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- <text id=91TT1119>
- <title>
- May 20, 1991: Profile:Madonna
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1991
- May 20, 1991 Five Who Could Be Vice President
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- PROFILE, Page 56
- Madonna In Bloom: Circe at Her Loom
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>Roll Over, Ulysses, she's at it again: winking, beckoning,
- scandalizing with her new film Truth or Dare, and making one or
- two points on the way
- </p>
- <p>By Carl Wayne Arrington/Los Angeles
- </p>
- <p> So they stood at the outer gate of the fair-tressed
- goddess, and within they heard Circe singing in a sweet voice,
- as she fared to and fro before the great web imperishable, such
- as is the handiwork of goddesses They cried aloud and called to
- her. And straightway she came forth and opened the shining
- doors and bade them in, and all went with her in their
- heedlessness...Now when she had given them the cup and they
- had drunk it off, presently she smote them with a wand, and in
- the sties of swine she penned them. So they had the head and
- voice, and bristles and shape of swine, but their mind abode
- even as of old.
- </p>
- <p>-- Homer, the Odyssey
- </p>
- <p> Beyond the black steel spikes, tall forbidding trees and
- gimlet eye of a surveillance camera repairs this modern Circe:
- Madonna Louise Veronica Ciccone. The air is perfumed with the
- sweet fragrance of a floating garland of fresh gardenias. She
- plies a visitor with strong drink and cunning smiles. Within
- earshot of the murmuring fax machine and the constant siren's
- whine of the telephone, Circe reclines in audience on a couch
- of golden threads, and speaks:
- </p>
- <p> "I think the Circe comparison is great. Warren's
- [Beatty] point of view about all of this is that he thinks I
- have to humiliate men publicly. That is his overall
- simplification of what I do, that I am living out my hatred of
- my father for leaving me for my stepmother after my mother died.
- That is true, but it is too much of an oversimplification. If
- that were all I was doing, it would be a lot less interesting.
- </p>
- <p> "On one hand, you could say I am turning men into swine,
- but I also have this other side of my head that is saying that
- I am forcing men--not forcing, asking men--to behave in
- ways that they are not supposed to have in society. If they
- want to wear a bra, they can wear a bra. If they want to cry,
- they can cry. If they want to kiss another man, they can kiss
- another man. I give them license to do that. My rebellion is not
- just against my father but against the priests and all the men
- who made the rules while I was growing up.
- </p>
- <p> "In the Like a Virgin scene in my show, I have these men
- whom I have emasculated with bras on who are attending to me
- and offering me sex if I so wish. But in the end, I would
- rather be alone and masturbate. Until God comes, of course, and
- frightens me. (Laughs) Then all of a sudden Like a Prayer
- begins, and you hear the voice of God, and the curtain opens.
- Figures clothed in black, like priests and nuns, appear onstage
- and the cross descends. It's like here comes the Catholic Church
- saying `Sex goes here, and spirituality goes there.' And I say--but I say, NO, THEY GO TOGETHER! I am supposed to pray,
- right? But my praying gets so frenzied and passionate and
- frenetic that by the end, I am flailing my body all over the
- place, and it becomes a masturbatorysexualpassionate thing."
- </p>
- <p> Hmmm.
- </p>
- <p> Madonna's artistic persona has clearly transformed from
- daffy Disco Dolly into a more substantial, surrealistic Poly
- Dali incarnation. For a long time, she seemed like a rebelette
- without a cause vamping for the world's attention. Now she has
- it. Not content to continue spinning out mere dance-floor
- fodder, she has used her bully pulpit to preach scantily clad
- homilies on bigotry, abortion, civic duty, power, love, death,
- safe sex, grief and the importance of families.
- </p>
- <p> Circe Ciccone's alluring attitude is not just a simple
- sexual defiance but a symphony of rebellions laced with a deep
- sense of responsibility: now she is undraped in Penthouse, now
- she is doing a benefit for AIDS research, now she is doing a
- Pepsi commercial, now she is the dutiful wife, now she is the
- brazen divorcee. Serious feminist scholars defend her
- intelligent womanliness. Bluenoses sniff at her every bump and
- grind. The Vatican has denounced her. Academics spin doctoral
- dissertations based on her canon. The Queer Nation beatifies
- her. Wannabes still, well, wanna be.
- </p>
- <p> Now 32, the Michigan-born Madonna has three world tours,
- 20-plus music videos, seven feature films and eight albums under
- her Boy Toy belt. She has single-handedly created a boom in
- music-video sales. That the image refracted in the media-crazed
- mirror never settles is hypnotizing. Her throwaway line
- "Experience has made me rich/ And now they're after me," from
- her tune Material Girl, seems more a wily prophecy than mere
- egoistic cant. Her latest public catharsis--a quantum artistic
- growth spurt, if you will--is Truth or Dare. It is a
- panoramic, emetic, beauty-marks-and-all, feature-length
- autobiographical documentary shot during her Blond Ambition
- tour. The film, which opens nationally on May 17, is a celebrity
- voyeur's feast that draws its substance from the dark well of
- Madonna's life. It is her bid for serious consideration as a
- multimedia artiste who is more attuned to the aesthetic ideas
- of Martha Graham (whom she plans to play in a forthcoming film)
- and Isadora Duncan than to her contemporary pop-star peers. To
- recast a line of her favorite playwright, David Mamet: "She's
- eating at the Big Table now." Quoth Circe:
- </p>
- <p> "I present my view on life in my work. The provocation
- slaps you in the face and makes you take notice, and the
- ambiguity thing makes you say, Well, is it that or is it that?
- You are forced to have a discourse about it in your mind."
- </p>
- <p> Madonna has many of the classic characteristics of both
- the responsible, rule-oriented eldest daughter and the
- mediator-rebel middle child. She has the looks and name of her
- late mother, who died of cancer when Madonna was only five. She
- has now learned the craft of spinning autocinematic tapestries
- out of the yarn of her private anguish. Her mother's death left
- her to cope with a father, two older brothers and a stepmother
- ruling over her, and ample chores helping to raise her five
- younger siblings. She grew up with considerable maternal
- responsibility but little actual power. So she rebelled and
- eventually hearkened to a destiny. Or so she says.
- </p>
- <p> "Sometimes growing up I felt like the unhired help. I was
- the oldest girl and always got stuck with the main housekeeping
- chores. I changed so many diapers that I swore I'd never have
- kids. I felt like I didn't really have a childhood. I was
- forced to grow up fast. Everybody should have a few years where
- they are not feeling too responsible, guilty or upset. I really
- saw myself as a Cinderella with a wicked stepmother.
- </p>
- <p> "My family life at home was very repressive, very
- Catholic, and I was very unhappy. I was considered the sissy of
- the family because I relied on feminine wiles to get my way. I
- wasn't quiet at all. I remember always being told to shut up.
- I got tape put over my mouth. I got my mouth washed out with
- soap. Mouthing off comes naturally.
- </p>
- <p> "When I was a Brownie, I ate all of the cookies. From the
- start I was a very bad girl. I already knew that people were
- never going to think of me as a nice girl when I was in the
- fifth grade. I tried to wear go-go boots with my
- parochial-school uniform.
- </p>
- <p> "I wanted to do everything everybody told me I couldn't
- do. `I didn't fit in because I don't belong here,' I thought.
- `I belong in some special world. Madonna is a strange name.' I
- felt like there was a reason. I felt like I had to live up to my
- name."
- </p>
- <p> Growing up with an icon for a name, Madonna has developed
- a distinctly democratic attitude toward sacred symbols: they
- belong to the common man and woman. She hangs multiple
- crucifixes around her neck, has draped herself undraped in the
- American flag and made freewheeling use of the hallowed peace
- symbol.
- </p>
- <p> "My idea is to take these iconographic symbols that are
- held away from everybody in glass cases and say, Here is
- another way of looking at it. I can hang this around my neck.
- I can have this coming out of my crotch if I want. The idea is
- to somehow bring it down to a level that everyone can relate to.
- </p>
- <p> "I had to cancel two of my shows in Italy because of the
- Vatican. Rome and Florence. It was propaganda. Even though there
- were all of these profane gestures and masturbatory
- demonstrations, I think that my show was very religious and
- spiritual. I feel fairly in touch with my Italian roots, so when
- I got to Italy, I expected to be embraced because my show has
- so much Catholicism in it. Fellini--whatever! And they slammed
- the door in my face. They were basically saying that I was a
- whore and no one should go to my shows and that I was taunting
- the youth and making them have bad thoughts and blah-blah-blah."
- </p>
- <p> In Italy, under direct attack from the Vatican, Madonna
- appeared under kliegs in shades and her flaxen halo to defy the
- prelates with her artistic manifesto:
- </p>
- <p> "My show is not a conventional rock show but a theatrical
- presentation of my music. And like theater, it asks questions,
- provokes thoughts and takes you on an emotional journey
- portraying good and bad, light and dark, joy and sorrow,
- redemption and salvation. I do not endorse a way of life but
- describe one, and the audience is left to make its own decisions
- and judgments."
- </p>
- <p> To use a technical psychiatric term, Madonna is a
- complicated nut. A darker shadow of her libido has been peeking
- forth in her recent work. She appeared bound in chains and
- wearing a black leather dog collar in her video epic Express
- Yourself. In Hanky Panky she pleaded for corporal punishment,
- asking for "a good spanking." She frolicked as a stern,
- let-them-eat-cake fop queen in a send-up of Les Liaisons
- Dangereuses at the MTV Video Awards ceremony. In her
- controversial medium-core mini-film, Justify My Love, she played
- an O-like character drifting through a hypnagogic sexscape
- worthy of Leopold von Sacher-Masoch. Truth or Dare takes her
- into murkier erotic territory still: Circe with a wink and a
- whip. A common theme of these artistic explorations by this
- former cheerleader is masochism.
- </p>
- <p> "Yeah, well I am a masochist. Why? Because I felt
- persecuted as a child. My father made a never-ending impression
- on me. He had a philosophy, little pearls of wisdom he would
- drop on us. One of them was, `If it feels good, you are doing
- something wrong. If you are suffering, you are doing something
- right.' I tried not to compartmentalize those feelings, so that
- they are rooted in the same impulse. Another was, `If there
- were more virgins, the world would be a better place.' "
- </p>
- <p> In Truth or Dare, a stylized icon of the Madonna appears
- dreamlike over her head and then dissolves into the form of the
- black-clad chanteuse spinning beneath the cross in an act of
- contrition: Mea culpa. Mea maxima culpa.
- </p>
- <p> "I guess you do get a certain sense of power if you are
- carrying the weight of the world on your shoulders and taking
- care of people. I certainly did when I was on tour in a hundred
- ways. I felt like I literally had not only my personal family
- that I was traveling with, that I was in charge of and
- responsible for, but then I had to go out onstage to the public--the impersonal family--and give them what they came for.
- But I am much more conscious of my masochism than any messianic
- feelings I may have.
- </p>
- <p> "I think about death a lot, maybe because I don't know
- about life after death. So I strive as hard as I can to suck
- every drop out of life. The great thing about being an artist
- is that artists are immortal by the fact that they leave their
- work behind them. There is something comforting about knowing
- that my life was not just a waste.
- </p>
- <p> "Finally I see what has happened to me is a blessing
- because I am able to express myself in many ways that I never
- would have if I hadn't had this kind of career. And I don't
- think my career is just for myself. I know this is going to
- sound horrible, but I think I help a lot of people. It is my
- responsibility to do that. I never wish I had a different life.
- I am lucky to be in the position of power that I am in and to
- be intelligent. Most people in my position say, `Listen, you
- don't have to do any of that. Just kick back, man. Just enjoy
- your riches. Go get a house in Tahiti. Why do you keep getting
- yourself into trouble?'
- </p>
- <p> "It's not in my nature to just kick back. I am not going
- to be anybody's patsy. I am not going to be anybody's good
- girl. I will always be this way. Am I misunderstood? Yes, but
- less now than I have been."
- </p>
- <p> Whether you want to swing upon her tarnished star, burn her
- at the media stake or just ponder her anatomy, Madonna is ready
- with an orchestra of masks for your pleasuring and
- consternation. Call them out-of-bawdy Madonna experiences. True,
- and daring. What is most astonishing about Madonna is not her
- originality or even the commercial success of any particular
- artistic venture, but her willingness to reinvent herself boldly
- again and again. The force that keeps her a moving target is a
- naked defiance that is nothing if not original sin: she wants
- to live forever, if only in our dreams.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-