Heat, Romancing the Stone, Prizzi’s Honor, The War of the Roses) and on stage (Tallulah, The Graduate, Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf?) . “One of the Californication producers kept going by me and whispering, ‘Money, money, money.’ I think he meant that we were going to rake it in on this series partly because of what I was doing. I think it was a compliment.” She laughs her throaty laugh. “But it’s odd, you know, when one can’t be quite sure.”

MORE: What do you like about playing this character?
KATHLEEN TURNER: It’s truly some of the most outrageous stuff I’ve ever done, in terms of the language and some of the sexual references. I thought, well, thank god my daughter is grown up. Every week, we had a table read-through of the next week’s show, right? And half the time I had to ask what they were talking about. I think at first they thought I was joking, but then clearly I wasn’t. I’d say, “I don’t understand, what does that word mean?” And then I think they just started making stuff up to confound me.

What did they say when they approached you about doing the role?
Essentially they called and said, “We’re thinking of it in terms of a nymphomaniacal, sociopathic agent.” I said, “Well, I haven’t done that yet.”

Was there anything they wanted you to do that you balked at?
Yeah, there was one thing that I told Tom Kapinos, the creator, “Look, I can’t do that.” And he said, ”Fine.”

What was it?
I don’t want to talk about it because I really didn’t want to do it.

I understand. Do you have sex scenes?
Yeah, but I probably show the least skin on the show. As I said, “Look, guys, been there, done that, you know? It’s your turn now.”

She reminds me a little of legendary agent Sue Mengers. . . or what I imagine Sue Mengers might have been like.
I always think about that. I actually met Sue Mengers years and years ago. I was staying at the Chateau Marmont; it must have been the first film I was out [in LA] for. And I remember her coming over for coffee and telling me that if I didn’t sign with her, she was going to strip and lie down naked in the middle of Sunset Boulevard. And I thought, this woman is out of her mind. Why would I want someone who is out of their mind [to represent me]? But I certainly have never forgotten that coffee.

But she wasn’t necessarily in your mind when you were playing the character?
No, no, I don’t do imitations.

What else are you working on these days?
I was at Arena Stage in Washington helping with a one-woman show based on Molly Ivins. I knew Molly, and it was very odd for me to play the life of someone I had known. And really moving. It was more difficult than I would have anticipated.

In your memoir, Send Yourself Roses, you talk about how you pursued Edward Albee to let you play Martha in Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf? You really made that happen for yourself.

I did, yeah. He was not interested in doing it again, even though the last time it had been done was ‘76, with Colleen Dewhurst. But he had no feeling that it needed to be done again. So I had to prove to him that it did. I was amazed, frankly, because even though I set out to do it, and waited 30 years to get to do it because I had to get old enough for the darn thing, that when it really came together, there was this moment of it being scary—like, “Wait a minute, do I really have this much control? I don’t think so.” But it was an affirmation that was stunning.

Have you always been that proactive in getting the work you wanted?
One of my great friends still is a guy named Michael Zettler, who wrote the first play I did in New York, off-off-Broadway. Stephen Zuckerman was directing. I’d been in New York for two months and I went down to audition, and Michael says he remembers turning to Stephen when I left and saying, “Well, I think she’s decided to take it.” So perhaps that’s my nature. Anyway, so far, so good.

How is your rheumatoid arthritis these days?
It’s tough. I may have to use the fall for another surgery, a knee replacement. I’ve had seven surgeries in the last 10 years. It’s not that any more damage is happening, because the new drugs are fantastic; it’s the damage that was done before we were able to arrest the disease. I have accepted a Broadway show in the spring, a new play—I can’t say any more about it—so I’m thinking that I may have to get this operation done, because doing eight shows a week for 10 months is no joke.

Well, I know that there are many people who are inspired by the way you’re dealing with the disease.
I just cannot imagine not acting. I really, truly can’t. So whatever it takes to keep going, that’s what I have to do.

Season 3 of Californication debuts September 27 on Showtime.

[Ask] [Bloglines] [del.icio.us] [Digg] [Google] [Mister Wong] [MySpace] [Netvouz] [Newsvine] [OnlyWire] [Propeller] [Shoutwire] [Squidoo] [StumbleUpon] [Technorati] [Twitter] [Windows Live] [Yahoo!]

professional wordpress themes