JNEntertainment 101 At The Movies A peek at "Primary Colors"; Hollywood gets ready for the Oscars. 0-1 JOEY BERLIN Travolta has a special interest in President Clinton doing "the right things." As a prominent member of the Church of Scientology, he is concerned about discrimina- tion against Scientologists in Germany. In fact, it has been suggested that Travolta may have softened his portrayal of his character in Prima?), Col- ors in order - to get Clinton's support of the issue. "I never spoke to the pres- ident ever about the movie," reports Travolta. "But I did speak to him about Scientol- ogy, because he brought it up to me, saying that he under- stood the dilemma and that he'd like to help me with it. He actually helped tremen- dously. And that's all that was ever discussed. The White House is always asking me to do functions for them. I've always been on great terms with them — and the movie's Special to The Jewish News IV hen the idea of filming Joe ( Anonymous") Klein's best-selling roman a clef about a presidential campaign was born, Tom Hanks was the front-runner for the juicy role of Jack Stanton, the philandering candidate obvious- ly inspired by Bill Clinton. But even with such top-of- the-line collaborators as Mike Nichols, Elaine May and Emma Thompson involved, Hanks backed away from the project. So now it's John Travolta on all the magazine covers as the star of Prima?), Colors. "I was envious when I heard Tom was going to do it," Travol- ta admits. "I thought it was a part I could do well and Tom should be doing something else. Then his schedule wouldn't allow him to do it, and I was the first guy they came to." Travolta had passed on the Robin Williams role in Good Will Hunting and the Jack Nicholson role in As Good as It Gets around the same time. Even after both those characters gar- nered Oscar nominations, Travolta still feels he made the right decision. "I wasn't right for either of those parts," he says. The ongoing White House sex scandal has not caused him to second- guess himself either. Although Primary Colors revolves around his character's sexual dalliances, Travolta claims to be unconcerned with how the film will reflect on the president's problems. "I hope it doesn't help and I hope it doesn't hinder," he offers. "I'm not interested in the scandals that are hap- pening. I couldn't even tell you what they're about. The movie represents great messages about flawed human beings that are still powerfiul and great " Joey Berlin, Norma Meyer, Eirik Knutzen write for Copley News Service. 3/20 1998 92 Above: John Travolta stars as Jack Stanton, the progressive governor of a small Southern state, in "Primary Colors." • Right: Emma Thompson stars as Susan, Jack's wife and partner in his presidential campaign. and do the right things for us. Putting people on pedestals is a mistake, unless you are willing to handle the truths that you hear about them personally. "You can expect the right things, like stopping a war in Iraq or helping religious freedom in China. Those are things you should expect. But what they had for dinner last night or whom they slept with is not anybody's business." more sophisticated than any kind of dealing like that. We put way too much significance on the power of a movie. A movie can influence, it can start trends, it can inspire, but when I did Pulp Fiction, people didn't turn into hit men." Nonetheless, the president did in fact help the Scientologists. Travolta o-4 says that the church had been frustrat- ed in its attempts to open a dialogue with the German government, until Clinton personally intervened. "He spoke to Helmut Kohl initial- ly," Travolta notes, adding that the president merely got the ball rolling and that a bill to help the Scientolo- gists is now working its way through Congress. "You have to do the bureaucracy in Washington. I had to learn what that was. You have to appeal to the House of Reps and the senators and get votes to pass a bill. We're halfway there. We've gotten some steps accomplished and others are yet to be accomplished. It's all moving with great attention. The bill is just aimed at stopping all the adversity that is happening and to sit down and discuss a way of solving the disputes. That's all the bill is. It's a human rights issue." On a far lighter note, Travolta has another movie opening next week. It's the re-release of Grease, which was part of his first Hollywood hot streak back in the '70s. The picture still has a warm place in his heart. "Grease was something that gave me hope and inspiration before I was ever famous, after doing the play and see- ing the play," notes Travolta. "Grease is something I'll always cherish. Harvey Keitel told me once that he was in a funk years ago and that the only thing that would bring him out of it was watching Grease or 'Welcome Back, Konen' I don't want anyone to deny my connections to those things and I want them to live forever. "That's part of the fun of movies." always been a separate issue." As for the suggestion that Primary Colors might jeopardize the president's support for Scientology in Germany, Travolta laughs. I'm most embarrassed at the idea that anyone would think that the pres- ident would do something like that. One is real politics. The other is-a movie. He is so much smarter and • ❑ 4