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Meryl Streep dazzles Shanghai audiences with tales
Award-winning actress Meryl Streep dazzles audiences in Shanghai with tales of her unique career.
After receiving American Film Institute's 32nd Life Achievement Award on June 10, Streep flew to Shanghai on Saturday with her husband and three daughters. She met audiences before the screening of her movie "The Hours," awarded the best film prize to Iranian film "Tradition of Lover Killing" on the closing ceremony and enjoyed a pleasant family trip to the nearby canal town of Xitang in Zhejiang Province. "A friend of mine who was born in Shanghai told me it is 'Paris of the East.' on the way from the airport, I looked through the car window and saw so many beautiful buildings,'' she says. ``Each individual in these buildings has stories and each woman has something amazing in her mind that could teach us something. I'm curious about people that are different from me.'' Among Hollywood's dazzling diamond stars, Streep looks just like the purple crystal she wears -- natural, mature and charismatic. ``Thank goodness there are always women who like to be on the cover of magazines, so I don't have to do that,'' she chuckles. ``I've just never been comfortable in the Hollywood world perhaps because I'm a middle-class girl from New Jersey. I don't like parties and glamour. In my DNA, it's not me. I can pretend, act and get through certain evenings. But it's not what I enjoy. I enjoy my family, my dogs, my lake and hiking in mountains.'' Streep was born in 1949 in Summit, New Jersey, to pharmaceutical company executive Harry Streep and commercial artist Mary Streep. As a seven-year-old, she says she ``looked like a 40-year-old. I acted like one, too. The kids thought I was one of their teachers.'' ``People think old is a bad thing, but to me it's good,'' she says. ``I was not beautiful. But I was a funny-looking child and a shower to stand in the middle of the room acting. I never felt like a child. The way I looked at the world was not naive. When I got to 40, I thought now I'm who I am.'' Streep notes that she gained confidence in herself while attending a university that was just for women. ``How we looked was not important, instead how we thought was more important,'' she recalls. ``How we argued, learned, discovered, laughed and joked mattered. I felt being a human being, not a woman or child and felt the quality of my character.'' An anecdote for getting the role in ``Out of Africa'' proves her genuine charisma. ``At first the producers thought I was not sexy enough to play this Denmark writer,'' she says. ``So I went to them in a low-cut dress. But at last they told me it's not the dress but the quality of my mind that won the role.'' Streep's career is enviously perfect. She is a recipient of two Oscars, five Golden Globes, an Emmy and dozens of nominations for the industry's most prestigious accolades. ``For success, luck is most important,'' she concludes. ``Luck presents opportunities while talent gets you into the door. Stamina, energy and love of the world are also crucial.'' Streep is a curious woman who loves to learn. In ``Sophie's Choice,'' she learned Polish so that she could shape her mouth and create a real-life character who immigrates from Poland to America. While preparing for her role in ``The Music of Heart,'' she spent two months learning the violin. ``It was very hard, but I did very well. I practiced the violin for six hours a day, and I could play Bach's concerto,'' she says, her voice brimming with pride. ``It's encouraging to be able to learn and challenge new things. I want to learn Chinese since there are so many jokes they talk about that I cannot understand.'' In addition to her life in the limelight, Streep is the wife of a loving husband and mother of four children. Like any mother in the world, she has sacrificed opportunities for her family. This gifted woman says she would never try a career in directing because the time-consuming job is not suitable for her family's size. ``The children are the most important thing in my life, and I removed other options for them,'' says this mother of a son and three daughters. ``I was trained to be a theater actress, but I haven't done a play for 12 years -- plays are staged at nights and on weekends, when my children are at home. For movies, I went during the day when they were at school. I work for four months and have three or four months' off. It's a good profession to have a family. My children are proud of me but only the oldest one has seen my films.'' Unlike other movie stars, Streep prefers New York to Los Angeles. Her family moved to New York two days before September 11 terrorist attack in 2001. ``We did not see our children for 24 hours that day because the tunnel and bridge closed so that they could not leave Manhattan,'' she recalls. ``It was a terrible day, but it made my children love New York and be proud of the city. It's difficult to live in Los Angeles if you are in my business, which is everywhere and suffocating. There's a lot of attention to how you look, how young you are, how beautiful you are, how rich you are and which car you drive. I didn't like it much. ``I love New York, a fabulous, global city of all kinds of people,'' she adds. ``My children go to a school, which is like a global village with Cambodian, Russian, Thailand, Philippines and Chinese. Los Angeles did not present them the opportunities. I was grateful to bring my girls to Shanghai to let them see the rest of the world and experience other people.'' Li Xiaojun, Streep's interpreter during her Chinese trip, says the actress is very different from other stars. ``She is a woman worthy of respect. She is kind of a person not only to her family but also to everyone. She cares about details and everyone. I've learned a lot from her from this trip,'' Li adds. Streep reveals that she will make a movie with Chinese opera director Chen Shizhen in July about a true story of the life of a Chinese student who studies at an American university. ``China has grand literature, and all the stories are going to be emerging and be talked about,'' she says. ``In New York the headlines for Cannes Film Festival were `Asian West'.'' It has been a long time ago since Streep first landed on the Academy Award stage for ``Kramer Vs Kramer'' in 1979. But this Life Achievement Award winner still remembered the very feeling that night. ``That movie was one of the first that made me from an unknown actress to a movie star,'' she recalls. ``I really fell apart and thought it could not be happening to me. I was in the lady's room at the Academy Awards with many, many famous stars, where I forgot my statue. As a young actress it was overwhelming and I thought those people were bigger, more important than me. Now I've lived in this world and find many stars are ironic and unhappy. ``The awards and ceremonies are the things I'm not good at. I'm good at acting a character in the film world. I love doing that and never feel tiring,'' says Streep, her purple crystal earrings modestly twinkling from her ears and a genial smile spreading across her face. |
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