Meryl Streep’s Vogue interview: passionate, intelligent, vital & fascinating

As I previewed yesterday, Meryl Streep covers the new January issue of Vogue Magazine. I thought she was just doing a Vogue cover – HER FIRST EVER – to promote The Iron Lady. Turns out that even The Amazing Meryl has more up her sleeve than a simple film promotion. One of the photos from the Annie Leibovitz shoot – the one where Meryl is walking in a garden – was specially organized because Meryl is a long-time supporter of “safe, organic, and ecologically sustainable food” and she’s a “shareholder in the Community-Supported Agriculture (CSA) organization.” Thus, she posed in an organic farm. She also took Annie down to Washington so that she could pose with some of the Washington power players who are campaigning for a National Women’s History Museum. Meryl is also the NWHM National Spokesperson. Because Meryl really is that f–king cool. Anyway, you can read the whole (awesome) Vogue article here, and I suggest you do. I’ve read too many interviews with vapid, coked up morons who think their every burp is high art – Meryl is so refreshing. Bitch has a lot to say about everything.

Meryl’s thoughts on Thatcher: Streep knew “the outlines” of the rage that people had about Thatcher. “In this country, it was blended with anti-Reaganism,” she says, “but there was a special venom reserved for her, I felt, because she was a woman.” Streep very much felt a defensive instinct about her. “With any character I play, where she is me is where I meet her. It’s very easy to set people at arm’s length and judge them. Yes, you can judge the policies and the actions and the shortcomings—but to live inside that body is another thing entirely. And it’s humbling on a certain level and infuriating, just like it is to live in your own body. Because you recognize your own failings, and I have no doubt that she recognized hers.”

Did Thatcher ever recognize her own faults? Streep tilts her head and says evenly that Margaret Thatcher was remarkably nonjudgmental. “If you think of a conservative in the United States, we think of a sort of moral Puritan or something. She didn’t have any of those things.” She shrugs. “I don’t know about not promoting women. Here’s what really surprised me: From the moment the day started until it was three, four in the morning, she just never, ever stopped, and she worked so hard and relentlessly to be able to be in that position where what she said was the course the nation took. It was really extraordinary, her tirelessness, sheer stamina. When I say that, I really mean it, because I work hard, I know what working hard is and I know what staying up late is, and you can do it for a certain time. But to do it for eleven years? And out of power, to keep on with it, into the sunset? Superhuman.”

A story about women and power: “Women and power and diminishment of power and loss of power,” she says. “And reconciliation with your life when you come to a point when you’ve lived most of it and it’s behind you. I have always liked and been intrigued by older people, and the idea that behind them lives every human trauma, drama, glory, jokes, love.” She was close to her grandmother, and remembers her saying that her husband, Streep’s grandfather, would be out playing golf when the school-board elections would come up. “My grandmother didn’t give a damn about politics, but she really cared who was going to be on the school board, and she would go out, interrupt him on the eighth hole, and give him a piece of paper with the names of the candidates on it and tell him who to vote for—but she was not allowed to vote. She was not allowed to vote for dogcatcher in her town, never mind president. Never mind imagine being president.”

Meryl on her 35-year-long career: She never was an ingenue; when her first film came out, in 1977 (Julia, with Jane Fonda and Vanessa Redgrave), she was 28. In the eighties, the era of Reaganomics and Thatcherism, she made huge movies in a Babel of accents and dialects: The French Lieutenant’s Woman, Sophie’s Choice, Silkwood, Out of Africa, A Cry in the Dark. In 1989, she turned 40. “I remember turning to my husband and saying, ‘Well, what should we do? Because it’s over.’ ” The following year, she received three offers to play witches in different movies. She saw the subtext pretty clearly: “Once women passed childbearing age they could only be seen as grotesque on some level.” But with The Bridges of Madison County (1995) she captured “the audience that were my girls, that I knew they’d get it if we could get the movie made,” hence Dancing at Lughnasa and One True Thing, which were also about “women whose usefulness had passed.” And her last five years saw hit follow hit: The Devil Wears Prada, Mamma Mia!, Julie & Julia, It’s Complicated. That last film, she says, “in the period of Silkwood, could never have been made, with a 60-year-old actress deciding between her ex-husband and another man. With a 40-year-old actress it would never have been made.”

[From Vogue]

God, I feel like applauding after reading that article. Compare Meryl to so many of her male contemporaries – for example, take Meryl’s friend Robert DeNiro. He is very active in the revitalization of downtown New York, but he would never sit down for an interview and passionately discuss his decades-long involvements with multiple issues, charities and interests. DeNiro phones it in for the most part these days, with his career and his interests. And look at how vital and how passionate Meryl still is – she’s amazing.

Photos courtesy of Leibovitz/Vogue, slideshow here.

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31 Responses to “Meryl Streep’s Vogue interview: passionate, intelligent, vital & fascinating”

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  1. carrie says:

    i hope that in the movie MARGARET,they doesn’t show Margaret Tatcher as a feminist hero or ingenue because Tatcher isn’t a feminist or ingenue (she adored what she did)

  2. Dorothy#1 says:

    Love, love, love her!!!

  3. paola says:

    She’s such an amazing woman, always portraying amazing, fierce and independent women. she should be an inspiration to all of us. god bless you meryl.

  4. Julie says:

    Very refreshing. God compare this woman with the others covered all the time. Really bright and interesting.

  5. k says:

    Some people believe that to talk about the charitable work you do negates the act of charity. I feel in the case of celebrities, they have an opportunity to bring media attention to the causes they support, so I’m on the fence about DeNiro’s own behavior.

  6. Erica says:

    *sigh*…I aspire to be meryl streep when I grow up…or marry her, I love this woman!!

  7. operagirl says:

    In my eyes, Meryl can do no wrong. I’m with her on the safe, organic,and economically sustainable food as well.

  8. Rita says:

    Her strength, intelligence, and confidence are just soooo incredibly sexy. Yes, sexy, attractive, desirable. A beautiful woman in every way. (Love to share a Snapple with her but I doubt that will happen)

  9. dorothy says:

    In a time filled with Lohan’s and Kardashian’s, she’s such a great role for women of any age. Love her.

  10. Ally says:

    Hands down, my favorite actress. Bravo!

  11. Sapphire says:

    Why isn’t she the role model rather than those vapid, plastic wax figures in the tabs? All the intelligence, fire and talent!

  12. Reece says:

    Adore her! (goes w/out saying almost)

    And Vogue. Wow! Someone interesting on your cover. I’m truly surprised.

  13. Victoria says:

    ahh if this what it means to grow into adult hood, then that’s what I need to aspire too. She is grace, poise, dignity, and passion personified. Viola Davis and Cecily Tyson is also like this.

  14. Pink Elephant says:

    Ahhh, such a class act. Je l’adore!

  15. Elena says:

    She’s a darling, but I’m not sure I like what they did of her in the photoshoot. It could have been much much better

  16. velourazure says:

    that whitehouse photo looks weirdly photoshopped.

  17. Nymeria says:

    It’s very easy not to criticise Thatcher when you’re a multi-millionaire and not one of the multitude of people she dicked over.

  18. Maya says:

    I still can’t believe this is her first Vogue cover! Love the pictures and the interview, and I can’t wait to see The Iron Lady.

  19. holls says:

    Love Meryl!! Thanks for highlighting this.

  20. NM9005 says:

    I love to sit down and just take in whatever Streep has to say because I know beforehand, I will be enthralled with it. She’s wise, intelligent and thoughtful, an amazing woman all around.

  21. Gwen says:

    Love her!

  22. megan says:

    “but there was a special venom reserved for her, I felt, because she was a woman.”

    Meryl, I love you, but no. There was a ‘special rage reserved for her’ because she was awful. Stop trying to make Feminist!thatcher happen

  23. Ari says:

    Wth is she really like 63 years old? Thats crazy to me she doesnt look a day over 45 :L

    Amazing lady

  24. bananapanda says:

    That last pic is the Capitol in the background.

    Meryl has a had a lot of life behind the camera- her fiance died young when they were in their late 20s, she married a fabulous sculpture, raised four kids out of the spotlight and juggled a film career while maintaining a degree of privacy. Outstanding!

  25. Koolkitty says:

    Oh Kaiser, Thank you so much for covering articles about women like Meryl. With all the Kardashians and Crackens and Housewives, it is a breath of fresh air that women can look around and actually see other women of substance. The fact that it’s covered here on this site just makes me feel better about the whole world in general. And by the way, I live for some Crackie shenanigans, but the balance is lovely. :O)

  26. Jane says:

    My god the woman is stunning! She looks great in all the pics and her intelligence is staggering!

    Don’t attack me but..
    I am probably one of the few who are grateful to see her words on Thatcher showing admiration in some form. I am intrigued by Thatcher having read many books on her and despite her unpopular policies she did very very well to get where she was and nobody can say she wasn’t thorough. She is extremely impressive. Many people quote her as having “pulled Britain up by the bootstraps” without which the economy would have suffered in some way. Don’t get me wrong I am disgusted about her unfair policies to those not in the higher earning classes of society but its nice to see Meryl showing restraint despite her own political views. (Personally I myself share Meryl’s political views so like her Thatcher’s ideals can be difficult for me to reconile with.)

    I admire Streep so much! I adore all her films. I can’t wait to see The Iron Lady. I hope she continues to make films for many many more years.

  27. Jackie says:

    what a breath of fresh air.

  28. jin says:

    She’s smart and really has a way with words when she speaks. She’s a national treasure in the same way Katharine Hepburn was when she was alive. Only she’s much nicer and more likeable.

  29. ViloDeMenus says:

    True talent defies age, it defies trends, it can even defy bad scripts. She’s magical and you never see her work, you simply see the results. She’s an original and will work until she decides not to work. Meryl is just that great.