Telluride: Angelina Jolie and Pablo LarraĆn on Reactions to āMaria,ā Singing Opera and Celebrity
On Sunday, less than 24 hours after the Telluride Film Festivalās North American premiere of Maria, a drama about the rollercoaster life of the legendary opera singer Maria Callas, The Hollywood Reporter sat down with its star, Angelina Jolie, and director, Pablo LarraĆn, for a wide-ranging conversation.
Jolie said of playing Callas, in a performance for which she is generating white-hot best actress Oscar buzz, āIt certainly was the hardest thing Iāve ever done.ā Why? On the most literal level, the Girl, Interrupted Oscar winner had to learn how to sing opera and then do so in front of others live and on camera (her voice was ultimately blended with Callasās in the final product). But beyond that, she clearly feels a personal bond with āLa Divina,ā who died in 1977, the age of 53, when Jolie was just two.
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Both, Jolie acknowledged, could be described as world-famous performers ā āicons,ā as LarraĆn puts it ā to whom the public and critics werenāt always kind, and whose relationships were often dissected by strangers, which took a major toll on them. But, she emphasized, āWhere we really connect is in our dedication to our work, our vulnerability, our loneliness and our love of communicating with an audience.ā (Jolie also spoke with Rebecca Keegan for this weekās THR cover story.)
A transcript of the converation, lightly edited for clarity and brevity, appears below.
* * *
What have you made of your Telluride experience so far?
JOLIE Itās just such a wonder. Thereās such a warmth among the people ā even among the press!
We try.
JOLIE Itās such a relaxed environment for everybody to be in, and thereās so much time to see each otherās work and support each otherās projects. Itās as it should be: all about the work and less about presentation.
You guys came here directly from your world premiere in Veniceā¦
LARRAĆN Yeah. Itās such a different rhythm over there. Itās so intense. Itās super beautiful. Itās organized chaos. And then here, itās so relaxed and people are really into the movies ā everyoneās seeing two or three films a day, at least. Itās the only film festival where you can see movies when you have a movie in the festival. Iāve seen three films. Itās unusual.
JOLIE We saw Anora this morning.
And what have you made of the reactions here to your film?
LARRAĆN I like it, when people take the film in the way that we felt it and did it ā that itās not entirely rational, itās more in an emotional space, which is what music is. Opera is something that is mostly an emotional experience. And I think Maria Callas did that, and took the emotional experience to a different level in the operatic world. The aim of this film is to try to do that somehow. I think people are connecting with that and itās beautiful.
Angelina, do you take a peek at what people are writing?
JOLIE I never read reviews. Not the good or the bad. I actually have read the bad in the past when Iāve directed, because Iām curious about what is or isnāt landing.
Theyāve been pretty good for this oneā¦
JOLIE Yeah, Iāve heard through people I trust and love. And Iāll ask Pablo if thereās a concern or if thereās something misunderstood. But yeah, it [this film] is so new for me. We just put this out, and Iām so emotionally connected to it that it means a lot for people to be kind or open to it.
I suspect I know the answer to this, but why are you so emotionally connected to this film in particular? Is there more of you personally in it, or is it the amount of prep and work that went into it, or something else?
JOLIE I havenāt fully analyzed that myself. It certainly was the hardest thing Iāve ever done. Anytime youāre playing a real person whose life has meant so much to people, you think of that individual and you carry that responsibility. On this one, I really felt that every step. When you walk inside someone elseās footsteps, you connect to them ā and on this one in particular, which is about the last days of her life.
Pablo, some people refer to your last three movies ā 2016ās Jackie, 2021ās Spencer and now Maria ā as a trilogy. Do you?
LARRAĆN I never planned to make three movies. I was invited to do Jackie by Darren Aronofsky, and then we thought about doing Spencer, and then before that movie was over, we invited Angie to play Callas. So itās like an accidental three movies that have some form of connection.
Theyāre all about 20th century female icons. Maria and Jackie were both involved with Aristotle Onassis. Princess Diana was kind of haunted by Anne Boleyn, who Mariaās singing about. And they all died too young. Anything else?
LARRAĆN I guess they were all dealing with very strong relationships, and they have in common that they all were able to find their own place on earth by themselves, not related to a man, basically related to their real identity, I think. But yeah, there are connections because they basically shaped a big chunk of what we understand of the second-half of the last century.
Angelina, I donāt think youāve sung before in films, and I donāt know if you had a particular interest in Maria Callas before this. Pablo, what made you think of Angelina for the part?
LARRAĆN Itās a little bit embarrassing to say this in front of her.
JOLIE Yeah, I kind of feel like you shouldnāt say it.
LARRAĆN But Iāll do it, of course. We met twice in previous years before we connected on this. When I thought about enormous mystery that Maria Callas had, I thought, āShe [Jolie] can do that.ā Thereās a lot that you need to imagine and complete, and I think cinema is about what we as an audience can complete. And then the discipline ā a movie like this requires a lot of discipline, not just to prepare for the role, but to hold it as you shoot it. Angelina is someone who was there to work; she is a worker, like everyone else in that set. And then, having someone that would be called āLa Divaā by all the other characters who would have that sort of energy, that presence, and she obviously has that. This woman [Callas] is an icon, and we needed to have an icon play another icon. What makes an icon? If I would be able to explain it, then it would be a formula and people could just recreate it. Itās not possible. Sorry, Angelina, I had to say it.
JOLIE Iām embarrassed. [laughs]
This movie raises an interesting thing about celebrity. Callas was such a huge name in her time, but today, probably nine out of 10 people on the street wouldnāt know who she was.
LARRAĆN Especially in the US.
JOLIE In the U.S., yeah.
Angelina, she died when you were just two. What, if anything, did you know about her prior to this project coming along?
JOLIE I knew some of her music, I knew of her, but so much of this was a discovery for me. I hope what audiences find is that there was so much research done into what we believe she really was like ā the human being behind the voice and behind the image. Maybe not ābehind the voice,ā because the voice is the woman. But I think even if Iād read biographies on her, I [wouldnāt have understood her] until I stepped in and kind of felt her. I hope more people discover her and opera and go to the opera and listen to opera. Itās really a transformative, unique art form ā I think it does something to our souls that is essential.
Pablo, you grew up going to the opera?
LARRAĆN My parents would get a year pass. I was more interested than my brothers and sisters. I understood that opera is something that takes all of your attention. You canāt have opera playing in the background. Itās not like pop music or any other form of music. If you listen to opera, itās the only thing you can do. And itās something that can be transformative, can make you feel things that are impossible to explain. I grew up not really caring about the argument of the opera ā I was not reading the subtitles because it would take my eyes off the stage and the singers. Itās an entirely emotional process, and I think thatās what we all did in this film. Everyone from Guy [Hendrix Dyas], our production designer, to Massimo [Cantini Parrini], our costume designer ā everyone was just creating this operatic world that felt like, I donāt know, a construction of an opera stage inside of her own house, inside of her imagination.
Angelina, did having to sing give you pause about doing this film? I mean, even the greatest singer alive today would probably be intimidated about having to ādoā Callasā¦
JOLIE Oh, it was daunting. At first, I really didnāt understand opera, so I was naive enough to think that I was just going to take singing classes and we would somehow do the magic of movies and make it through. Then it became very clear to me that you really canāt fake opera, and that I was going to actually have to learn how to sing. He [Pablo] knew this all along, of course, but this became more and more clear to me. But what a great privilege to have the support of a director like Pablo, who believes in you and supports a team around you to train you and teach you and grow your instrument and help you to do something you didnāt think you could ever do. So, though it was really frightening, I never didnāt think, āHow fortunate am I?ā
Pablo, can you explain the technicalities of how you blended Angelinaās voice with Callasās voice?
LARRAĆN This is not pop music or rock. Itās not asking Angie to sing, I donāt know, David Bowie. Opera requires a pitch, so you need to be in the right pitch to find the color, the structure of the melody and the emotion that Callas sang with. First she [Jolie] learned how to stand, posture, breathing, then the accent of the words that she was singing, mostly in Italian ā and then just sang it over and over again. On the set, she had an earpiece [playing the accompanying music] and she was singing out loud with no amplification, in front of the crew ā sometimes there were 50 people, sometimes 200, sometimes 500. The only thing that we heard was Angieās voice, nothing else, because everything else is through wires. [With regard to the mix blending Jolieās and Callasās voices], Iāll tell you who does it. Itās a guy called John Warhurst, who has been doing this for many years. He did it with Rami Malek [for Bohemian Rhapsody], and the Bob Marley movie [Bob Marley: One Love], and now heās doing the Michael Jackson movie [Michael]. Itās really the only way to do it. He explained to me, and then I said, āYou have to [explain it to Jolie].ā So we had a Zoom call, and Angie was blinking fast on the other sideā [laughs]
JOLIE As he was explaining. [laughs]
LARRAĆN If we capture her voice, then we not only have her voice, but we have the breathing, the emotion, and every sound she produces is there. So then, when we mix it, you have the elements. We donāt want to spoil it, but in the last rehearsal when she [Callas] is singing in the present, thatās mostly Angie. And then when we go to La Scala in ā59, and itās Callasā prime, but thereās a little bit of Angie. Sometimes itās two percent, five percent or seven percent in the prime. In the present, it could be up to 50. And in some moments, it could be 80. But thereās always a balance, never forgetting that weāre making a movie about the greatest opera voice.
Angelina, you and Maria obviously are totally different people from totally different eras, but what are the ways, if any, that you found that you most relate to her? I mean, it seems to me that there are certain things about her that few people could understand more than youā¦
JOLIE Yes. I think it must be obvious to the audience, because I get asked this every time. Itās quite interesting. I almost want to ask it back, to hear what everybody else is thinkingā
Well, I could throw out a few if you want.
JOLIE Oh, okay.
Itās up to you. Do you want to hear?
JOLIE Sure.
I mean, she was obviously one of the most well-known people in the world. People werenāt always particularly nice about her. Her personal relationships were discussed a lot, which is probably not a lot of fun. I donāt know, am I leaving anything out? Are those accurate?
JOLIE I think that is accurate and what people would see. I think the truth is where we really connect is in our dedication to our work, our vulnerability, our loneliness and our love of communicating with an audience.
Angelina, this is kind of one of these impossible questions, but would you rather have been a very famous person when she was one or now?
JOLIE I donāt know because I didnāt live at that time, so I canāt compare. I think weāre all curious about living at a different time.
The film suggests that Callas died with two people that really cared about her. Is that a happy thing to know or a sad thing to know? Both were on her payroll, but they seemed to really care a lot about herā¦
JOLIE I think those people did really care about her, and she wasnāt completely alone, and Iām very happy for that. Iām very grateful to them for that.
LARRAĆN And there were more than two people. The movie needs to reduce certain things. But those wonderful Italian actors, Pierfrancesco [Favino, who plays Callasās butler] and Alba [Rohrwacher, who plays Callasās maid], were extraordinary.
Maria is clearly haunted by the sound of her voice from the past, to the extent that sheās not even able to listen to recordings of it. Angelina, how do you do if, say, youāre watching TV and come across a film of yours from the past?
JOLIE I mean, there are quite a few of my films Iāve never seen, but she didnāt listen to her music for very different reasons, I think. I love the experience of creating; I donāt necessarily like the experience of watching my own work. I do love to know if an audience connected. It depends. Some things have come on from when I was young, and Iāll see my kids enjoy them, and I can remember a different time and the people I knew then ā itās like a family album sometimes when you see your old work. But I wonāt watch it [all the way through]. Do you [Pablo]?
LARRAĆN Never. I never look back.
JOLIE Really?
LARRAĆN I donāt do that. No, I canāt.
JOLIE Have your children, though, asked to see any of your work? Because thatās how it happened to me.
LARRAĆN Well, most of my movies in Latin America are on Netflix, so they have seen some of them. But thereās one thing Iād like to say before you go, that I think is very important. Opera started in the 16th century. The aim was to connect the theater with popular music. It was really a folkloric event, and it was for the masses. And then over the years, because of the Germans, it became a more elitist type of artwork. And then Maria Callas sang most of what is known as bel canto, which is a tradition of composers, mostly Italian, and they were more popular. She followed the tradition that first was Caruso and then Maria and then Pavarotti and today, to some extent, is Andrea Bocelli: they were people that were trying to put opera back where it belongs, which is not in elitist, $500 seats kind of shows, but where people could just really enjoy and feel that music out there. Maria Callas did that. If this movie ā thanks to Angelina, thanks to Callas, thanks to everyone who did this film, and obviously thanks to the composers that made that music ā can make one person, five, ten, one million, or whatever it is, interested in opera, then I feel that we will have succeeded in a very beautiful way, because weāre trying to put opera where it belongs, back to the masses.
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