- HFPA
FROM THE ARCHIVES: MERYL STREEP THOUGHT ACTING WAS SILLY
Meryl Streep
by Jack Tewksbury For forty years the HFPA has recorded interviews with famous and celebrated actors, actresses and filmmakers. The world’s largest collection of its kind — over 10,000 interviews — is now in the Academy of Motion Pictures Arts & Sciences Library. The audios are fascinating. Below is an excerpt, with eight-time Golden Globe winner Meryl Streep recalling how the acting craft called on to her.
“I spent a long time thinking acting wasn’t worthwhile, that it was frivolous and not worth anything to the world at large. When I went to drama school I thought it was silly — speaking someone else’s words, imitating behavior, feeling other’s emotions. I’m an intelligent parrot, that’s what I am. It was very easy to dismiss this great art form. I don’t feel this way anymore. We are defined and remembered, as a civilization, by the arts. I was once invited to a dinner on the arts in Washington D.C., and Nixon’s chief of staff, Alexander Haig–an unlikely choice for a speaker–got up and said, “Nobody remembers the armies that anybody had raised or the bridges or railways they built. Times are remembered for their artists.” I believe that, too. I have been accused of being a technical actress. I won’t denigrate my training but, truthfully, I am not ever aware of any method. I do a lot of research if the part calls for it. If the part doesn’t, I don’t do a thing, just show up. So much of acting has to do with listening. I am a reactive actress. I don’t know what I’m going to do until I see who’s coming in the door. When I was a young actress, I worked with Irene Worth, and I asked her, “How do you get that emotion to come out so freely?” And she answered, “How do you stop it?” It was a complete revelation. What she did was lay herself open to the complete events of her imagination. It’s just a matter of thinking, of really believing you are that character. And in a way, you can’t stop that thing from happening.”