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ABOUT THE PRODUCTION.txt
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2001-06-25
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ABOUT THE PRODUCTION
Woody Allen's latest crime caper, "The Curse of the Jade Scorpion," stars
Allen as crackerjack insurance investigator CW Briggs. Briggs might be forced to
relinquish bragging rights to being the best in the business when he falls under the
spell of a crookóand a beautiful colleagueóin his most baffling case to date, and
finds that he is the one left clueless.
In "The Curse of the Jade Scorpion," Woody Allen returns to the period of the
1940s to entrance audiences with an idea he had been musing about for a whileóthe
hypnosis craze that seemed to mesmerize many of the Jazz Era, and is still
captivating people today.
"Woody always says he has more ideas than he has time to make them," says
producer Letty Aronson. "Like several of his films, 'The Curse of the Jade Scorpion' is
a period movie, but like a lot of his movies set in the '30s and '40s, its themes are very
current, which is why they play to contemporary audiences."
"This was an idea I had wanted to do for quite a while," the writer/director
offers. "I've never been hypnotized, and there was no specific reason to do it; it was
just a funny premise, and the rest is whatever spun out from that."
What spun out was an amusing take on denied desires both romantic and
illegal. Is it really true that no power of suggestion can make us do anything we don't
really want to doÖespecially when it comes to love?
That clearly surfaces in how the woman's role plays out in the man's world of
the '40s setting. While his characters play to the archetype on the surface, Allen flips
it as the key players let their outer masks slip, exposing their true selves.
"Certainly Elizabeth Berkeley's character, Jill, is a classic type of the 1940s,"
says Allen. "She plays the sexy secretary, a real staple of films of that era. By all
appearances, Helen Hunt's Betty Ann Fitzgerald is the stronger woman."
But only at first blush, as Helen Hunt notes. "As a woman in the workplace,
she couldn't be more powerful for her time, which is something you didn't see a lot of
back then."
Despite her outwardly steely office demeanor, "Fitz," as she is often called, is
involved in a clandestine affair with her boss, Mr. Magruder, a risky romance then, as
well as now. This duality was one of the things Hunt liked best about her character.
"Her love for him is her biggest weakness," Hunt remarks. "Fitz just has this big blind
spot when it comes to men and love, like a lot of women do. Where she is able to
stand up to men in the office, she isn't able to stand up to them in her personal life.
That's what's so great about playing this characterófor all of her strength and
sexuality, she's the girl who's really a mess, the girl who literally winds up on a ledge.
She is not as controlled as she tries to appear."
On the flip side: Jill.
"She's the office girl that all the men want, but she's the one who always goes
home at night alone," says Elizabeth Berkeley, who plays the role of the proverbial
"pinch and tickle girl." "She loves all the flirtation and the forbidden passion going on
in the office."
Nevertheless, it is Jill who knows how to hold her cards close, realizing the
power of her attractiveness and how to wield it with a sense of control, whereas Fitz
cannot. Berkley notes, "You see it in the scene where Jill has dinner with Briggs and
some of the other executives. While she flirts with CW, teasing him coyly, she never
caves to the office romance. Again, Jill goes home alone; she knows where to draw
the line."
There comes a third woman in CW Briggs' life, Charlize Theron's Laura
Kensington, the stunningly beautiful, spoiled little rich girl, who is used to getting any
man she wants. She takes Briggs as an easy mark for her seductive wiles, but his
mysterious rebuff proves the ultimate attraction for the blonde temptress.
"This is my second film with Woody after 'Celebrity,' and I would work with him
again and again," Theron says. "What he does with the writing, the dialogue, is
different from anybody elseÖat least for me. It may be period, but the characters
have a modern feel. Also he writes me these great, fabulous, flamboyant parts, like
Laura Kensington. I loved this characterÖand I especially loved her clothes, but," she
adds with a teasing pout, "I didn't get to keep them."
Theron recalls that when Woody first spoke to her about playing Laura, he
made the role sound almost irresistible for any actress. "The first time I talked to him
about doing the part, he said, 'If I were making this film in the '40s I would cast Lauren
Bacall. Would you be interested?' Okay, so Woody Allen and Lauren Bacallóhow
difficult a decision is that? Who wouldn't jump at the chance to be Lauren Bacall?"
Aronson reveals that one of Allen's great strengths is knowing which actors are
perfect for the roles. "He just has this instinct for knowing who is right," she says.
"He's not a director who works by committee, but is guided solely by his own vision;
he knows exactly what he is looking for."
Working with Woody Allen for the first time, that approach suited Helen Hunt
perfectly. "You know, all that any actor really wants is to work with a director who
really knows what they want and is truly passionate about it," she says, adding that
she got an equal charge acting opposite the comedy legend. "I've done a lot of
comedy, but it was almost impossible to keep from laughing watching Woody as
Briggs play off of my character."
In preparing for their roles, Helen Hunt and Elizabeth Berkley watched such
'40s classics as "Double Indemnity" and "His Girl Friday," which served as valuable
resources for the tone and style of the era. Berkley relates that she tried to bring
some of that style into her audition, but nature had other plans. "I had my hair done
like Veronica Lake for the audition, but as I was walking over, the skies just opened
up. By the time I got there, I looked more like I had fallen in Lake Veronica than I did
Veronica Lake."
Despite that nearly disastrous audition, Allen knew he wanted Berkley for the
role of Jill, saying "I have always loved Elizabeth and wanted to work with her,
because she has a really great sense of timing, and I knew she could be very funny."
The director offered equal praise for his other female stars. "Helen is such an
amazing actress; she really made the character so much more than it was written.
And what can I say about Charlize? She's funny, sexy, smart and was just born to
play a '40s femme fatale," he says.
The men in the main cast are mostly alumni from previous Woody Allen
movies, with one notable exception: Dan Aykroyd, who stars as Betty Ann Fitzgerald's
boss and illicit paramour. Though their paths had crossed on a number of occasions
over the years, Allen and Aykroyd had never had an opportunity to collaborate,
though, they are both quick to note, it was not for lack of interest.
"I have been a huge fan of his since his 'Saturday Night Live' days, but I just
never had the right part until now," Allen says.
Aykroyd indicates that the part was worth the wait, remarking, "I love that I got
to play a heel in the classic '40s sense. I think Magruder loves Betty Ann, but he is
just too weak. When she starts wanting more, it's easier to dump her than to deal with
the scandal." As for working with Allen for the first time, the actor simply asks, "What
artist in this industry has not wanted to work with Woody?"
The question is rhetorical to the three actors who had worked with Allen in the
past and were only too happy to again: Brian Markinson, Wallace Shawn and David
Ogden Stiers. "The Curse of the Jade Scorpion" marks Stiers' fifth collaboration with
Allen, though, the actor quips, "I have no idea why he keeps calling me."
In this case, the reason is a no-brainer. Stiers, with his familiar deep and
commanding voice, was the perfect choice to play the role of Voltan, the hypnotist at
the center of the crime caper. While he is also a veteran of a number of animated
hits, it was one of the rare times that Stiers' voice played such a pivotal role in a live
action film, though the actor recalls that Allen didn't give him much to go on when they
first talked about the part.
"When I got the call from Woody, all he tells me about the character is this:
'He's a guy named Voltan. He wears a turban. He doesn't have an accent.'
"I say: 'You gotta guy with a Middle European name and no accent?'
"He says: 'Oh, this Voltan is from Brooklyn.'
"How do you turn that down?"
Rather, Stiers turned to the Amazing Randy in Florida and Mark Sweet at the
Magic Castle in Los Angeles for a little hypnotic inspiration. He jokes that he also
found motivation, appropriately enough, in the stars. "I'm a double Scorpio and you've
got that Jade Scorpion thing going onÖ"
Behind the camera, "The Curse of the Jade Scorpion" brings together a
number of veterans from earlier Woody Allen movies, including cinematographer Zhao
Fei, production designer Santo Loquasto, editor Alisa Lepselter and costume designer
Suzanne McCabe. Loquasto, especially, was no stranger to the story's period
backdrop, having revisited the first half of the 20th century with Allen on such films as
"Bullets Over Broadway" and "Radio Days."
Allen offers, "I tend to like certain periods. The `20s, `30s and `40s were a very
exciting time in New York. They were the decades of gangsters and gamblersóthe
music was great, the clothes were greatÖ It's just a period that appeals to me."
One element from the past that resonates through all of Allen's filmsóperiod or
notóis music. It typically is from the Jazz Era. "He just loves the music," says Allen's
longtime collaborator Santo Loquasto. "It is his inspiration. When we're discussing
the look of any of his productions, our meetings are on top of his album collection.
The breadth of his knowledge of music from that era is truly amazing."
Another one of Allen's proclivities that stayed true to form for "The Curse of the
Jade Scorpion" shoot was its location: New York, New York. The insurance office
where CW Briggs, Fitz and Magruder all work was located in a government building at
80 Center Street. Loquasto notes, "Woody likes that Depression-era look, which was
perfect for 1940, so we kept the palette for the office in warm, earth tones. He wanted
the office to have that 'Front Page' look."
In designing Briggs' and Fitzgerald's apartments, Loquasto drew inspiration
from the 1957 film "Designing Woman." Briggs' somewhat dumpy apartment, located
on 85th Street, takes after that of Gregory Peck's character in that film, while Fitz's
stylish pad, at Park Avenue and 35th, echoes Lauren Bacall's glamorous apartment.
Built in the 1920s, the latter building presented a challenge to the production
designer, as well as director of photography Zhao Fei. "The main problem we had
was that her apartment was really too small and shaped like a pie, which made it
really hard to light," Loquasto notes. "But we managed to pull off a few tricks with the
lighting to make it work."
A New York warehouse was reconfigured to serve as Voltan's elaborate
Oriental private den. Loquasto also reveals that Laura Kensington's posh bedroom
was located in the same mansion that was used as Helen Sinclair's home in "Bullets
Over Broadway."
Costume designer Suzanne McCabe, who also worked on "Bullets Over
Broadway," comments that the costumes for this film called for a far more understated
style. "They weren't as outlandish as the mobster look in 'Bullets Over Broadway.'"
McCabe gave Helen Hunt's wardrobe a tailored professional look, though, she
says, "Woody definitely wanted her also to appear soft and feminine, not all brass
tacks." Contrastingly, the designer put Elizabeth Berkley in dresses that, while
appropriate for the office, could be a distraction for the men for whom she worked.
The men wore suits and hats custom-made in the fashion of the day.
"The clothes, like the music, are there to help support the story," Allen says.
"Everything has to contribute to making the tale workóit's true of any film I do, and I'm
sure most directors feel the same."
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