A Mother finds herself
The silent suffering Meryl Streep
Meryl Streep could, obviously have made it, to the screen on looks
alone. Says Director Michael Cimino, who worked with her on The Deer
Hunter: "The camera embraces her." Lucky camera. Many women would kill
for her slender, fashion-model figure, for that ash-blond hair, oval
face, porcelain skin and those high, exquisite cheekbones. Her eyes
mirror intelligence; their pale blue sparkle demands a new adjective:
merulean. Only a slight bump down the plane of her long, patrician nose
redeems her profile from perfection.
Yet she is more than just another gorgeous face. The typical Hollywood
starlet may think that August Strindberg is a hot new agent, but Streep
played Miss Julie at Vassar. Beginning her professional stage career in
New York only four years ago, she conquered prized roles in Shakespeare
(Measure for Measure, Henry V, The Taming of the Shrew), Chekhov (The
Cherry Orchard) and Brecht-Weill (Happy End), as well as in works by
Arthur Miller and Tennessee Williams. This repertory training came to
Meryl because she was ready for it; her education went on in public, but
critics and audiences did the learning. Director Arvin Brown expresses
what threatens to become a brodmide when he calls her "the most talented
actress of her generation."
Despite her theatrical training, there is nothing stagy about Streep's
performance in Kramer vs. Kramer. Emotions play across her face as
subtly as breezes ruffling pond; rarely have the varieties of anguish
and uncertainty been so thoroughly catalogued through look and gesture
Streep’s understated suffering rescues the character of Joanna Kramer
virtually no-win plot: bad enough that a mother should leave her young
child and then disappear from the film for nearly an hour; worse still
that she come back and try to break up the new that her husband and son
have painfully built. If Joanna is a villain,” Streep recently told
Times’ Elaine Dutka, “if there’s a white hat-black hat situation, that
doesn’t make for an interesting courtroom scene, which I consider the
climax of the film." Joanna's testimony at the custody hearing is indeed
one of the film's most wrenching sequences, precisely because Streep
avoids histrionics, lowering her voice rather than raising it. When she
cries she does so visibly in spite of herself. So thoroughly had Meryl
come to inhabit her character that she wrote every word of this speech
herself.
Director Robert Renton recalls her work that day on the set with amazement:
"We must have shot that scene from seven in, the morning until six at
night, over
And over again. First in close-up, then a Clowning as Kate In Taming of
the Shrew
medium shot, finally a long one. Later in the day, we shot only Dustin
reacting to her on the stand. During this last take, all 30 people in
the room were facing Dustin. I happened to be watching Meryl, as well.
She had the same intensity as she had when she first did the scene."
Added to this consistency is her instinct for the impromptu, for the
movement or gesture that no one thinks of until she does it and makes it
inevitable. Her role in The Seduction of Joe Tynan as the other woman,
having an affair with a married U.S. Senator, also placed her in ar
uneven struggle for audience sympathy. Many would argue that Meryl won
hands down. Recalls co-star Alan Alda: "When she blew Tynan a kiss at
the airport after their affair, that was Meryl's own inspiration. It was
her way of conveying that she didn't get what she wanted. but she was
taking life on her own terms."
Life has rarely failed to give Meryl, who is 30, what she wants. "Mine
is a Cinderella story all right," she says with a trace of self-mockery.
She and her two younger brothers grew up in the leafy and comfortable
suburbs of central New Jersey. Her father was a pharmaceutical company
executive and her mother a graphic artist who did most of her work at
home. "I didn't have what you'd call a happy childhood," insists Streep.
"For one thing. I thought no one liked me. Actually, I'd say I had
pretty good evidence. The kids would chase me up into a tree and hit my
legs with sticks until they bled. Besides that, I was ugly. With my
glasses and permanented hair, I looked like a mini-adult. I had the same
face I have today, and let me tell you the effect wasn't cute or
endearing." Brother Harry, two years her junior, agrees: "in fact, she
was pretty ghastly when she was young,”
The prettiest thing about Meryl in those day was her singing voice. A
promising coloratura soprano, she began taking lessons in New York with
voice coach Estelle Liebling. “The first opera I went to” recalls Meryl,
“was Douglas Moore’s The Wings of the Dove, with Beverly Sills. It was
incredible to see her onstage. Until then, I thought she was just a nice
lady wh had the lesson before me.” One morning Meryls got up, squashed
her glasses underfoot, put peroxide and lemon juice on her hair and set
out to be “the perfect Seventeen magazine knockout.” Boys quickly
appeared, and so did a high school teacher determined to build musicals
around Meryl’s singing. During her freshman year she made her first
appearance onstage as Marian in The Music Man. The young performer was
talented but hardly driven. She gave up voice lessons when they
interfered with her duties as a cheerleader. Classmates name her
Homecoming Queen.
Next came Vassar and the recognition that this wholesome young woman
possessed an eerie gift. Clinton Atkinson, a director on the college
staff, found her acting "hair raising and absolutely mind boggling. I
don’t think anyone ever taught Meryl acting; she really taught herself."
After graduating with a major in drama, she joined a small repertory
company in Vermont and then won a three-year scholarship to the Yale
School of Drama. Her classvvork won ever higher praise. "Whenever, she
did a scene," says Director Robert Lewis, who was a professor there at
the tithe, "You wished that the author was there to see it." She was
also much in demand for major roles by the Yale Repertory Theater. By
the time she earned her master of fine arts degree she had developed an
incipient ulcer: "It was very liberating when I got out to find that
you're not competing with 24 people but with 20,00 others."
Meryl had auditioned in New York occasionally while still at Yale. When
shw moved to the city, directors scrambled to use her. Her first
professional appearance was at Lincoln Center in Joseph Papp production
of Trelawney of the Wells. Next she played in a program of two one-act
plays and did the seemingly impossible: she became both a slovenly,
bovine Southerner in Tennessee Williams’ Twenty Seven Wagons Full of
Cotton and a thin, sexy secretary in Arthur Miller’s a Memory of Two
Mondays. Says Director Marvin Brown: The audiences didn’t realize that
they had seen the same girl twice. These were the first of seven stage
roles that Meryl was to play in 1976.
During one, a Central Park production of Measure for Measure, she worked
with John Cazale, a respected actor known to film audiences for his role
as the cowardly son Fredo in the Godfather and the Godfather Part II.
They fell in love and began living together. Actor Joe Grifasi, a friend
of both a the time, says: “Meryl admired his ability to cut through the
crap and focus on the essentials. He was very careful to maintain his
equilibrium.” They spent as much time together as their careers
permitted; the summer of 1977 found them in Steubenville, Ohio, working
on The Deer Hunter. Neither one talked n the set about what they both
knew by then: Cazale had bone cancer and, barring a miracle, was dying.
Meryl next went to Austria to work on the TV series Holocaust. Cazale
was too weak to follow her. “I wanted t go home, she say. “John was very
sick and I wanted to be with him. But they just kept extending the damn
thing. It was like being in prison for 21/2 months.” Actor Fritz Weaver
shared this internment and remembers Meryl admiringly: “In Holocaust she
played a woman whose lover was imprisoned in a concentration camp. Meryl
must have been living it twice, in the story and in real life. But there
was not one moment of self-pity.”
Rusing back to New York, Meryl took a leave from acting to care for
Cazale full time. During his last few weeks she moved into the hospital;
every day she read him the sports pages, comically imitating the
overheated delivery to the TV announcers and trying to nourish his
spirits until the end. He died in Mary 1978. Afterward, says Streep, “I
was emotionally blitzed.” She began work on Joe Tynan four months later:
"It was a selfish period, a period of healing for me, of trying to
incorporate what had happened into my life. I wanted to find a place
where I could carry it forever and still function. I'm O.K. now,
obviously, but the death is still very much with me."
Along with her work , Meryl found comfort in the companionship of
Sculptor Don Gummer, a longtime pal of her brother Harry's. Before some
friends even knew they were seriously involved, they married in
September 1978. Stage and film work kept Meryl on the run during her
first months of marriage; since April, though, she has been staying
home, where her husband works, in a sprawling studio loft south of
Greenwich Village. For fun they visit galleries and museums, go to the
movies and entertain friends at home.
Meryl's pregnancy was the prime reason for her professional inactivity.
On Nov. 13, she gave birth to a 6-lb. 14-oz. boy, named Henry. The baby
will impose some new demands on the haphazard, casual Gummer household;
Meryl's recorded message on her phone-answering machine sounds more laid
back than most new parents are allowed to be: "Hello ... um ... if you
want to leave a message, please wait for the beep because ... um ... I
don't know... otherwise the thing cuts off. Thank you." There is no sign
of the actress in this voice, but it reveals a side of Meryl that her
friends know well. She ducks formality whenever she can and prefers
rolled up jeans and canvas shoes to the sleek clothes she wears in
Kramer. Sensitive to a variety of women's issues, she speaks forcefully
about sexism in films and the need for new methods of male contraception.
Moviegoers have yet to see the full range of Streep's art. She is an
expert mimic (she copied her dead-on Southern accent in Joe Tynan from
Dinah Shore) and can turn a hilarious pratfall. Her film roles have
mainly been those of vulnerable modem women. She has not yet played a
period character from a position (if strength, but plans to start work
on the screen version of John Fowles' The French Lieutenant's Woman
early next spring.
The prospect of Meryl as an enigmatic Victorian rebel is intriguing.
"Eventually," she says, "I'd like to be as adventurous in films as I've
been onstage. I know you're supposed to do film small, but I think I
hold back too much." When she lets go, everyone had better watch:
"There's so much untapped with in me."
© 1979 Time Magazine. No copyright infringment intended.