100%

Scanned image of the page. Keyboard directions: use + to zoom in, - to zoom out, arrow keys to pan inside the viewer.

Page Options

Share

Something wrong?

Something wrong with this page? Report problem.

Rights / Permissions

The University of Michigan Library provides access to these materials for educational and research purposes. These materials may be under copyright. If you decide to use any of these materials, you are responsible for making your own legal assessment and securing any necessary permission. If you have questions about the collection, please contact the Bentley Historical Library at bentley.ref@umich.edu

August 22, 1997 - Image 89

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1997-08-22

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

JAT Entertainment

H

Lynda Steadman plays Annie, all grown up.

Katrin Cartlidge: Hannah as a young professional in Career Girls.

ments, "Looks like you've done the tango ally grant interviews [with Jewish publi- Secrets and Lies enjoyed is only more trib-
cations]. I'm cautious about it all; it's a pri- ute to what an "anarchic, artistic person"
with a cheese grater."
Hannah is played by Katrin Cartlidge vate aspect of my life. The audience can achieve. In his film Life is Sweet, he
— of Breaking the Waves and Leigh's shouldn't be primarily concerned with my portrays a family which is funny, painful,
simple, sad — it is real, it is life.
Naked. Cartlidge herself is the daughter religion."
"All my films tap into ongoing feelings,
Mike Leigh has spent a lifetime stub-
of a German-Jewish refugee who fled
Berlin as a girl in 1938, and whose father bornly laboring against forces against him preoccupations: They look at secrets about
was literally left on the steps of an or- — the commercial norm. Understandably, relationships from the present and past,
he has had a difficult time of finding fi- things that happened in childhood, careers,
phanage.
Perhaps her childhood impacted a need nancial backing for films which have 110 Where they're going, and that relationship
to the past and present, how we are and
to explore her characters' vulnerabilities; script — yet.
But the international success that what we are doing.
whatever the influence, she exudes in Han-
nah a manic, sometimes cruel bully
with a fierce wit and the always un-
derlying struggle to unleash her sen-
sitivity, which is softened in her later
meeting with Annie.
"She's brilliant," says Leigh of
Cartlidge, "very committed and cre-
ative, very talented and very funny."
Leigh's own family history in-
cludes a great-grandfather who was
editor of a Zionist newspaper before
World War I, and Leigh himself was
for a time involved in the Habonin
movement (a Zionist youth move-
ment). He recently visited Ukmerge,
Lithuania, his grandfather's home-
town, which his grandfather left at
the age of 16. Leigh also took his
1991 film Life is Sweet to the Israel
Film Festival.
"I grew up in a very strong Zion-
ist background," says Leigh. "But I
walked away from it when I was
about 17. And I became disen-
chanted by Israeli politics and treat-
ment toward Palestine.
"I'm a spiritual person; you know
that from my films. But I'm suspi-
cious of religion. I'm concerned with
roots, those past and present. It isn't
that I have no sense of Jewish roots,
that's a very different thing. But I
have no interest in the clutter of the
Jewish community.
"I'm a normal bohemian, anar-
chic, artistic person who is not bour-
geois," he continues. "I don't practice
[religion] at all, but Jewishness stays
in one's life.
"I've read all of Isaac Bashevis
Singer, Primo Levi. And I don't usu- Lynda Steadman and Katrin Cartlidge as college students Annie and Hannah.



"I return to the guises and modes of re-
lationships. I don't make the kinds of
movies where there is one single idea.
They're about how we live our lives." ❑

tZt Mike Leigh's Career Girls will screen
one weekend only at the DIA's Detroit
Film Theatre. 7 and 9:30 p.m. Friday;
4, 7 and 9:30 p.m. Saturday; 4 and 7
p.m. Sunday, Aug. 29-31. $5.50; $4/stu-
dents/members. 5200 Woodward, De-
troit. Call (313) 833-2323.

Back to Top

© 2025 Regents of the University of Michigan