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SALMA HAYEK on
'ASK THE DUST'
Contributed by
David Cross, Executive Editor
for JoSon Movie Guides
March 1, 2006
Set in Depression-era Los
Angeles, the period drama Ask the Dust tells the
story of a writer (Colin Farrell) who, despite the
social taboos of the time, finds his life's muse in a
Mexican beauty (Salma Hayek) and becomes involved with
her. The film is written and directed by Robert Towne,
and based on the novel by John Fante.
In this interview, Salma talks about working with
Farrell and Towne, shooting nude scenes in freezing
water, and forming an unusually strong emotional
attachment to her character Camilla. (In fact, she gets
teary-eyed by simply recounting Camilla's story for this
Q&A.)
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The Interview
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MEDIA: Robert
approached you for this role some time ago, yes?
SALMA: He gave me this script eight years ago, and I did
not understand the character. And I thought she was an
awful human being, and racist...I just did not have the
vision to see the subtleties of the character. And then
eight years later, I read...that script and I thought,
"Oh my God, what a fantastic opportunity. What a great
character."
How did your character of Camilla in the movie differ
from the Camilla in the book?
I did not read the book on purpose, because Robert
developed the character...I think it's different than in
the book, and there is more of it in the movie than
there is in the book. My character was more developed in
the script, so I talked to Robert. I said, "I'm not
going to read [the book]. I'm going to read it when the
movie's over." And then I became so close to this
character that when we finished the film, Colin gave me,
as a wrap present, a first edition of the book. So I
started to read it on the plane, and I was sobbing. And
then I put it away. I got home like a week or two later.
I couldn't read the book because I missed her so much. I
put the book away and I said, "I'll wait and I'll read
it when I'm not so close to this character."
Do you become this attached to all your roles?
No.
What made Camilla so special to you?
I think what happened was that my inspiration for this
character was...I thought of all the women in the
history of the earth that inspired a man--that in some
way touched the life of a man. And maybe the man didn't
notice until they were not together anymore. I thought
of all the women that inspire great artists. Even if it
was just someone's first girlfriend, and later on in
life, you still remember that first kiss, [and] that
person makes you who you are as a man later, and they
will never know it. And I thought of Camilla. [pauses to
wipe her eyes] I thought of this woman who thought [she]
did everything wrong in her life, and she never
accomplished anything, and she dies thinking that. And
yet she inspired this fabulous book. So I would keep
thinking of her. And I wish I could go back and tell
her, but I can't, you know? [laughs] Because it's almost
like after she's dead is when it really got even worse
to me. She had such a great spirit, but there were so
little expectations--because that's all she could afford
to expect in life--that she almost dies happy. There's a
lot about the character. It doesn't always happen, but
there are some characters you really create a
relationship with, almost as if they were your friend.
And you never get into their heads again or think like
them. They're gone.
What was your experience of working with Colin
Farrell like?
I was a little bit worried about working with Colin. I
was like, "I'm going to have to set him straight!" [But
he was] never a problem. Always on time, always showed
up--but always showed up passionate about the job,
passionate about work, eager in the rehearsals. That is
very usual. [laughs] I shouldn't be saying this, but
that is very unusual. This guy was so thirsty for the
process. I think he didn't have a lot of training, so
for him to have the opportunity to have a rehearsal...He
loved it. He was so there. And that was my favorite
thing. He was always participating in the process
seriously. Very respectful of the work.
Robert has described you both as "volatile actors."
What do you think he meant by that?
Well, it was a very, very good combination. We worked
really well together because we are both very creative,
but we really trusted each other and we were very
respectful of each other. So I think probably what
Robert is referring to is that we rehearsed a lot, which
was a new thing for me. We rehearsed for months. And
every time we would rehearse, he'd take new things and
rewrite and do things. And we had a lot of freedom to
play around, to improvise, so when we got to the set, we
were very well in tune. So sometimes I would surprise
him and throw something at him that was never rehearsed
and never planned. And he would brilliantly just catch
it and throw it back at me in a way I never
expected...It was so exciting to work with an actor like
that.
Did you do anything special to prepare for the nude
scenes?
I gained weight for that!
Really?
They had a good hamburger place. I ate. I thought the
character should be 1930s, but Mexican...I thought she
should be a little bit "meaty"...I actually put a lot of
weight on, and I actually haven't been able to lose all
of it. [laughs] But you know what? Once I got naked with
all that weight on, I said, "It's okay." So I sort of
stayed up since then.
How physically grueling was your scene in the ocean?
Oh, Robert didn't tell you? It was freezing! Freezing,
unbearable, cold. And I got a little bit of hypothermia.
They were really careful. We had to take special drinks
that would keep our body heated. I mean, we had to
prepare physically to do the scene because it was so
cold.
Was that scene filmed in an actual ocean?
No. Because the actual ocean...Not only it would have
been just as cold, but like a week before we arrived,
somebody got eaten by a shark there! Exactly where we
were going to shoot! So they had to, really fast, find
this place. And I thought it was going to be warm, but
it wasn't. So they had to prepare us physically to go in
the water. There was a point [where we had to] stop
because the doctor had to check both of us. And of
course, the Irish guy was fine, but the Mexican girl had
hypothermia! So they had to pull me out immediately and
that was it.
Were you as comfortable and relaxed as you seemed in
that scene?
I was not comfortable and I was not relaxed at all...I
act comfortable, but I was not. And as a matter
of fact, I was really nervous, because this is not the
one scene that I wanted to do, you know. And it was
cold...So at one point, Colin came, started making
jokes, and [I said], "I'm not in the mood right now! I'm
really upset about this!" I'm barking. And out he comes,
butt-naked from the trailer, jumping and doing ballet
dance. And I started laughing. It was the most
ridiculous thing. Everybody started laughing. And he did
it to relax me, because I was really tense. And I have
to say that when we were doing the scene, he not once
looked down. I sometimes talk to guys that...I am
dressed, and they talk to me like this. [does the
"wandering eyes" thing] And Colin, for all his
reputation...I was like expecting, "What's he going to
do? Is he going to try to get too funny here?" Never.
Never took his eyes off mine. Completely supportive. I
was very surprised by Colin Farrell. I mean, with all
the stories you hear... [laughs]
Did we break eye contact with you?
[laughs] Not after I mentioned it!
Was the love scene in the bedroom more taxing than
the ocean stuff?
Oh no, it was much warmer. [laughs] It was easier to do
the love scene, because he's covering you, so not
everybody's looking at your body. There are certain
tricks you can do within a contained environment. And
it's an actor that I was very comfortable with and I
trusted. I don't want to disappoint, but you know,
because he's always on top of me, he's covering me most
of the time. So you can really have like a tender moment
where you're not freezing, worried that the whole team
is looking at you...So at least with Colin, I had some
sort of trust. He was very protective.
Do you have an upcoming project that you are
particularly passionate about?
There is something I am writing, and I don't know how
long it's going to take.
What are you writing?
[coyly] I'm writing...a movie that I want to direct.
[laughs] It's about classical music.
Having done them all, how do you feel about
producing, writing, acting, and directing?
Producing is hell, writing is frustrating, acting is
really satisfying, directing is heaven.
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