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Lunch & Dinner Entrees Include: Appetizer or Soup, potato, vegetable, dessert & beverage. Open 6 Days • Closed Mon. • Carry-Out & Group Parties 8/10 2001 64 Cover Story TEL 248-851-8782 FAX 248-851-7685 THU. 4313 W. 13 Mile Rd. 2 Blocks East of Greenfield • Royal Oak (248) 288-6020 • Fax (248) 288-6020 from page 63 We've never had more than a two- or three-minute conversation. "He's a very private man," Stiers adds. "He lives a lot of his interior life on film and makes jokes about his charming maladjustments and idiosyncracies publicly. "I think it's sort of flopped. Where most of us evolve friendships where we can admit to these things with trust, he trusts the film public to laugh and personally is muted, even guarded." Allen's sense of himself as well as other actors is exceptional, Stiers adds. "He doesn't ask them to do what he does, and he doesn't cross over into what they do. "In that regard. I think he's a remark- able writer, and having written that care- fully; he's also directed, and that's why he stays out of the way as a director unless he really needs to fix a little moment." In the moments we shared with Woody, herels more of what he had to say about his latest film, his child- hood, his Judaism and his career. WOODY On his love for film noir ... In the early '40s in my neighborhood, you could see two, three of those a week, and I always wanted to make one." "It's a very colorful era of New York, full of great theater, great night clubs, great jazz." On how he gets his ideas ... On his childhood ... "Sometimes ideas come to me based on something and sometimes they just come spontaneously. [For this film] I wrote out two lines and threw it in the drawer, and it was in the drawer along with a lot of other ideas of mine. "A couple of years ago, I went through some of these notes I had and I noticed there were a number of comic ideas I'd accumulated. "Small Time Crooks was one; this was one; a film I just finished titled Hollywood Ending was another one. "The idea just came to me once that it would be a funny idea if I was hypnotized and I was the criminal as well as the person pursuing the crimi- nal. And since I'd always wanted to do a fast bantering film, the two came together very easily [for this film]." On his love for period films ... "W hen I grew up [in the early "Well, I grew up on those. They were crime stories or romantic stories, office comedies or mistaken identity comedies, and one of the staples of them was a hostile relationship between a man and a woman. It was that fast banter between a man and a woman, and you always knew they would get together, even though osten- sibly they hared one another deeply and kept digging at one another. "This was a very pleasurable kind of film for me to see when I was younger. '40s], hypnosis was half-comic, half- sinister. So, everything just conspired to make [this film] set in the '40s. "Plus visually, I've always liked the '20s, '30s and '40s for films. When I do a period film I don't do the 1800s or the turn of the century. Really what I do is the '20s, '30s or '40s because I like the music. I like the clothes. I like the way women look. I like the way the guys are. I like the soldiers and sailors, the gangsters with their violin cases and the machine guns. RISING STAR from page 63 family and practicemedicine on the West Coast, "she's not as naive [now]. She's grown up and is able to defend herself and take care of herself more as a woman and a person. "It comes with experience," he adds. "Inspiration for most artists comes from negative experiences." "I was doing what I love to do every day — act and dance," says Elizabeth of Showgirls. "The joy was so sweet and the main thing for me was that, right after that, I just wanted to get right back to work." Her first movie after Showgirls was First Wives Club, where Berkley played the girlfriend of Goldie Hawn's ex-hus- band. The film's stars, Hawn, Bette Midler and Diane Keaton, were actress- es who'd "been through everything in this business, and were so inspiring and so encouraging," she says. the business." Things could have tuned out differently When she accepted her first leading role in Showgirls, directed by Paul Verhoeven from a script by Joe Esterhas of Basic Instinct fame, Berkley was hoping the experience would give her career a boost as the next Sharon Stone. Instead, she was vilified on a personal level as well as for her per- formance in the film, and just about laughed out of the industry "Liz took the fall for the movie," says Jason Berkley. People attacked her character as a person, he says, making up rumors and saying things about her that were untrue. The filmmakers never defended her. But, adds Jason, who'll move out to L.A. at the end of the year to join his "I was a nice child. I didn't have a miserable childhood. My parents loved me. I was a very, very bad stu- dent, but I was not unpopular. I was a good athlete, the first one picked, not the last one. I didn't like school at all; I didn't function in school. But amongst the kids it was fun. "I lived in a nice neighborhood, in Flatbush in Brooklyn, and it was at the time a lower-middle class neighborhood and everybody was nice and safe. You could play ball on the streets all day long. It was a nice childhood actually. "The only thing I regret — but I regret it only in fantasy because I don't know what it would have been like — I wish my parents had raised me in Manhattan. Because the great- est thing you can do for a kid is to be raised in New York City. "Because I can see with my own chil- dren — within a radius of 20 blocks from the house [there] are theaters and museums and opera and everything, stores — it's just a great exciting place. "Brooklyn was not that. It was much more suburban, but still very nice." On being raised in a Jewish home... "I was raised in a religious home and it was unreasonable and forced religion that turned me off it.... I've never got- ten over that feeling. And I hold a very, very dim view of all the religions." Berkley played another well- reviewed role, an actress/love object opposite Matthew Modine, in The Real Blonde, directed by Tom DiCillo, and then was cast by director Oliver Stone as Al Pacino's high-priced call girl in Any Given Sunday. Last year, she did a play in London directed by Sir Peter Hall. Lenny, based on the life of Jewish comedian Lenny Bruce, starred standup comedi- an Eddie Izzard in the leading role; Berkley played Bruce's tragic, doped up wife, Honey Harlow. The Times of London dubbed her performance a convincingly vulnerable portrayal." It was a serious play but "I was cracking up during this one scene," recalls Berldey. "Lenny is talking to the audience, and refers to me as 'the ultimate shiksa god- dess.' The guy playing Lenny Bruce is not Jewish. And here I am, lying on