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Annette Bening


Annette Bening has received three Oscar® nominations to date, for "Being Julia" and "American Beauty" (Best Actress) and "The Grifters" (Best Supporting Actress). She won a Golden Globe® for "Being Julia," and was nominated three other times.



Annette Bening.
HBO: When you read Phyllis Nagy's script, did you know immediately that you wanted to play Mrs. Harris, and why?

Annette Bening: I thought that Phyllis' script was completely original. I had remembered the case from the eighties when it was a big scandal, but I didn't follow it that closely. So when I looked at the script I just thought it was a completely original way of approaching the story, and that's what got me interested was the way that she put it together, the way she approached it.

There was a certain sense of humor about it. There was a certain style to it as well as a very sound composition going from real life events to the court room to these kind of interviews. And of course the character was so compelling and such a woman of complications and contradictions. And then when I met Phyllis I also thought that she had a very specific take on a subject. From the time that this had happened, people were interested in making a movie of it. But it was tricky to make a movie about Jean Harris because she's not a totally sympathetic figure. Most movies are about people that we want to celebrate, and to a degree Jean is unsympathetic to many people. So I thought that Phyllis had such an original way of approaching it that it was worth doing.

HBO: Tell us about Mrs. Harris.


Annette Bening: Jean Harris is a woman of enormous intelligence, very well educated. And she is a woman, like most of the characters that interest me, of enormous complexity and has lots of contradictions inside her. And because this is a real person, it's fascinating for us to look at someone who like us has passions, has fallen in love with someone and, in this case, went over a line that most of us thankfully don't cross. And I think for her it was of course devastating. You know she claimed that she did not murder him. She claimed that it was an accident and that was what the whole trial was about. She was convicted of murder, but she said that it was her intention to go and actually kill herself and that somehow in this struggle they went through together, she ended up shooting him accidentally.

But she was convicted of murder and served twelve years in prison for it. But she is a woman of enormous passion and I think one of the things that intrigues people about Jean and certainly intrigued me was so many of the things that she did seemed to be contrary to her own interests. Yet she was absolutely committed. For instance in the court room when she was on trial for murdering Herman Tarnower, her attorney desperately wanted to bring up all the supposed terrible things that he had done to her, that many people felt were justifiable to bring up and she wouldn't allow that. She didn't want anything bad said about him. Even when she was on trial for murdering him. So, she is a woman that is an enigma. I could never come to a conclusion about her.

As an actor my job is try to play someone and to see the world through their eyes. It's an enormous honor really to try to do that and to not judge someone and to try as much as you can to see the world how they see it. And that was a certainly a challenge, because Jean's a very complicated woman.

HBO: How did you deal with filming out of sequence often times?

Annette Bening: I guess shooting a movie out of sequence is something that I now take for granted. I know when I first started doing movies, I didn't understand that at all and I thought, how is this possible. Especially having come from doing plays where you're going from the beginning of the play to the end of the play every time you step into it. So in preparing for a film, that's certainly one of the things that I look at very carefully as I'm trying to get myself psychologically ready. Emotionally--it's hard to talk about playing emotion without sounding self indulgent as an actor. So I try to avoid it.


But Jean was sad, is a sad person in many ways. She was suicidal. That's why the whole episode happened. That made her a national figure. So that is there. I wish I could play someone and not feel any - of it myself. But I haven't quite figured out how to do that. [LAUGHS] But it is the job to be able to immerse one's self and also at the same time to be able at the end of the day to take the make up off and go home and carry on. The real essence of the job is to not only approach someone from a kind of intellectual standpoint, an analytic standpoint but also from a purely emotional point-of-view. An intuitive point- of-view.

There was so much material to look at with Jean Harris that I had a lot of time to research her because there were two major books written about Jean. Both very different points of view, written by very smart female journalists. So that was an enormous leg up right there. Jean is not a people pleaser, I think it's fair to say. She's someone who is not out to win people's approval and so she there are a lot of people that didn't like her. She was head mistress of a very prominent girls' school. There were a lot of people at the school who were after her. Because she had been unstable.

HBO: Was she a doormat? What made her the way she was?

Annette Bening: I wish I understood what made Jean Harris the way she was. I'm not sure I know. I think that it's a combination of her generation. Jean is still alive and she's in her eighties and she was a woman of that era, from the Middle West who was also went to Smith College and majored in economics. I would say that that would be extremely rare in her crowd of people that she knew. And the neighborhood she was in and the town that she was in, that was very rare for a woman to be that highly educated. So I think she always approached life in a very individualistic way.

I don't think she was somebody who followed the crowd. And as much as that is a blessing in life, it's also a challenge, it gives one a certain deficit I think in approaching social situations and approaching marriage and in approaching career. I mean that was really a time when women didn't have careers outside the home unless they didn't have children. And she was someone, she had two sons. And so she in a way was kind of a groundbreaker. But yet during the time of the trial the feminist movement wanted to make her a champion, and she didn't want that. She didn't identify herself that way. She didn't seem to identify herself in the way in which we might expect her to. I don't know that I can explain her sense of self. That's probably the key to Jean is the mystery of her sense of self.

HBO: What kind of man was Herman Tarnower?

Annette Bening: He was a ladies man. He never got married and proposed to a number of different women and then ended up being unable to follow through as happens with Jean in the story. They meet, they fell in love; he proposes to her and then ends up backing out and really feeling he can't stay with that commitment which broke her heart. But then she stayed with him and he went on to have other relationships. She always claimed that that was the deal and that she understood that and that she was fine with it.

And that of course is one of the things about Jean that always kind of either enraged people or fascinated people or puzzled people, was that she seemed very upset by it. But always claimed that she wasn't. They traveled together. He was an avid traveler before they were together, and when they were together they went around the world. They went to interesting places. I mean they were in Afghanistan in the late seventies. They traveled to hard places and fascinating places. But he was known as a ladies man, and being a very charming guy.


HBO: Sir Ben--what did he bring to the role of Herman Tarnower?

Annette Bening: Well I think whenever Ben approaches a part he has this incredible combination of intelligence and just an intuitive response. So he doesn't over think things and I know him very well. I've done other movies with him. And I felt completely at home with him. Which I think is a good thing in this case. I think Ben never judges a character, he just plays him. He played him how he thought, how he felt he was.

HBO: Jean Harris and Herman Tarnhower -- were they in love? Was it obsession? How would you describe the relationship?

Annette Bening: Well they were certainly in love. There's no question that there was a mutual connection between these two people. And she was a woman in her forties and she had two teenage sons. She was divorced. So meeting Herman Tarnhower was a real shock. And she just fell head over heels for him, and I think to this day still loves him.

HBO: Why is the story still relevant today? After twenty some years?

Annette Bening: Well I think that the story is relevant today if we've made a good movie and if it works. It's relevant because they're human and they're like all the rest of us, Jean and Herman Tarnower. They fell in love. They were having enormous difficulty. That she became a scandal that was on the front page of all the newspapers and that people wrote books about her. She just couldn't believe it was happening. And there's still I think a sense of disbelief that the whole thing became what it became in her life. She was a quiet woman. She was not a woman who sought attention.

HBO: Do you think this movie will resonate more with men or women or do you think it will resonate with both men and women?

Annette Bening: I hope that the movie resonates with men and women. If it's a good movie, people will like it. I want people to be interested in it. It's a disturbing story. It's a disturbing situation. So this isn't something that you go into you know wanting to just entertain people. It's something that hopefully people will relate to in some way. Because they've fallen in love or they've done dumb things or they've stayed with someone when they didn't quite understand why they were staying with someone. It is a case where truth is stranger than fiction. And the lives that these people ended up living, I mean they were just like you and me. People living private lives. Although Herman Tarnower had become a celebrity, he was a well known man the time that the shooting happened. So that's part of why it became such a huge scandal.

HBO: Was it obsession, was it love, was it jealousy? Was she a stronger or a weaker woman for having loved him do you think?

Annette Bening: That's a great question. I guess Jean would say that she - I don't know how she would answer it. In looking back at the story one can't help but feel this compassion for her and you just want to say look if someone's treating you in this way it's not good for you and you should protect yourself. But she didn't see it that way. She loved him. She wanted him in her life.


Annette Bening
Sir Ben Kingsley
Phyllis Nagy

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