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AE:
The casting directors are looking for someone more conventionally
feminine?
MW:
Absolutely, and they can't see me doing that. Even though, once
this director let me go there, he said that it was exactly what
he was looking for. As an actor, I can let that feminine side
out, I can change my clothes, my hair, my makeup, my approach
to a part, and all of a sudden be much softer and feminine.
It doesn't matter that that isn't really me, because I am an
actor and I can do that. But when you go into Hollywood, they
have a very tough time seeing you any other way but the way
that they want to see you.
MW: Has it ever been an obstacle to you that you are
out in your career?
AE: I don't think because I have never, not
been out. I don't know, maybe. Maybe there was somebody who
said, "Ooo we don't want to cast her because she is gay."
It has been a little bit uncomfortable sometimes, when I've
had a girlfriend on-set, but I don't feel like it has ever held
me back.
I
do look a little bit more like a lesbian then some of the other
actors in Hollywood who are lesbians. I don't have an issue
with that, that's how I look, that's who I am, and that is actually
my strength rather than my weakness, I think. It's important
for me to stay with my strength; it would be very easy to try
and stay more mainstream, try and be more feminine, grow my
hair long, not work out quite as much. There are all these things
I can do but my point is why? There is a ton of people doing
that. I am still going to be a step below that because that
is really not my essence, so why not go with my essence. If
the big parts and the great roles end up being lesbian, great,
because I want to push lesbian films, I want there to be good
lesbian films out there, to be great lesbian characters.
AE:
So if you were to do only lesbian films your whole career...
MW: My fan base is in the lesbian community,
and I'm totally fine with that. I want to do more stuff in that
community because I think there is not a lot out there, and
there is a void that needs to be filled. Lesbians desperately
want good movies, they're willing to pay for them, so why can't
we make them? I don't get it. There are very few full length,
feature lesbian films out there. They're just not being made.
Part of it is you can make a so-so movie, and even a really
bad movie, and if it's a lesbian film, you will get at least
some positive reception.
I
think we all grew up watching TV wishing some of these characters
were lesbians, that one of the Charlie’s Angels was
a lesbian. (laughs) We wanted Sabrina to be gay. We wanted Cagney
and Lacey to be gay, we wanted it so bad--why can't we have
those strong, hot roles and they just happen to be gay? That
would be wonderful. The fact that I'm out and that those are
the parts that people tend to see me in, I say "wonderful."
AE: One of the complaints I've heard is that there is
such an old boys network in Hollywood that the lesbians really
need to create something like that themselves.
MW: I wish there was more of that
among lesbians, because it would help. But I've found there
to be much more of that with gay men, then with gay women. I
don't know why with men and women it's so different. I think
women have a much harder time supporting each other then men
do. I would like to see more networks like that. I know there
are a lot of organizations now that are forming for women in
Hollywood, trying to create those networks, but there absolutely
has to be more.