Streep's Ahead
It was around 1980 that Meryl Streep was first hailed as America's greatest living actress. And who can dispute that, for what little it's worth, she remains in that Olympian position? Ten Oscar nominations - with wins for Kramer vs. Kramer (1979) and Sophie's Choice (1982), hardly her best work in retrospect - is no fluke for a woman who had conquered the New York stage by her mid twenties. No one else has demonstrated such emotional range or such a facility with different accents, demeanors, social classes, and looks. Her greatest achievement may be that virtually every time out she makes Meryl Streep disappear.
But Streep has her critics and they've raised pertinent questions about her choices: Why the ill-starred resort to comedies of dubious merit in the late '80s and early '90s? Why The River Wild (1994)? Why, above all, her abandonment of theater? In the following interview, Streep claims the constraints of motherhood have determined her path: She has three daughters and a son, none of them yet twenty. And to her credit she doesn't blame that old chestnut "the lack of good roles for women" for what she has decided to do. While it's fair to say the mid '90s have been lean years for her, she was outstanding in both The Bridges of Madison County (1995) and Marvin's Room (1996), as well as this fall's One True Thing, in which she made maternalism and domestication saintly. She's better still as the pinched Irish schoolteacher who dominates her unruly sisters (Brid Brennan, Kathy Burke, Sophie Thompson, Catherine McCormack) in '30s Donegal in the film of Brian Friel's elegiac play Dancing at Lughnasa: It'll probably bring her nomination number eleven.
When I met Meryl Streep in a Greenwich Village restaurant her hair was tied back and she was wearing a billowy white blouse. At forty-nine, she is beautiful - much more so than she allows herself to appear onscreen. She seemed serene but admitted to feeling nervous about her scheduled appearance on The Tonight Show two days later. "I'm all over the place," she said. How touching is that?