Zelda Williams
add a link
Zelda Williams w/Smashing Interview Magzine
Zelda Williams w/Smashing Interview Magzine
Interview door Melissa Parker for Smashing Interview Magazine, August 2016.
trefwoorden: zelda williams, interview, smashing interview magazine, 2016
|
I remember visiting this website once...
It was called Zelda Williams Interview: Robin Williams’ Daughter Reveals, “Dad Wanted People to Be Happy” – Smashing Interviews Magazine
Here's some stuff I remembered seeing:
Zelda Williams Interview: Robin Williams\' Daughter Reveals, "Dad Wanted People to Be Happy"
] on March 20, 2013 to include the photographers name in the post information area. -->
Zelda Williams, daughter of the late comedian Robin Williams, stars in her latest feature film
also features Zachary Booth, Nicole Gale Anderson and Angela Sarafyan. Indican Pictures is releasing the film theatrically on August 19, 2016, and expanding to additional markets. The film has garnered accolades throughout the festival circuit.
, created by Adam Horowitz, Edward Kitsis and Ian Goldberg for the Freeform channel. The show is about a group of young counselors at a camp that appears to be haunted by chilling, supernatural forces. Williams plays Drew who was revealed to the audience to be a transgender man. She also stars in the new Lifetime thriller,
, which chronicles the life of Colleen Stan who was kidnapped and kept in a box by Cameron and Janice Hooker in 1977.
“I grew up on a lot of sets. We lived in San Francisco. Throughout my childhood, my dad was very good friends with Chris Columbus. Chris would film a lot of those movies in San Francisco because both he and my dad had kids, and they wanted to be around them and not displace their families, as opposed to being gone eight months of the year.”
Zelda Williams: Yes, it was brought to me by its creator, and I just took an interest in what the story was about.
is primarily about my character (Nikki) being a lesbian singer/songwriter in Seattle. She becomes very close friends with a straight guy. Through no fault of his own, he falls very much in love with her. There’s no part of her that will ever be able to give him what he wants no matter how much she loves him as a friend and how hard that is. This is very much about that kind of reality, that there’s no kind of happy medium in that relationship.
I found a lot of that to be really fascinating because we had not really
that before. I had such a blast shooting that movie. I’d never really been to Seattle as well, so it was a combination of things. I think it was one of those things where everything kind of lined up well, and you’re involved in something you’re really not going to see again in a script. I certainly have not seen anything like it since.
Zelda Williams: I suppose it would be, yeah. I’ve done a couple of horror films and did a couple of comedies and quite a few shorts, but this is the only one where I wasn’t the best friend or the love interest, the girlfriend or wife or the killer ghost in a horror film (laughs). It was really a great experience getting to
a lead. It didn’t involve a lot of singing. There was a bit of performing on stage, which will always terrify me (laughs). I am
Zelda Williams: I directed my friend’s music video, but I’ve never done any videos for me. I’m not a professional singer. I’ve only done it for fun. But, I
love it. I always grew up around music, and many of my mom and dad’s friends were musicians. I just have never, and arguably, with my stage fright, will ever do it professionally (laughs).
): You play sort of a mysterious, loner and transgender man (who is born female and whose gender identity is that of a man) in
. This takes place in 1989, so mainstream awareness was practically nonexistent. How did you prepare for the role?
Zelda Williams: Because it’s still a supernatural show, I don’t think the focus necessarily is on historical accuracy as much as it is on wanting the portrayal to be honest, to approach a lot of the issues that the transgender kids face
. I don’t think that Drew would’ve necessarily been able to exist in real life back then in 1989. Coming out to his mother doesn’t really end well for him in that sense, but I don’t think he would’ve been able to get
far. They are very true to the fact that Drew at 18 is not able to have any sort of surgery or hormones so he, while living as a guy, is still anatomically female. We do approach some of the difficulties of that on the show and the fact that he has to hide that.
These are all discussions I had with people that I sought out that were male identifying and who would speak to me about what it was like, especially if they were older and transgender during that time period. None of them I spoke to were out, to be honest, at that time. But, they spoke to a lot of what it was to exist and be a trans at that time and that they just couldn’t be completely open then. All of it’s hard. Drew was very wonderful and very challenging to play. I felt an enormous amount of responsibility to that community, and I still do.
on Lifetime coming up, which is based on the true story of the kidnapping of Colleen Stan who was held as a sex slave by Cameron and Janice Hooker in Red Bluff, California. You play Janice Hooker.
Zelda Williams: Yes. That comes out September 10. We’re playing real people, but this is obviously a fictionalized movie version of such. I never got to meet Janice. I think she’s in witness protection. So, a lot of what we had to incur was how we were going to portray her for television, especially because she was also abused by her husband, so he abused her and the woman who was kidnapped. I think it’s almost like a kind of Stockholm syndrome dedication to
that she wasn’t aware as well of all the ways he ended up hurting her. It was really interesting to approach.
I play a mother in this as well. She ended up having kids in the duration of the captivity of Colleen Stan, and it was very interesting and very different for me. I’m 27, but they primarily still had me play 18 because that’s the roles you get. But, it’s always been very strange to me to play a high schooler when I didn’t even feel like a high schooler when I was one (laughs).
): Looking young isn’t necessarily a bad thing (laughs).
Zelda Williams: No, not at all. But, there are times when people say, “Why the hell is Zelda still playing a high schooler when she’s almost 30?” I kind of want to say, “I’m with you, man. I would happily play a lawyer or FBI agent. They just won’t hire me for that yet.” (laughs). Janice was in her early 20s when we started and was probably almost 30 when we finished.
Zelda Williams: I think it was a pretty natural progression for me. I grew up on a lot of sets. We lived in San Francisco. Throughout my childhood, my dad was very good friends with Chris Columbus. Chris would film a lot of those movies in San Francisco because both he and my dad had kids, and they wanted to be around them and not displace their families, as opposed to being gone eight months of the year.
So, dad was actually home a lot, and that allowed for it to be a bit easier than I imagine some kids and their actor parents have it. I do feel bad for them because I can actually understand where they come from and some actors wanting to bring them on the road, but then that would displace them from having a home base. It’s not easy.
Instead of what people might think, the choices that are made are
that and getting to visit sets, lots of sets that don’t really exist anymore. I got to be on sets where there were no green screens. Mermaids were actually models that were sitting in a pool with mermaid tails on. When you’re a child, that’s the most amazing thing because you’re literally seeing and being able to touch these incredible, fantastical stories that otherwise you’d only get to read.
I was someone who loved books. I loved fantasy books growing up. It taught me the only way I was going to get to be in one of those fantasy books or live that fairy tale was to do this. So, I loved it from a very young age. I found my way to it mainly from books as opposed to some kind of first-hand knowledge on set because I was a child. I didn’t know what the director did, and I didn’t know what dad really did. I would just go, “Oh, he’s a robot. Okay.” You learn about it as you become older.
I’m glad my parents also told me, “Hell, no!” until I was done with high school. They wouldn’t let me do acting or audition or even come to LA and take part in it until I was about 17. That was great because I still had to go through school even though I didn’t like it because that’s part of it. That’s part of life. I’ll always be grateful for that. I didn’t have to jump into it at 10 or 11 because I was demanding it, and my parents said, “No.”
Zelda Williams: My parents just wanted me to try and be happy and work hard. That was what dad always told me. He said for me to be early to set and the last person to leave if I have to, and that even if you’re having a really hard day and everything is falling apart, actors can’t usually fix the stuff that’s falling apart. Usually it’s a number of things like scheduling or things that have gone awry. He said that it’s an actor’s place to
become part of that problem. You have to step back and find help or offer to help and make people happy if you can.
He was so good at that even when everything was falling apart. Dad would make everyone happy again. The actor has to try and not be a part of the problem. As funny and as simple as that sounds, you’d be shocked how hard it is for some people (laughs). My dad was, and my mom is someone that tries to help people. He wanted people to be happy. As naive as that sounds, that’s very much what I took from him.
): What are your other projects and your future goals as an actor?
Zelda Williams: I do a lot of voiceover work, so I do cartoons for kids and fun stuff. That actually makes me very happy. I wrote a bunch of scripts, so I get to direct my first short version of one of the scripts in October. I’m excited about that. That will be my first directing narrative. As for goals, I just hope to keep getting to work because it’s wonderful. It makes me happy.
Truthfully, I’m not one of those people who have to set out goals to leave behind a legacy or win an award. Dad will always
that in people’s minds and that’s great. He should. For me, I love it because it’s a job that I love and that I feel I’m best suited for. I just want to continue to do it.
I think many people want to have a perfect resume, and I respect that absolutely. But, I was very much raised on the idea that you are responsible for what you put into anything. You work hard and do what you are asked to do. I just hope to keep doing that. It has served me well so far.
© 2016 Smashing Interviews Magazine. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed without the express written consent of the publisher.
« Melissa Rauch Interview: "Big Bang Theory" Star Talks Upcoming Season and "The Bronze"
Rose Marie Interview: "Dick Van Dyke Show" Star Recalls 90 Years of Showbiz Life »
Sam Getz Interview: Breakout Band Welshly Arms Inspires Us All to Be "Legendary"
Charlie Sykes Interview: "The Trumpish Right Is Dumb, Cruel and Dishonest"
Brian Wilson Interview: Beach Boys Icon Talks "Pet Sounds" and "Playback"
Don Siegelman Interview: Former Alabama Democratic Governor Details His Political Journey Through Hell
Ana Kasparian Interview: "The Young Turks" Host Provides a Fearless Progressive Voice
Nancy Wilson Interview: Rock Hall of Fame Guitarist Talks Roadcase Royale and Heart Hiatus
Dallas Havens on Kirsten Vangsness Interview: "Criminal Minds" Star on Garcia, Cast Changes and Giving Back
DONNA SEYMOUR on Kirsten Vangsness Interview: "Criminal Minds" Star on Garcia, Cast Changes and Giving Back
Lorie on Lou Gramm Interview: The Backstory Behind Foreigner\'s Rock and Roll Hall of Fame Snub and His Days as a "Juke Box Hero"
read more
teken in of kom bij fanpop om uw commentaar toe te voegen