| Andrew
Duncan, Radio
Times, 1994 |
Guilt,
she says. That's what life is all about.
Particularly as she is
a very undisciplined human being. Jewish, too. And a woman.
And unmarried. And middle-aged. "You've got to have guilt, I
suppose. Men don't. though, do they?" |
|
Zoe
Wanamaker smiles, curls her feet under her in a comfortable
armchair and, before we discuss these weighty matters, rolls
herself an ounce of Samson tobacco in liquorice paper, lights up
and inhales. "At least I don't feel guilty about smoking.
I'm not going to do anything about it, although I think I
should."
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|
There
are many words to describe her, but three will do to start-
refreshing, straightforward, honest. Ask any question, however
dumb or intrusive, and you will not be fobbed off with muttered
clichés. She will talk about marriage, children, life, death
and tell you, "I feel great anger and frustration at how
we're screwing up our world."
|
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Suggest
that actors should be wary of discussing political matter and
she lets fly - in a hesitant, rather than a strident way - with a
few mild obscenities, adding sparkily, "Of course we have a
bloody right to be involved. We vote, live in this country, pay
taxes. If dustmen have a voice, why not actors? It's this
old-fashioned British thing of not treating us with respect, as
they do in Europe. Our arts should be cared for, nurtured and
loved by everyone - not degraded, diminished and demoralised by
that nonsense."
|
This
week she is seen in a new guise, reporting from Addis Ababa,
capital of Ethiopia, about work supported by Comic Relief.
"Very exciting and scary", she says, admitting she had
initial doubts about her role. "I'm not comfortable being a
'front' person, a sort of Joanna Lumley. She does it so well and
enjoys it, but my job is to act. I don't have the confidence to
be a personality. I get scared quite a bit in my life, but I
find when I'm apprehensive, I usually end up doing whatever it
is." |
In
December 1992, she spent five days in the kebelles
(slums) of Addis Ababa, filming the work of Jamber Tesfaha, a
woman who is organising self-help for 30,000 people. "Millions live in shacks made out of paper, dustbin lids,
plastic, anything they can get their hands on. They have no
work, the crime rate is enormous, disease is huge, dead dogs lie
in ditches, and sanitation is appalling. Half the population is
made up of kids under 15, and although it's hot, their hands are
freezing and their noses running because of illnesses. You feel
so helpless. Yet in the middle of it all is this extraordinary
woman with incredible commitment and energy. It's awesome to
know there are thousands like her vehemently committed to
helping others. That's what I found most moving." |
"Normally
I'd only see these things in the telly, or read about them in
the newspapers, and because you're not really there it doesn't
touch you. We nice, cosy, middle class people are quite safe.
We
know where to put our rubbish, go to the toilet, and are
educated to live with others. There is an understanding
attitude that people are starving on the other side of the world
and will probably die, but what can we do? The world is
overpopulated so who gives a damn? But these people are
suffering through no fault of their own. It's because of global
greed and our thoughtlessness in not realising how we are
changing the world. No one considered, until too late, what
would happen if the rainforests were destroyed. There's a
knock-on effect that will kill us all, and for what? We're all
responsible." |
Tread
carefully here. But sometimes, I suggest, there are rumblings of
intellectual discontent about Comic Relief, a questioning of the
motives of actors, not known for their innate modesty or
altruism. She looks at me beadily. "You mean we're another
bunch of luvvies - I hate that word- thinking, 'Aren't we
marvellous?' Screw people who think like that. It's their
problem. How else are you going to get the money? They've found
a way of doing it that works, so why not use it? If you've got
it, flaunt it." |
The
middle of three daughters of the late American actor and
director Sam Wanamaker, who was blacklisted during the McCarthy
period, Zoe Wanamaker was brought to England by her parents when
she was 3. Her mother, Charlotte, also an actress, gave up work
to raise the family and Zoe says she and her sisters (one a
speech therapist, the other a lawyer) became independent as a
mild reaction to her. "She was part of that generation who
didn't believe in themselves as their own person. She thought
nothing existed except for Dad, really. But she's very
stubborn -
I've inherited that quality - and a strong woman in her own
right. I don't mean to sound gooey, but she's an adorable
person." |
Her
father was a whirlwind of a man with an enormously strong
personality and a passion to rebuild Shakespeare's Globe Theatre
on the south bank of the Thames, a dream that may finally be
fulfilled next year, two years after he died from cancer, aged
74. She is a trustee and on the artistic board - "a gesture
to him I feel I must honour - but the theatre is a monument to
Shakespeare and no one else." |
Her
parents tried to dissuade her from becoming an actress. "They wanted to protect me from the rejection that all
actors suffer. It's particularly hard because you're selling
your personality, the way you look, your whole self. But I was
lucky because I always knew what I wanted to do. It crystallized
for me when I was ten and we spent an we spent an idyllic summer
at Stratford-on-Avon where Daddy was working. I remember the
smells backstage - actors wore greasepaint in those days - and
Stratford itself was such a romantic place then. Now it's like
the rest of England - one huge suburb." |
She
went to drama school, rep, and then the RSC, where she spent 12
years on and off, but mega success came relatively late with Love
Hurts and her part as Tessa Piggott, a career-minded,
feminine foil to Adam Faith's spivvy self-made millionaire Frank
Carver. "Adam
and I were both astounded by its success. It's a shame the
series couldn't continue, but I think it had a natural life -
unless someone thinks of a good idea for another series - and
it's good to quit when you're ahead. It was difficult for the
writers because it's half serious, half comedy, about two
different and strong personalities and based on the idea of
relationships between lovers, parents and children. I think
Americans and Europeans have a better idea of writing that sort
of material. We seem to need 'events', dramatic explosions,
rather than life or gentle things. I loved working with Adam and
care for him very much. He's so quick and multi-layered."
But is he as good an actor as he is a pop singer and financial
adviser? There are those who say no doubt with affection, that
he seemed 'wooden'. "I'm not saying anything," she
laughs. |
Love Hurts brought her fame for
the first time, which she enjoys now, although she found it
unsettling at first to be stared at, "particularly as
people didn't realise why they were staring. It's that quizzical
look that made me so cross. I felt there was something wrong
with me, like I had snot on my nose, or looked like the elephant
man. Now people know who I am and, so long as they're nice, it's
great." |
She is equally pleased with her
late-flowering sexy reputation, and jokes that it means there's
hope for everyone. "It's a great coup, isn't it."
Surprising? "No, of course not. It's absolutely right that
it should happen. Actors are very vain - like most people.
We all
want to be attractive and liked. That's why we all want to be
famous, if only for five minutes. At least, I do. Show me an
actor who says he doesn't want fame and I'll show you a liar.
It
gives you strength and approval and, in this business, the power
to do the sort of things you want." |
She now has another success with
Dead Funny, at London's Vaudeville Theatre, a brilliant comedy
by Terry Johnson in which she plays a doctor's wife in her 40s,
trapped in a marriage without sex or children. "Doing the
same play every night is a very hard discipline. The repetition
is inhuman, silly and you can go a bit loopy sometimes. I gear
my day to the evening performance, and my life stops at for so I
can focus. It's a dangerous work which leads the audience in
many different directions and has a resonance with every woman.
All women have this dilemma: we're in touch with death every
month from puberty until late middle-age. Men aren't.
We're have
the constant worry of that time switch when we will no longer be
able to breed, whereas men are geared to procreate as long as
they want. |
Now 44, she remains single,
although she has had three long-term relationships, the longest
lasting 11 years. "Not getting married is a sign of the
times. The world has changed so much since I was a kid, and
people are more honest. I haven't married because I'm puzzled by
the institution and didn't see the need for it. I wasn't brought
up to believe living together out of wedlock was a sin, and I
didn't want to have children and be a housewife, which is an
occupation in itself. Of course, it makes people more
comfortable to feel you're married. You're less dangerous than
if you're available and still a loose cannon. I haven't ruled
out marriage. But I don't care whether I live with a man or
marry him. It's not an issue, and I've never seen a wedding ring
as kudos." |
She still has an American passport
but feels English after all these years here. So she's really
just one of the unwashed Philistines? "Oh, yes," she
laughs. "I'm one of the barbarians." We should have
more of them. |
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