New Yorker 10月14日 08:38
黛安·基顿:从宗教信仰到银幕角色的内心探索
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文章深入探讨了演员黛安·基顿的职业生涯和个人成长,从她童年时期的宗教信仰,到她在银幕上塑造的复杂角色。文中分析了她如何通过角色表达对美好生活的向往,以及她对身体政治的敏感处理。文章还提及了她作为艺术家在艺术书籍和纪录片领域的尝试,以及她在回忆录中坦诚面对的个人斗争,特别是与饮食失调的抗争,展现了她作为一位多才多艺且深刻的艺术家的多面性。

🌟 宗教信仰与角色投射:基顿童年时期对宗教的虔诚与困惑,以及她渴望“去往天堂”的心态,在她塑造的如《马文的房间》中身患绝症的贝茜等角色身上得以体现。这些角色常常怀揣着对稍纵即逝的生命而言,更为持久的喜悦的梦想,如同田纳西·威廉姆斯笔下的劳拉,专注于守护和欣赏易碎的美好。

🎭 身体政治与情感表达:在《月亮熄灭》等八十年代的作品中,基顿以其敏感的表演,深刻刻画了女性在身体和情感上的挣扎。她对身体的界限和亲密关系中的不确定性有着细腻的呈现,例如在与工人弗兰克初次约会时的退却与渴望交织的情感,以及在《教父》系列中饰演的凯,通过拒绝生育来对抗家族的暴力 legacy,展现了角色的道德立场。

📚 艺术探索与自我剖析:除了演艺事业,基顿还积极投身于艺术书籍的创作和纪录片制作,如《天堂》。这些项目是她对影像和拼贴艺术热爱的延伸。她的回忆录《然后又一次》更是深刻地剖析了她与母亲的关系,以及她与饮食失调的长期斗争,展现了其 raw and true 的内心世界,堪称对成瘾症的深刻洞察。

✨ 内向闪耀与艺术家的自我认知:基顿是一位在内向和渴望闪耀之间寻求平衡的艺术家。她认为自己的身份与创作紧密相连,即便在面对“英雄瘾君子”这类极具挑战性的角色时,也展现出其作为演员的深邃思考和对艺术的敬畏。

In Vanity Fair in 1987, Keaton told Joan Juliet Buck, “I was always pretty religious as a kid, but I had trouble with Jesus early on because I couldn’t understand that there was a son of God here on earth. I was primarily interested in religion because I wanted to go to heaven.” Longing to be somewhere else, someone else, up in the firmament, is the mark of a dreamer, and Keaton’s characters, like the terminally ill Bessie in “Marvin’s Room” (1996), dream of joy, a joy that is less fleeting than life. Bessie’s father, Marvin, has had a stroke and can’t speak, so Bessie holds a mirror up to the window to reflect sunbeams toward him and make him smile and feel the warmth of the world’s heart. In those moments, she’s like an older Laura from Tennessee Williams’s “The Glass Menagerie,” polishing her bits of glass so she can watch the light play in them.

Like Laura, Keaton’s characters don’t know what to do with the attention they crave once they’ve got it. There are actually very few love scenes in Keaton’s movies, and the ones I remember seem partially obscured by darkness or clothing: in that era, innuendo was generally more interesting to filmmakers than being explicit. Plus, there was her natural modesty (“I have definite opinions about my body,” she told Buck). Keaton distinguished herself in her first Broadway show, “Hair,” in 1968, not only by singing “Black Boys” (“Black boys are delicious, chocolate-flavored love”) but by not taking off her clothes at the end of the first act—she didn’t see the point.

In the eighties, Keaton gave several remarkable performances about the politics of the body. In the sensitively drawn, almost emotionally overwhelming movie “Shoot the Moon” (1982), directed by Alan Parker, she plays Faith Dunlap, a middle-aged woman with four young children. In the first scenes, we watch as Faith gets dressed to go out, only later to be emotionally stripped down as she realizes that she no longer wants to be married to her husband, George, a writer, beautifully played by Albert Finney. Soon after she and George separate, Faith entertains a workman named Frank, who is building a tennis court on the couple’s property. As she and Frank sit apart in the parlor, nearly silent, first-date jitters, tentativeness, anxiety, hope, fear, and attraction fill the space between them. Frank makes a pass, and, in a move that is part Faith, part Keaton, Faith retreats. But then, there’s a touch, a kiss, and you can almost hear her heart beating beneath her oversized shirt: Will I be hurt? Is this love? Is it?

Like many of Keaton’s characters, Kay, the wife of Michael Corleone (Al Pacino), in Francis Ford Coppola’s three “Godfather” films, lives in a morally compromised world: goodness is not part of anyone’s calculations; reflection slows things down (unless you’re thinking about how to stick it to the next guy before he sticks it to you). In the first film, Keaton wears a terrible wig—a coiffure she loathed—but I think the awkwardness of it actually helped her to develop Kay’s awkwardness; her innocence is in direct contrast to her husband’s canniness. Just as Keaton was a sort of Wasp foil to Allen’s Jewishness, Kay is “white” in contrast to the Corleones’ darkness. But Keaton doesn’t over-emphasize Kay’s difference; Kay just is, and, when she rebels against the Corleones’ legacy of violence, she uses her own body to take a stand, telling Michael, “I wouldn’t bring another one of your sons into this world!” Kay’s ethics are her downfall, just as sensuality becomes a kind of downfall for Anna in “The Good Mother” (1988). A single parent, Anna falls for an Irish sculptor (Liam Neeson) who wakes her up to her own body, to pleasure, but, even as she explores the beauty of it, you can see, flickering across Keaton’s face, all the doubt and fear Anna feels when intimacy—the ultimate stranger—shows up at her door.

Throughout her acting career, Keaton, whose diverse creativity and productivity got less attention than her persona—she would not have known who she was if she wasn’t making something—worked on other projects. With the curator Marvin Heiferman, she made art books that drew on movie stills and tabloid pictures, while also producing works of her own. (Check out “Reservations,” her book of photographs taken in hotel interiors. Not surprisingly, Keaton was drawn to images of furniture that was unusual or positioned at odd angles.) Her books, like her documentary filmmaking—her 1987 film, “Heaven,” explored various ideas about the afterlife—were an extension of her love of imagery and collage, an interest she inherited from her mother, the charismatic Dorothy Hall.

In 2011, Keaton published “Then Again,” her first memoir (three more would follow). The book is beautiful for a number of reasons, one being that it is a kind of conversation with her mother, whose triumph in the “Mrs. Los Angeles” beauty pageant when Keaton was a child was an impetus for her getting onstage herself. Incorporating selections from Dorothy’s journals, scrapbooks, and collages in “Then Again” gave Keaton a scrim to hide behind while she talked about herself; the most harrowing section of the book has to do with her body, her struggle with bulimia. She developed this self-destructive behavior when she was in “Hair”—she was told she’d be paid more if she slimmed down—and it continued for years until she finally beat it with the help of psychoanalysis (the talking cure, where, perhaps for the first time, Keaton was invested in dialogue outside of a script). In that chapter of the memoir, everything we feel and identify with in Keaton’s performances—the clouds that sometimes obscure the sun, the goodness that cannot face itself—comes rushing out, raw and true; it’s a shattering accomplishment, and one of the best things I have ever read about addiction. When I got to know Keaton a little, I said that, given all that she had learned, she should play the heroin-addicted Mary Tyrone in Eugene O’Neill’s “Long Day’s Journey Into Night” one day. Her eyes widened, and she smiled as she turned away. Then Keaton, the introvert who loved to shine, the thinker who thought of herself as anything but, looked back and said, “That’s all I need! Are you out of your mind?” ♦

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黛安·基顿 Diane Keaton 电影表演 女性角色 艺术创作 个人成长 回忆录
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