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Karen Black on her career beginnings and sporadic cinema in this first of three parts of our transcribed Interview |
The lovely and talented KAREN BLACK has played
both leading ladies and character roles: the bigger parts with lots of
character and the smaller ones standing out, quite often stealing the
show...
And to honor this incredible actress, who died Wednesday, at 74,
we'll go back to the beginning as Karen discusses how she got into the
business of acting...
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Jack Nicholson and Karen Black in FIVE EASY PIECES |
When did you know you wanted to be an actress and what did you do to become one? I
was kind of midair I guess because my sister and I used to climb up on
the bureau in our bedroom. When we were very little we would fly through
the air and land on the mattress, and it was like flying for a moment…
So I decided I wanted to be an actress.
I was probably six or maybe younger so that’s when I
decided. How I would do it… I’d try to be in everything in grammar
school. They said well, we need someone to play Christopher Columbus.
And I said, “I think I can do that." They said, “No, you’re a girl." And
I said, “No, I could do that." “Oh no, you’re a girl.” Then of course as soon as I could I got into acting class; my parents helped me with that.
And
then the teacher had us helping people where he was directing plays in a
carousel theater near town – and I would pick up all the half eaten hot
dogs off the grounds, clean the toilets. And I finally got the part of
Beer in a play called “George and Margaret," which she’s thirty, and
when, you know, you’re fourteen “you can’t play thirty," and she was an
alcoholic… Oh, no she wasn’t – but she was a really strange character, a
deaf mute.
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Martin Milner w/ Karen Black on ADAM-12 and no she doesn't talk about this show we just love these pics |
Anyhow, I would go home and start practicing,
practicing, practicing. And my boyfriend Charlie and I, at the time – or
my friend-boy I should say… We were in the basement of the summer
theater and I tried this character Beer, and a sort of scrim lifted
between myself and him, as an audience member, and it’s never come back.
There’s no scrim between me and any audience. I feel very much in
communication with them. And comfortable. Very comfortable with an
audience.
But I did a pretty good Beer, I guess,
everyone laughed a lot because I wore a lot of… Well I hallowed my
cheeks out a lot I think with this brown kind of greasy stuff, and
that’s how I started.
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One more of a young Karen Black on Adam-12 episode Log 132-Producer circa 1968 |
What was the next step to continue on the path of becoming a professional actress? I
went to New York. I was about seventeen and supported myself by getting
odd jobs. I could type so I was a Kelly Girl, living from place to
place and I would have a backstage magazine and I would go out for
everything that they had...
I would go from singing and
dancing and I had just come from ballet and acting and I got a lot of
off-Broadway roles and at the same time I was always working. I stayed
at a hotel picking up complaints and writing them down... Writing down
complaints for insurance people for jewels… For people who had jewels
stolen who would call and I’d write all about it. Thank Goodness I was
quite literate because I could do this kind of work.
I
would just get a little bit of money and live on almost nothing, and
just kept going up for parts and I got a role in a Broadway show,
playing a fifteen year old in a Broadway show called THE PLAY ROOM. And I
was nominated for Best Actress for Drama Circle Critics Award. I was
the lead in it…
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Director and actor Dennis Hopper with Karen Black in EASY RIDER |
And
then a fellow saw me and wanted me and my leading man in the play to
meet a young student who was doing a movie as his thesis. And Peter
Kaster and I went to meet him and it was Francis Coppola. And he put us
in a little movie called YOU'RE A BIG BOY NOW, which was his first
movie. And then I went to L.A. with the movie and with the credits: I
had just done the lead in a Broadway play and basically I’d just gotten
parts in television shows and, um… I was really good in them by the way.
And
then I meet Henry Jaglom, and Henry introduced me to… He knew Dennis,
you know… And he knew Jack and… I don’t know, somehow that whole group
of people. And Dennis Hopper and I improvised… he was very brilliant…
and he put me in EASY RIDER. And then I auditioned just like any other
actor for FIVE EASY PIECES and, there you go.
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Perhaps Karen Black's greatest performance w/ Jack Nicholson in FIVE EASY PIECES |
Describe a little about getting into the character of Rayette in FIVE EASY PIECES... I
got my accent by having someone talk back to me in that accent and I
wrote my accent in and I went up to… We were up in, somewhere that
starts with a B… The town where Jack worked…
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The famous "chicken between your knees" scene |
I went there and stayed
there and watched the women and they have the same accent as if they
were from Arkansas – a lot of people comin’ from Arkansas to work there.
And they have beehive… All old-fashioned hairdos from the sixties
almost and... You know if an actor reads a script often enough you start
to understand what it’s like to be that person.
It’d
be hard to explain her state of consciousness. She’s very open. She’s
very receptive. She does not think. She’s completely not critical. She
has no critical mentality. She doesn’t evaluate things that she sees out
of her eyes, she just feels them. Or she’s very sensual or sexual and,
that’s how she is – in that sense she has a lot of life-force and
so-forth and something like that. And Bob Rafelson said, “I think you’re too smart to play this part.” And I said, “Well when you say action I’ll just stop thinking."
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William Atherton with a 1930's Karen Black in THE DAY OF THE LOCUST |
In
the 1975 John Schlesinger melodrama THE DAY OF THE LOCUST, Karen Black
plays Faye Greener, a beautiful starlet desperate for fame in Hollywood,
living in a dilapidated motel and crossing paths with eccentric
characters including William Atherton and Donald Sutherland...
Karen Black, who died last week, transformed herself into this role,
which wouldn't seem that much of a stretch since, of course, Karen
herself was an actress... But as we all know, she was a great actress,
one of the best, in fact, while the very limited Faye merely wished to
become one...
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Karen Black argues with the interview from THE DAY OF THE LOCUST |
Playing
an actress in a different era, the thirties, were there any particular
mannerisms or characteristics or physical traits to make her different
than yourself (at the time): an actress in the seventies? Did you ever read my talking about this before?
Uh… I, uh… [And for some strange reason, very perturbed, all I can think to say at this point is…] I guess that covers it... No,
no, I just wondered. I’m going to answer. I intend to answer, but I
just wondered if you’ve… It sounds like you’ve maybe read something I
wrote about it or said about this before.
I
can tell you – in all honesty – while I did listen to some of the
TRILOGY OF TERROR commentary... I never, ever read anything about
this... I’m not accusing you or anything, James, I just was curious ‘cause it was a very apt question.
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Karen Black back on track for THE DAY OF THE LOCUST |
Okay... No problem, Karen... So,
I would read magazines from that era and I would suggest to Mr.
Schlesinger that we use certain expressions such as “That was very
daring.” Everything was daring in the thirties. They just were
expressions I would get and would mention them to him – to put them into
the script. I actually helped work on the script with Waldo Salt. It’s
hard to believe but…
There’s a scene where I’m “Dancing on a Dime” with Donald Sutherland and the truth is, when we rehearsed it…
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Karen Black with Donald Sutherland's Homer Simpson in THE DAY OF THE LOCUST |
How we rehearsed the scenes is we would rehearse
them… Improvise them in rehearsal time before shooting and someone was
standing around with a little recording device in one hand and holding
out the microphone in the other, stretching his arms towards the actors
as they were improvising. And we were dancing on a dime in
improvisation… We were dancing in a little circle kind of crying…
So
I said, “Waldo”… I love Waldo. I loved Waldo probably as much as I’d
ever loved anybody – I just loved Waldo. And I said, “Waldo, you got us
yelling at each other, don’t you remember?” “You know I don’t remember.”
And he threw the script nicely… Gently threw the script on my sofa in
my room and he said, “Write it.”
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Karen Black in THE DAY OF THE LOCUST |
And then eventually I wrote a script called “Deep
Purple” and Waldo loved my writing so much he made sure it got into the
Sundance Screenwriting Lab. It’s in Utah and it’s Robert Redford’s
screenwriting class and I’m very proud of that but I haven’t got it
produced yet – because I’m not a producer. But anyhow… So, then we did
it correctly: we were dancing in a little circle on a dime – and it’s a
beautiful scene.
Now also I’ve noticed that women of
that era, when they would pose they would, instead of putting their
hands on their waists with their fingers in front and their thumbs
behind the waist they would stand with their thumb in front of their
waist and their fingers behind their waist – you had a certain way of
standing and moving and we put… I put that into the characterization so
it’s a good question and we did work on that a lot.
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Dennis Hopper and Karen Black in the LSD scene from EASY RIDER |
You
played a prostitute in the groundbreaking film EASY RIDER... Besides
having a bad acid trip, what else do you feel your character was going
through during the New Orleans cemetery sequence? Oh
well, actually I… Well I was improvising. I didn’t do drugs. I don’t do
drugs at all. I’m against them. Any form. Medical drugs I think are
almost worse than street drugs, but they’re all… Ah...
So, during that scene did you… I was about to speak – I was just pausing in thought. Sounding like I stopped but I actually wasn’t
, so,
um… Yeah, she was worried about being pretty I think. Her hair came
off. I was rolling around muttering to myself – whatever I improvised.
It was a very long time ago actually, thirty-five, forty years.
But
you know, I was improvising. I had come off of improvisation and
Broadway. Then they didn’t have it in the movie and Henry Jaglom, when
he was helping out with the editing, saw it, and put it in – he put in
my character’s mumbling and mental flashes.
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Peter Fonda, Karen Black and Dennis Hopper trippin' in EASY RIDER |
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Karen Black and son Hunter Carson (later in PARIS TEXAS) on Saturday Night Live |
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