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TIME: Almanac 1990
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1990 Time Magazine Compact Almanac, The (1991)(Time).iso
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time
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102389
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10238900.073
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1990-09-22
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SHOW BUSINESS, Page 86Barkin Up the Right TreeIn two new movies, a gifted actress climbs to stardom
Her name is Helen, as in Hell 'n' back. Allure and danger play
on the dramatic planes of her wide-screen face, which looks like
Diane Sawyer's pressed against a windshield. When her lips crack
open into a wide, diagonal smile, some Mae West line seems ready
to emerge. "Come up and see me sometime." And Frank Keller (Al
Pacino), a good cop with no life, does just that. Though Helen is
a suspect in the grisly murder case he is investigating, he can't
wait to get to her. The feeling must be mutual: before making love
to Frank, she strips off her red jacket with the urgency of a
lifeguard en route to a rescue. They fight viciously, then lurch
into a mad pash. She solders herself to his back; she climbs the
wall, elevated by lust. Later, Frank awakes dazed and guesses, "I
must have fainted. I'm gonna have to be airlifted to the standing
position."
Moviegoers at the new hit Sea of Love check out Helen and
think, What a woman. Got to be a killer.
Killer actress, please. We speak of Ellen Barkin, 35, who does
more than curl men's toes. In her first film, Diner (1982), she
played the young married whose husband rags her because she can't
catalog his precious 45s. In Tender Mercies she was Robert Duvall's
teen daughter. She righteously battled Dr. Lizardo in The
Adventures of Buckaroo Banzai and taught her sweet niece how to
dance in Desert Bloom. Just now she is bookending her role in Sea
with a turn as the triple-crossing ultrabitch in Walter Hill's
Johnny Handsome. Tough? This babe can blast a robbery victim
without blinking. And when her muscular creep crony pulls a gun on
her, she stares back utterly unimpressed, as if to say, "Go on and
shoot. My hide's so hard, the bullets'll bounce off."
This chameleonic actress has a lot going for her, starting with
her eccentric good looks. "Taken apart, Ellen doesn't work,"
observes Martin Bregman, who produced Sea of Love. "But put it
together, and you've got a stunning woman." Then she gives you
Method intensity with treacherous glamour. As Sea's director,
Harold Becker, notes, "Ellen is very real. She looks like she's
lived, like she's earned her face." And her spurs. This is a
ferociously bright, witty, serious actor who packs risk and
surprise in every move. She will go bigger, badder, beyond. "So
much of what makes her special," says Hill, "is her chance taking.
She understands instinctively that the enemy of art is what passes
for good taste."
The enemy of stardom too. For if celebrity is courting Barkin,
it is partly due to the sizzling sex scenes that ornament her
recent movies. As a prim D.A. in The Big Easy, she gets lessons in
precision ecstasy from handy Dennis Quaid. A Barkin heroine will
tussle with any man on even terms, perhaps to the death. In Mary
Lambert's gorgeous, complex ghost story Siesta, Barkin is already
dead, but that cannot stop her from a convulsive rendezvous with
the aerialist of her dreams. Or from looking sensational in a
stop-light red dress and a body sculpted by daily workouts. These
two films, though, were cult objects for cinephiles and
discriminating voyeurs. It took Sea of Love, which earned $40
million in its four weeks, to make her a pricey Hollywood
commodity.
Tell Barkin she acts with her body, and she nonchalants,
"Doesn't everyone?" But don't tell her that simulating sex onscreen
is a performer's ultimate perk. "Sex scenes are the least fun to
do," she notes. "Everyone's nervous. The crew's not yukking it up
waiting to see your tit; they're uncomfortable with the whole
procedure. The actors don't want to do it again and again. It's
hard work. I have to figure out what my character wants, how her
desires evolve at this point in the script. Then we have to block
the scene. It's like choreographing a dance. You get the steps
down."
Barkin, born into a middle-class Jewish family in the Bronx
("Happy childhood," she recalls, "no divorces"), took a while to
get the steps down. She is a confessed slow starter: "In
kindergarten I sat before an easel and thought and thought. Then
at the last minute I painted like mad." She graduated from Hunter
College with a double major (history, drama) and planned to teach
ancient history. But she continued with acting classes, and after
seven years she was pushed into her first audition. O.K., an actor
prepares, but for what and how long? "In retrospect, I'd have to
say I was afraid to try. I was more than a little self-indulgent.
What was I doing those seven years?"
The past seven years have been lucky for Barkin -- though not,
as she sees it, for movies. "The film industry," she says, "is a
boys' club that pays little attention to women, especially
actresses. If you're a feminist, it's hard to find a script that
doesn't offend you. If I'm not offended, that's as good as it's
going to get. Greatness I don't hope for."
The conservative climate in Hollywood and beyond rankles
Barkin. "Nobody wants to rock the boat. It's Mary Poppins again,
choking the audience on a spoonful of sugar. Look at Working Girl
and Wall Street: two-hour commercials for Reaganomics. In the '70s,
movies produced the Duvalls, De Niros and Pacinos. But the ones
selling tickets today are the new Troy Donahues and Tab Hunters.
They're actors who don't go home with you. They can't compare with
a great actor like Marlon Brando. When he's up there, he's telling
a secret about himself that's not for sale."
It's no secret that Barkin can be a handful on the set, though
her recent directors testify that she is warm, helpful and fun to
work with. "I don't fight so much now," Barkin says. "I have less
to prove." And more to love. Last year she wed Irish actor Gabriel
Byrne, her romantic co-star in Siesta. And at present she is nine
months pregnant with a baby Barkin-Byrne. So finally, perhaps, the
new star and new mother can afford to modify her cynicism. She can
dare to hope for greatness.