Sign in to wowOwow

Enter the email address that you used when registering at wowOwow.
The password field is case sensitive. Click here if you have forgotten your password.

Please register for wowOwow

Newsletter subscriptions
Sign up to receive wowOwow's weekly newsletter and get our best picks delivered right to your inbox. Our newsletter content is hand-picked by the wowOwow editorial team and provides the top features, news, and commentary from our site. Subscribing to our newsletter is free and safe. We will never share your email or other information with a third-party without your direct consent.
By registering, you indicate that you have read and agree
with our privacy policy and terms of service.

Q & A | 07/23/2008 4:00 pm

A Visit With Emma Thompson, Plus a Sneak Peek at 'Brideshead Revisited'

Emma Thompson in 'Brideshead Revisited'

Nicola Dove/Courtesy of Miramax Films

Editor’s Note: Oscar-winning actress and friend of wowOwow.com Emma Thompson is currently starring in "Brideshead Revisited." Here, she joins us for an exclusive Q & A and talks about working with the new wave of heartthrobs, how she developed the character of Lady Marchmain, her future plans and more.

wOw: We’ve heard that your performance in “Brideshead” as Lady Marchmain is Oscar-worthy and to expect a Best Supporting Actress nomination. Does that sound about right?

Emma: I think it’s always best not to expect a nomination just in case the inevitable happens: You don’t get nominated and you have bought a frock.

wOw: Your Lady Marchmain glitters with the nuances of class and religion, as you play an aristocratic Catholic. How did you get is so right? Do your own experiences feed into your portrayal of this character?

Click here for photos from "Brideshead Revisited."

Emma: The first thing I did was to ring the Vatican. Always go to the top, that’s what I say. Then I booked an appointment with Prince Charles. He gave me some very useful tips on aristocracy; always keep your elbows close in while eating was one of them, because you’re often on a table with lots and lots of people and rather squashed. OK, I’m kidding. For myself, I’m much close to Charles Rider, and would certainly be considered a heathenish middle-class upstart.

wOw: There’s been some controversy surrounding the screenplay. As someone who’s adapted books to screenplays, what do you make of changing Evelyn Waugh’s book to fit it into two hours onscreen?

Click the play button below for a sneak peek at "Brideshead Revisited."

Get the Flash Player to view this video.

Emma: Adaptation is always a nest of wasps; however gently you handle it, you’re going to get stung. In fact I have much more trouble adapting a very short children’s book with hardly any plot than I did with Sense and Sensibility, which had 135 characters and a truckload of plot.

wOw: The 1982 miniseries version of "Brideshead Revisited" was 659 minutes long — that’s eleven hours. How do you fit all of that into just more than two hours for this new version?

Emma: You don’t. What Jeremy had to do was tease out and dramatize those parts of the book that he wanted to explore. He did it brilliantly and I think the film is a wonderful companion piece to the book.

wOw: And you’re starring alongside some up-and-coming young men – Matthew Goode and Thomas Morrison, to name a couple. What is it like acting alongside the next wave of new heartthrobs? Have leading men begun to change?

Emma: It’s hell. They’re all so lovely, funny, talented and gorgeous that you start to flirt with them like a whippet and then suddenly catch sight of yourself and realize you are 85 years older than most of them.

wOw: Harry Potter is among your recent films. What is it like to be part of the huge Harry Potter phenomenon? And did it make you believe in magic?

Emma: It’s great fun because the whole thing is like a huge extended family and the wizardry involved is all to do with the fact that they have managed to make seven of these films without killing each other.

wOw: Do you let your husband and daughter see all of your movies? You’ve done a couple of children’s movies recently — besides "Harry Potter" there’s "Nanny McPhee." Is this something that started to interest you more after you had your daughter?

Emma: My husband and daughter couldn’t be less interested in my movies, and I started writing "Nanny McPhee" four years before my daughter was even thought of. There is the new "Nanny McPhee" coming up next year, which I’m very excited about because I love writing for families.

wOw: You have such a history of picking elegant and witty characters to play. What is next in your collection of roles? I know you’re involved in several other films coming up: “An Education,” “Last Chance Harvey” and “The Boat That Rocked.” What’s in store for us?

Emma: In "An Education" I play a savage and anti-Semitic headmistress; in "Last Chance Harvey" I play a middle-aged, rather ordinary woman who falls in love and in "The Boat That Rocked" I play a nymphomaniacal ex-sex symbol with no morals and a drinking habit.

Guess which one’s the closest.

wOw: Beyond that, what are you planning? Will you be screenwriting again anytime soon?

Emma: Before we start shooting "Nanny McPhee," I will be in Los Angeles and New York with an installation about sex trafficking, called Journey.
I’m also writing the new screenplay for "My Fair Lady."

——————————

Miramax Films, UK Film Council and BBC Films present in association with Hanway Films, 2 Entertain and Screen Yorkshire, an Ecosse Films Production; A film by Julian Jarrolf; Casting by Priscilla John, CDG; Music by Adrian Johnston; Hair and Makeup Designer: Roseann Samuel; Costume designer: Eimer Ni Mhaoldomhnaigh; Editor: Chris Gill; Production Designer: Alice Normington; Director of Photography: Jess Hall; Line Producer: Rosa Romero: Executive Producers: David M. Thompson, Nicole Finnan, Tim Haslam, Hugo Heppell; Based on the novel by Evelyn Waugh; Written by Andrew Davies and Jeremy Brock; Produced by Robert Bernstein, Douglas Rae, Kevin Loader; Directed by Julian Jarrold. 

41 Reader Comments (so far…) Sign In or Register to comment

IAM Woman
It is time for movies to portray older women as attractive and desirable to younger men. My husband is eight years younger than me and so far, it works. Those heartthrobs in the movies need “a more mature” leading lady to grace them on the scene. Imagine the possibilities………
By IAM Woman on 07/24/2008 4:00 pm
Dab-a- do
Tell me the possibilities……..I’m too old to even imagine!!! LOL Is this a legit post. If it is sorry, Ms. C, but we do get some really “unusual” stuff here sometimes.
By Dab-a- do on 07/24/2008 4:36 pm
Blue Circle Girl
(sound of snickering in the back ground) To: DC :)
By Blue Circle Girl on 07/24/2008 5:15 pm
Dab-a- do
To BCG, I heard that !!! :-) To Ms.C.:, I’m sorry. I’ve been reading some of your comments and I should of checked before I jumped to a wrong conclusion.
By Dab-a- do on 07/24/2008 5:29 pm
Maurine H
Dabney Crowe - gotta tell you I really like your name. Sounds as if you could be a great actress!
By Maurine H on 07/24/2008 8:41 pm
Dab-a- do
Maurine, I AM a great actress or a flirt, a southern belle, or a drama queen, whatever makes my family laugh! I just got waylaid by a nursing career. Thanks for the compliment.
By Dab-a- do on 07/24/2008 9:35 pm
Dab-a- do
Oh, Maurine, I also love reading your posts. You and the other ladies (and gentlemen) really “mix” it up sometimes and I love it. Am learning a lot from everyone who contributes. To find this type of interchange makes my day. Thanks.
By Dab-a- do on 07/24/2008 9:41 pm
l drake
Emma Thompson. A mind to go with her talent. She would make a great contributor.
By l drake on 07/24/2008 5:18 pm
Beth Cavalli
Ahh, Emma, who married the man who played Willoby in her movie, Sense and Senseability, smart woman…..I am looking forward to her view of “My Fair Lady”!
By Beth Cavalli on 07/24/2008 11:00 pm
Ulla
Long Live Emma Thompson” (… no disrespect, dear lovely Elizabeth II, you have a few grand Dames in your realm and did honor most of them so far …) … and I can only second every single word of praise expressed here so far!
By Ulla on 07/26/2008 11:42 am
RoseMerry Hoffman
Ms. Thompson, I cannot tell what a joy it was just to be in line with at the ole Alamo Drafthouse Cinema during SXSW file fest some years old - “Primary Colours” was just out. Woman, as we say in Austin, you RAWK! And you were so funny with the Governor of California in “Junior”! I hope to see you two work again.
By RoseMerry Hoffman on 07/27/2008 11:16 am