Premiere Magazine Article, October, 1991
Actress Piper Laurie
In her first few scenes in Other People's Money, Piper Laurie gave director
Norman Jewison a mild case of the jitters. "We started filming," he says,
"and I wan't sure there was enough in her performance. I mean, it was so subtle,
sometimes it seems like she's doing absolutely nothing." But when Jewison watched
the scenes on film, his concern quickly gave way to elation. "I looked at the
rushes," he says, "and I couldn't take my eyes off her, "and I couldn't
take my eyes off her. She brings a sincerity and reality to everything she does."
Piper Lalurie has made a career out of confounding her collaborators. Now she has
leapfrogged from ABC's cult hit (and recently canceled ratings disaster) Twin
Peaks to Other People's Money, alongside Gregory Peck, Danny DeVito, and
Penelope Ann Miller. "It's a romantic comedy with overtones of greed and lust,"
she says.
After four decades in front of the camera, Laurie has seen her share
of both vices. Born Rosetta Jacobs, she was placed in a Los Angeles children's home
by her parents when she was six. "My sister had asthma, and I was sent to keep
her company" she remembers. "I got the message- I was expected to go"
Early on, acting became her refuge. By seventeen, she was under contract to Universal
Pictures, which began casting her in roles that demanded everything from her but
acting. "They put me in a movie with Donald O'Connor, even though I'm not a
dancer." More fluffy films followed, until Laurie got fed up and broke her contract.
"Some of those movies were charming things that did well at the box office,"
she says, "but it wasn't what I wanted to be an actress for.
Laurie moved
to New York in 1955 and acted onstage and in some early television dramas. When she
did return to Hollywood it was on her own terms. She made The Hustler with
Paul Newman in 1961 and was nominated for an Oscar as Best Actress. Unimpressed,
Laurie quit acting altogether. "There seemed to be other things in the world
more important," she says.
Laurie married, studied art, and raised her daughter,
Annie. One day while she was sculpting, she felt a familiar twinge. "I was really
high with the pleasure of carving stone, and I thought the only thing better would
be to go to the theater," she says. "That's how it was. There were fifteen
years between The Hustler and Carrie."
No publicist could have dreamed a
better comeback that the Brian De Palma film. "I thought it was a comedy when
I started working on it," she says. "In the scene where Carrie's getting
ready to go to the dance, I'm literally tearing my hair out- or at least trying to.
I thought I'd pull myself across the room by my hair." Her performances earned
her a second Academy Award nomination.
Since moving back to Los Angeles in the
mid 70's, Laurie has worked steadily as an actress. Still, she says she never thought
of herself as special. Mark Frost, her former Twin Peaks producter, disagrees. "Having
someone of her caliber is one of the reasons the show worked so well." he says.
Last January, she won a Golden Globe Award for Twin Peaks, then Frost cast
her in his feature film directing debut, Storyville, which wrapped in June,
and she recently agreed to do a Bruce Beresford film with Alfred Finney.
"I
have been watching her most of her adult life," says Frost. "Someone as
good and versatile as she is will always be able to find what's interesting in a
scene and make it work for her." KEVIN PHINNEY