If
you've watched even a few movies or televisions shows
in the last few decades, chances are pretty good you've seen
Holland Taylor in something. The prolific stage and screen actress
has had prominent roles in dozens of movies and TV shows over
the last thirty years, developing the kind of steady career
many actresses can only dream of.
This
week alone, you can see her on the CBS sitcom Two and a
Half Men, where she has a recurring role as the acerbic
mother of brothers played by Charlie Sheen and Jon Cryer, and
in theaters in the Debra Messing-Dermot Mulroney romantic comedy
Wedding Date and the teen romantic comedy D.E.B.S.,
directed by Angela Robinson, in which Taylor plays the
headmistress of the school the D.E.B.S. attend.
Taylor first got involved with D.E.B.S. when she saw
the short film premiere at the Power
Up gala in 2002. "It was maybe six or seven minutes
long and it was just hysterical," she recalls in a phone
interview. "It showed a lot of the director's talent. So
I went up to Angela afterwards and told her how much I liked
it. Later, when it got made into a feature, she wrote in a part
for me."
The
62-year-old Philadelphia native
also worked with Robinson indirectly when she guest-starred
on the first season of The
L Word in 2003, Showtime's hit lesbian series on which
Robinson was a staff writer at the time. "I thought the
character was just delicious," Taylor says of "has-bian"
Peggy Peabody, the role series creator Ilene Chaiken recruited
her for. "The script was very, very thoroughly written.
I thought it was Ilene's script, I didn't think it was written
by a staff writer., and I said 'Well, I think this is just wonderful!'
It was only afterwards that I realized it was Angela's script."
Taylor
became the first of what would become a parade of well-known
guest stars on The L Word. "I wouldn't not
do it because it was a lesbian-themed show," she says,
when asked whether she had any concerns about appearing on a
show with such potentially controversial subject matter. "I’m
not going to say 'oh, I’m not going to be associated with
that show.' It's a very cool show."
Like
the lesbian relationships on The L Word, Taylor thinks
the lesbian romance in D.E.B.S. works because it's
not heavy-handed, but it's not downplayed, either. The romance
plays as just one more twist in a satirical film full of twists
and turns. But, says Taylor, "when you make a jest like
that, you have to make it boldly. If you’re at all timid
about it, it won't work with the audience, because it's like
telling a joke weakly--the air goes out of it and the audience
senses that you don't believe in it yourself, so why should
they?"
Taylor
is dismayed that lesbian relationships like those on The
L Word and in D.E.B.S. are still relatively rare
and controversial on screen. "It actually sort of embarrasses
me for mankind, that there should be the amount of attention
on [sexual orientation] that there is. It's like 'are you nuts?
How can you possibly feel this way?'"