ROBOTS
MISS CONGENIALITY
2: ARMED AND FABULOUS
SANDRA BULLOCK Q & A
“Gracie Hart”
QUESTION:
You guys had so much fun with this film.
SANDRA BULLOCK: We did. We worked our asses off --
we worked really hard, but we had a great time. The minute
we got on set was when we had our fun. The same audience we
made it for the first time is the same audience we made it
for the second time, and sometimes adults have to just remember
who they were when they were younger and let go and have a
good time. I said exactly what I wanted to say.
Q: What did you want to say?
SB: It says it at the end of the film, so
you have to go see it, but what is the thing that happens
to most people when they come into society's limelight? What
happens to people who accomplish something -- whether they
meant to or not -- what does that industry do to people unbeknownst
to them? They get caught up in it and make you doubt who you
were originally and we find ourselves conforming and trying
to highlight our hair, and make this cuter, and build up here.
Then by the end of the trek, you realize the person that started
out is not the person that you wound up being. So there are
a lot of comments about what would have happened to Gracie
if all of a sudden the TV cameras had been filming and what
does the world do with someone like that? Everyone has their
15 minutes and you watch that person's 15 minutes and their
lives go to hell afterwards. Like anyone who wins the lottery,
everything falls to pieces.
Q: Is it comfortable to return to a character that
you've played before?
SB: We never really left it because Marc
Lawrence, who wrote it, and I have been working together for
five years now so we're always talking Gracie and making Gracie-isms,
and then that sort of built into really good ideas. We would
talk about the ideas and what would happen, what is the message
we can build on? It’s strange -- you come back to something
and you wonder, “Now, what would Gracie do in this situation
versus new Gracie versus Sandy?” It's schizophrenic.
Q:
I have a couple of shallow questions.
SB: Oh please – yeah, not that I'm
going to answer them, but you go right a head.
Q: A couple of wardrobe questions.
SB: Thank God -- I love talking clothes.
Q: What's going on with that green sweater?
SB: Ida’s sweater?
Q: It was Ida's sweater at the airport.
SB: Ida Flammenbaum’s sweater. That's Ida's
sweater. If you notice, that's what Ida was wearing when she
went to the old age home.
Q: I was thinking, “Wait a minute she has three
breasts.”
SB: No, those were Ida's breasts. Those were carefully
orchestrated and they built boobs that needed to have swing
value and needed to be able to raise and lower according to
the humor factor-- like when you're in a fight, your breasts
get in the way when you fight. See, men don't have to think
about that. When we women get into fights, we have to think
about how the breasts will get in the way, and that's sort
of what that whole scene was based on.
Q: This was at the airport?
SB: Yes, I’m talking about the fight scene
in the airport.
Q: I thought it was her shoulder pads that fell down.
SB: No, sister. Those are the breasts.
Q:
What was it like to work with Marc Lawrence again?
SB: So many things work. So many things don't, but
that's why we like working together. His wife suggested we
go to therapy, which we're thinking about. (laughter) He also
directed “Two Weeks Notice” and wrote it and I
produced him as a first-time director, and I produced him
as a writer, and we produce together. For some reason, the
collaboration can grow as we grow. And we disagree all the
time, but we know how to disagree and we know how to fight
and we know when to relinquish. When it comes to music, we
disagree and disagree until we find the right thing. Sometimes
I say, okay, yours can win, but I'd like to win over here.
We've really developed a good fighting technique for what
we want, which in the end is the same thing. We both want
an entertaining, good movie that makes people laugh and affects
the same audience that we had the first time around. We both
get that, and as long as you get that and the most important
thing is the project then you're always fine to work in a
collaborative relationship with someone.
Q: Can you talk about Gracie's evolution?
SB: If you saw the first film, she was the same way.
When Gracie wakes up and does her job, she wants to obey the
rules; she wants to take the orders -- that's her job. She's
not the captain- she’s an FBI agent who goes undercover
and that's her job. The reason she can't take much from Sam
is because she's told not to fight, because now you’re
the face of the FBI. You have to act like a lady, and this
is what you have to do, and your wings have been clipped.
It’s an interesting situation when someone is forced
into a shape that is not them, but they feel that's their
only option and the only way that she can do anything is to
be the face of the FBI. She's not allowed to go undercover
anymore and do what she knows. The only option she has is
to abide by the rules, then she's faced with who she used
to be at the very beginning, and how do you deal with the
fact that she has to look at herself? But, she can also see
what didn't work with who she used to be, and she can also
see what can be changed about Sam, that she can help Sam learn,
and Sam can help her learn about who she used to be. I wanted
to put her in the most difficult
situations
in life and see how she would react to them. And sometimes
it's not pretty. We're not always going to react in a way
that everyone wants to see someone react, and I wanted to
really push that and show this is what happens to a lot of
people when the media gets a hold of them. They doubt who
they are, when they're not secure in their abilities, and
if people are constantly throwing things at them like, “You’re
not good at your job. You can't do it anymore.” If someone
said to you, “You can't write anymore. You can't be
a journalist anymore. You can't do that anymore.” and
that's all you've done all your life, what do you do? It's
that sort of thing – it’s comedy. It's “Miss
Congeniality Part 2!”
Q: Did you ever have anybody like Diedrich's character
tell what you had to wear?
SB: Are you kidding? This entire industry is full
of them -- the fashion experts. People tell you that you look
good in something, and it’s not something you spend
your life thinking about. Then you listen to an “expert”
and think maybe they’re right and then you get into
public and your picture’s taken and you say, “What
were you thinking?” It becomes more about them representing
themselves on your body rather than you being who you are
in a comfortable, cool outfit.
Q: Do you snort when you laugh?
SB: Sometimes, if it's a really good laugh. My reasoning
behind it is that when you laugh you expend the air, and you
need to get it back in. Sometimes it's comes through the mouth
and sometimes it comes through the nose. And when it comes
through the nose, it's a snort.
Q: I sometimes snort when I laugh.
SB: Yeah, not all the time. But, it feels good, doesn't
it?
Q: Is it problematic?
SB: Well, if it's a problem for someone than they
just need to not be around me. It does attract attention.
After you’ve done it, the room kind of quiets down then
you realize, “How do I get out of this?” but,
you know, it's like when your chair makes that little noise
that we all know, and you try to repeat it all the time to
prove that it didn't come from you body. That's kind of what
it is.
Q: What were you voted in high school?
SB: I don’t know whether it was Class Clown
or Most Likely to Brighten Your Day. There's been a lot of
speculation as to which one it is. Oddly, I can't remember
because I was voted some other things as well that I'm not
as proud of. (laughter) So it's one of those two.
Q: Were you the most likely to brighten people's day back
then?
SB: You know, you're asking the wrong person. Go back and
ask the high school kids I hung out with. I can give you a
couple phone numbers of people I still keep in touch with,
but, yes, I was rather perky. I think it goes back to the
theory that you can deflect drama and tension with humor,
and I think I did a lot of that in high school. I did a lot
of class clowning in order to connect the masses of cliques
that existed. You know, if you feel like you're on the outside,
what better way than to get on the inside but to make people
laugh. I think that a lot of that had to do with wanting to
fit in.
Q: Why take on a producer’s role as well instead
of just taking on projects and trusting the folks behind the
scenes?
SB: I do that now as well. I find projects now and
will only act in projects where I trust every single aspect.
In the end, it still doesn't guarantee that it'll be a success,
but if you're happy with all the artisans behind the camera
and you trust them -- it's about the process. The end result
you really can't do anything about except for go out and sell,
and say “Go see this movie or don't go see this movie.”
Can you imagine if someone said, “Do not go see this
film.” I was producing before I was actually acting
in a lot of theater, and I love the collaborative side of
it. You know, I grew up with parents who were opera singers
and I was left backstage in Europe, and you're with the wardrobe
mistresses, and the directors, and you sort of see that there's
a great camaraderie, and a joy, and a great energy of being
able to develop the script. Then go on location scouts for
weeks and find the house that had been written for so long
in this script that matches what you want to see. And then,
“Can we get the house? If we can't get the house, can
we build half the house on this hill, and build the other
half in the stage?” And then come the logistics. But,
I like hanging out and having table meetings like this where
you just sort of knock ideas around and watching people be
creative and letting them do what they do. I mean, the best
thing about producing is delegating. Hire the best and let
them do what they do, and just make sure you come in on budget,
and move around money and show up.
Q: What kind of creative energy do you take from those
types of experiences and that material as well with Paul Haggis?
SB: Well, again, as an actor you have to go in and
trust your director. You just have to. In the end we take
the heat when it doesn't work, but my job is to go in, do
my homework, argue when I think it's time to argue for the
character, and then, for the most part you have to trust the
director. Working with Paul Haggis was the reason I started
working again. I took a year off; it became a year and two
months, year and three months, year and six months. I was
like, “I have no desire to act right now.” There
wasn't anything life changing. I didn’t want to do what
I used to do, but I love producing. I'll just keep doing that
and if something comes along, and this something that came
along was “Crash.” And when I got it and you read
a story like that (he also wrote “Million Dollar Baby”),
you think, “These two scripts were so well written and
now the guy who wrote them is going to direct.” I said,
“I'll do whatever you want me to do. I want to be a
part of this film.” It was incredible. Paul gets every
script I get and every book, and we keep talking about, “What
can we do next together?” His vision is in the stories
that he wants to tell, I trust him 100 percent in how he would
tell them.
Q: As a kid, what inspired you to develop the parts
of yourself to reach for the stars?
SB: In our household there was no Hollywood, no star-reaching.
I came from parents who were opera singers and traveled back
and forth to Europe. I was raised in a house full of a lot
of big voices who are artists, who worked their asses off,
who were part of a dying craft -- that's how we were raised.
You respected your craft. We weren't allowed to watch TV (I
did watch Carol Burnett). The only magazine we had in our
house was Newsweek. I didn't know what a People was, what
a tabloid was. I didn't know what any of that was until I
think I got into college. So, when I realized I wanted to
be an actor, I assumed I would go to a school of the arts.
I assumed I would then go to New York, which, you know, I
went to New York and studied, and then the television and
movie world came into play. I was doing theater. I didn't
reach for the stars in terms of “I'm going to be a star
or a starlet or on the cover of a magazine.” That didn't
exist in our household so I didn't know to dream of it. Now
you can't turn on a TV or a radio without seeing it and so
that's why kids now are reaching for the stars or reaching
to be a celebrity, but that didn’t exist in our household.
My dad said “If you're going to do it, do it 100 percent
and then we'll support you -- whatever your craft is.”
Q:
Did the discipline of ballet help you once you got into acting?
SB: I hated ballet, and I hated it because my great
teacher was German and would discipline me in German in front
of all the American kids. So, that was a problem. I wanted
to do jazz, and I wanted to do hip hop. When I was taking
piano, I didn't want to play classical, I wanted to play ragtime,
I wanted to play something with more rhythm. Once I discovered
jazz and Alvin Ailey and all that kind of stuff I, I realized
there was a way for me to still dance, but dance to a rhythm
that made more sense to me. But, I think any kind of dance
or movement or connection with your body I think is really
important for someone who's younger. In Germany, we had movement
classes. You moved to different rhythms, or congas or drums
just to find out where your body went. If your right arm went
here you can pull it back and make your left arm do something,
and I think we're so disconnected from our bodies, and it's
a very sensual connector for us. I think if you understand
music and dance and rhythm, there's something that connects
you to yourself.
Q: Do you remember your first professional acting
job?
SB: My first professional acting job was in the opera
with my mother. It was an opera I believe was called “The
Gypsy Baron” and I played a gypsy child, and I got paid
in schillings, so that was my first paying job. Then I did
musical theater with some of my dad's opera students and got
paid for that. That's where I got my big break.
Q: Can you tell us why people should buy the “Miss
Congeniality” DVD that's coming out soon?
SB: The fun thing now about filming is that you have
so many other entities covering you while you're filming.
We have our EPK crew, which films how a scene is made. You
have your outtakes. You have scenes that don't end up in the
film because we can't have a five hour film. Now it gives
you a fun outlet to see what didn't make it in there. I think
it's appropriate for some films and not appropriate for others.
For something like “Miss Congeniality,” if it
will make you laugh, you will get enjoyment out of things
that you didn't see. Now you can see scenes that were cut
and can revisit those on the DVD. And, we also included the
soundtrack for “Miss Congeniality Part 2” which
I put together, and with our music supervisor John Houlihan,
which I love, and soundtracks, bless their hearts, are having
such a hard time. So instead of selling it I said, “Just
incorporate it as sort of a sneak peak into the energy that
you'll get into the second film and you can have it with you
and throw it in your car.” It's something that sort
of reminds you of the film and I love it. It’s like
any Jim Carrey movie, I pray that there's outtakes at the
end. You just want to see how he screwed up and it's genius.
I love that aspect of the whole DVD empire. I think it's a
good way to revisit those things.
Q: What is the sneak peak of “Every Word is
True?”
SB: It’s the world of Truman Capote when he
went to research for In Cold Blood down in Kansas and subsequently
in New York while he was writing it. It’s about what
happened to the killers and how that sort of took over his
life and when his life started spiraling down. It's a very
sad but beautiful look into this world that was this man,
who was an icon, and not many people know the story of what
happened when we went down to Kansas. I play Nelle Harper
Lee, who he was friends with since they were in kindergarten
in Monroeville. A lot of people didn't know that either. She
wrote To Kill A Mockingbird and they knew each other, and
she used to beat people up for him in school and protect him.
She went with him on the whole trip. Toby Jones plays Truman.
When Doug McGrath, the director, started going through the
microfiche and all of Truman's real files, we started noticing
a discrepancy in the handwritten notes versus the typed notes.
We started figuring out that in the typed notes they said,
“When T and I…,” it was Nelle's notes. She
documented his many notes, about two inches thick, of typed,
meticulous notes for his research. He would do the interviewing
and she would quietly sit and remember certain aspects for
him. It's a great story about these two friends. Eventually
they stopped speaking about 20 years before his death and
we don't know why. She's still alive in Monroeville, and she's
this wonderful woman who chose not to be in the public eye.
She's one of the few people that went to his funeral. It’s
a beautifully done film.
Miss
Congeniality 2: Armed & Fabulous is released today!