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Issue 13 - March 25, 2002
KW: Hi Jason! How
are you?
JB: Pretty
good. And yourself?
KW: Pretty
good! Really busy and a little crazy, but good. I'm on lunch right now
actually.
JB: Well
thank you for making the time during your break.
KW: Sure!
JB: How did
you become involved in Do it for Uncle Manny?
KW: I auditioned
like everybody else. Adam was so completely convincing that it was going
to be a good, funny movie. I thought he had a lot more experience than
he actually had. (Laughter) I was really shocked to learn as I did that
he was doing everything himself. It was pretty impressive. He is such
a hard worker that I knew something was going to happen that was pretty
good.
JB: It was
a film that had potential, but didn't make any promises up front. Do
you worry how a film is going to do commercially when you pick a project
like this?
KW: Dude,
I've done 46 movies with nary a promise of how well any of them were
going to do commercially. That's not how I work. I have my reasons for
choosing every project that I pick and I wanted to work on something
that was funny. For me it's all about the process and it's never about
the results because as an actor I don't have much if any control over
that anyway. I just had a good time when working and hopefully learned
something.
JB: You mention
that you were looking for something to do that was funny, but for you
is that easy to decipher when sent a script?
KW: Well,
that's where the director's voice is really important and the tone of
the movie is usually set at
I'd say the table reading, which I
think is a very important thing to do. You get the whole cast together
at least one time before we go our separate ways to shoot our separate
scenes with the actors that we're primarily working with.
I
think Adam had a really good voice and I think he knew how he wanted
it to be funny and where he wanted it to be funny. Sometimes as actors
we tend to play funny because something and you really try to keep a
handle on that, so that it is as real as it can be.
JB: Do you
see yourself as funny?
KW: In real
life! (Laughter) You know
I can't watch my work after I'm done,
but I just relied on Adam to give me direction. It was his movie and
I'm just a pawn in his game. It was a character that was acting within
the film, so it was kind of an interesting thing. I thought she was
pretty funny.
JB: You mentioned
you're on lunch
what project are you on lunch from?
KW: I'm doing
a film called A Spider's Web and my costar is Stephen Baldwin. It's
directed by this wonderful, sensitive and highly creative director named,
Paul Levine. I'm really in a period of real transition in my life and
in my work, so I'm trying something new. It's a character that I've
never played before in such a way that I've never played myself before.
I think I'm doing really good work and I feel really good about it.
I'm having a really good day today actually.
JB: Well
that is good to hear.
KW: Yeah. (Laughter)
JB: Are you
usually hard on yourself?
KW: EXTREMELY!
But, at this point I'm starting to take my work a lot more seriously
than I have in the past. After a while the quantity of work starts weighing
on me, so I've decided to choose quality over quantity. And that starts
with me
how much effort and work I put into a project. I've never
worked harder and never done my homework more thoroughly than I'm doing
now. I see myself now as a different kind of actor than I've ever been
in the past. I have more confidence and I definitely have a different
vision for my future. I've kind of put it into play.
JB: Does
that vision still include a musical career?
KW: Well,
funny that you should ask that. (Laughter) I do a lot of things OK and
I'd like to do something really well, so I'm really focusing on my acting
right now. (Laughter) BUT, I recently have had an obsession with a ukulele.
(Laughter) So my down time is really dedicated to my ukulele these days.
(Laughter)
JB: What
a bizarre obsession to have. (Laughter)
KW: I don't
know why. Don't ask me why. It just popped into my head one day and
it's just been going on now for a few weeks.
JB: I can
see it now: Kari Wurher
The Ukulele Album!
KW: I don't
know about that! (Laughter) Maybe I can use it in a film one day. I'll
add it to my skills. It's something else to put on the resume.
JB: I was doing
a lot of research for our interview and I came across a lot of photos,
both past and present. I noticed some of the photos had the cutesy,
girl-next-door look while one cyber page later I was finding you decked
out in a skull and crossbones bandana. I'm curious which one is more
in sync with your real personality?
KW: (Laughter)
Baby, you've been looking at pictures over the scope of a decade
at
least. I'm becoming more of a woman now. I'll be 35 this year and I'm
definitely not the person I was a year ago or five years ago for that
matter. I can't really put my finger on it. I just have more depth and
more self-confidence in a way that my physical body is irrelevant at
this point.
JB: And as
you mentioned, that new outlook is playing into your work?
KW: Yeah!
It really, really is. I've had a lot of support from the crew and cast
that I'm working with now, as well as friends and family. It's been
pretty eye opening. And it's fun because as an actor we really get to
explore not only the characters we play, but also ourselves in the process.
It's painful at times and it's definitely challenging. As hard as my
life has been lately
I'm really grateful for the challenges.
JB: So do
you see some time off in the future or do you just want to keep working?
KW: No, I
really want to keep working. (Laughter) I just want to hit a stride
that's different from where I've been in the past. I've got a big summer
movie coming out later this year and
JB: I've
been waiting for that movie. Eight Legged Freaks, right?
KW: Yeah!
JB: I've
been dying to see it. I'm a big monster movie fan.
KW: It's great. It's really a throwback to that 50's horror genre without
being really campy.
JB: I saw
the trailer
KW: It's
good, isn't it?
JB: Oh yeah.
But, I saw it at some point last year and have been wondering when we
were going to get the chance to see it.
KW: It's
gotten so much better. The effects are just so much better. How do you
go wrong with Dean Devlin and Roland Emmerich? (Producers of films like
Stargate and Independence Day) It's impossible!
JB: So you
did a lot of work with tennis balls on sticks?
KW: Oh yeah,
but I'm used to that. (Laughter) I did that with everything from Anaconda
to Sliders. I've worked with a lot of tennis balls and green screens.
But, actually in Eight Legged Freaks it wasn't about green screen. All
the special effects have been worked on digitally for the last eight
months and they're really amazing.
JB: You play
a police officer?
KW: I play
the sheriff of a small town in Arizona.
JB: Stuff
like giant spiders attacking people always happen in small towns.
KW:
Oh sure! (Laughter) And we really shot in one. It was crazy. So, I play
the sheriff, but at the same time I'm a mother of a 16-year-old daughter
played by Scarlett Johansson and a 12-year-old boy played by Scott Terra.
So, that was a real challenge. It was kind of interesting how Warner
Brothers could approve the casting of me. You know
teen pregnancy.
It all works! (Laughter) It's testing quite well and nobody is questioning
it.
JB: Has it
been given a release date?
KW: Yes
July
12th.
JB: That's
right around the 4th. It's always a big time for the studios to send
out their big guns.
KW: Yeah!
We've got a lot of competition this summer with Men in Black 2 and what
not, but Warner Brothers is really confident so, I'm ready to be a summer
leading lady. (Laughter)
JB: Are you
going to get your own action figure out of the deal?
KW: I don't
know, baby. I'm already an action figure. (Laughter)
JB: Jumping
back to your music, I'm curious when the last time was that you listened
to your CD?
KW: The last
time I listened to my CD was in my hot tub with the lead singer and
the DJ from Incubus. (Laughter) I was switching between that and Britney
Spears. It was one of those kinds of nights. (Laughter)
JB: And you
say you play a mother of two in Eight Legged Freaks? (Laughter)
KW: Yeah!
Pretty cool mom, huh? (Laughter)
JB: You mentioned
how you were in this transition period, but does that mean you've thrown
the bad girl vibe completely out the window?
KW: Well, my life was about shock value for awhile and I'm definitely
looking into my crystal ball a little deeper.
JB: I also
read that you have three cats?
KW: I do.
JB: I judge
people on the originality
KW: What
are you saying? That I'm never going to get a husband, right?
JB: (Laughter)
No. I judge people on the originality of their pet names.
KW: Oh. (Laughter)
I have a Sphinx that I've had for years. He's a hairless cat and his
name is Roger Toes. (Laughter) It came to me in a dream. I have another
who is the guru of life and he's kind of nutty, so his name is Monki.
(With an "I") And then I have a black Cornish Rex who sort
of disappears and is more mysterious, so his name is Houdini.
JB: Well
those are very original names. I dig cats because to me they have more
personality. If you put three cats in a room, you can immediately tell
the difference between each. They're more like people.
KW: They
are. I learn a lot from my cats actually. I've learned the art of stillness
and "Who gives a fuck" from my cats.
When it comes to
you Kari
we give a fuck!
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