27-01-2007 17:36
Blanchett: "It was a complete veneer, Im glad it was dark because I blushed my way through the whole thing."
Eyre: "Also Cate did something I think is completely brilliant. Infinitely generous she endows this boy, and hes an attractive boy, but she endows him with a great sexual allure. That is her acting achievement; by making you believe in this passionate obsession that she has she made him seem very sexy. Thats acting genius."
Marber: "I was very conscious throughout the shoot that Cate and Judi were dreading the day they had to do this scene. Its monstrously difficult and its a scene also where we the audience are watching two mad women, two characters who have been driven almost mad by the events of the story. We watched the scene appalled by where theyve got to with each other, but thats the whole point, thats where the story has gone. Its the purging scene. And after that when Barbara is clearing up all the rubbish that Sheba has created its a very, very quiet scene. And their goodbye scene is sort of a stalemate, theyve come to the end of something."
Blanchett: "Its an interesting journey really, a fascinating journey to play, someone whos quite fey and gossamer and coy in the beginning, who then ends up being thrust out of a basement flat, screaming in her pyjamas, dressed as Siouxsie and the Banshees, going after the paparazzi. That scene had to get Sheba to the place where that would be a logical, the only place for her to go."
Marber: "I realised when we were making the film something that never occurred to me when I was writing it. Its that actually Barbara doesnt really go on any kind of journey, she just sort of gets an obsession for someone, it doesnt work out and shes upset about that but she endures. Its Sheba who goes on the massive journey and Barbara who is he fixed point. But that only occurred to me when I watched the film, what the true extreme of it is."
Marber: "I think Zoes book recognises a peculiar strand of loneliness thats out there. I think if you look around, if you go out onto the streets, you will see a thousand Barbaras out there. I think thats why people like the film because I think its identified a particular streak of modern loneliness in the comfortable middle classes and the uncomfortable lower middle class of people like Barbara."
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