Michelle Pfeiffer has a restless streak. You can spot it in her
widely disparate choice of acting roles. She was steamy as “
Catwoman,”
wrenchingly vulnerable in “
Dangerous Liaisons” and glamorously debauched in “
Scarface.”
She was twice exiled, as the social pariah
Ruth Madoff in “
The Wizard of Lies”
and now as an uptown grandee gone broke in “
French Exit,” which arrived in
theaters this month.
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But at 62, Pfeiffer has stayed put long enough to bring up two
children with her husband, writer and producer
David E. Kelley, and embark on
new projects: She plays Betty Ford on the forthcoming Showtime series “
TheFirst Lady,” and she has taken on the unlikely role of beauty entrepreneur.
Two years ago, she started Henry Rose, a line of gender-neutral
perfumes, home fragrances and salves that bear broodingly evocative names like
Fog, Last Light and Queens and Monsters. The newest scent, Windows Down, a
bergamot and citrus-tinged addition, hints at the more free-spirited, candidly
fun-loving facets of Pfeiffer’s personality.
Last week, she dropped her reserve to talk about the challenges
of entrepreneurship, of playing a genteelly impoverished society queen, and of
finding the freedom to let down her hair.
Q: I’ve read that you sometimes wear a fragrance to help
you slip into character. Was that the case with “French Exit”?
A: At the time we were shooting, we were playing around with a
floral. I wore it. I thought my character Frances would be a floral person.
Q: But your character is no sweet-scented dowager.
A: As we like to say, this is not your grandmother’s floral.
Q: Which part of you related to Frances?
A: I don’t always know why I respond to a character. But I found
her incredibly moving. Her tragedy is that of someone insulated by wealth who
has never learned real coping skills. When she has no money anymore, she doesn’t
really know who she is.
Q: She behaves like a woman with nothing to lose. Did you
find that intriguing?
A: Frances has always behaved that way. In this situation she’s
a bit delusional. But the thing that most excited me is that we spend so much
of our time, at least I do, trying to be polite. It’s totally exhausting.
Frances can’t be bothered.
Q: Was there a time when you became less
concerned with what other people think?
A: It’s age-related. The older I got, the more I let go of those
worries. It’s incredibly liberating.
Q: How did the concept for your latest fragrance come into
your head?
A: I was driving, and I rolled my windows down and felt the warm
summer air. I felt untethered. It reminded me of getting my driver’s license
when I was 16, that feeling of, you know, just letting go and letting life lead
me. The older we get, we just don’t do that.
Q: Was this scent conceived as a response to an oppressive
year?
A: No. But it is optimistic. Its introduction just happens to
coincide with all of us slowly coming out and the feeling that we’re wanting to
start over.
Q: These fragrances vary broadly in character. Which are
you most drawn to?
A: I tend toward the darker and richer woody vanilla earthy
ones. Torn, my first and a go-to, has a whisper of something spicy, a little bit
woody. My favorites are the ones that are complex.
Q: Celebrity fragrances are said to be a difficult sell.
Yet you introduced one without even placing your name on the label.
A: I was cautioned at the start that celebrity fragrances were
not doing well, that people were not trusting them. It was important to me,
because this isn’t a licensing deal, that the brand would be able to stand on
its own, that all the ingredients would be listed on the label. I didn’t want
to develop something that relied on my face or celebrity.
Q: You are known to be private. Did you feel pressured to
go on Instagram?
A: I don’t know that I would have started Instagram if I hadn’t
launched this brand. I tend to be very cautious in interviews. I hate doing
photo shoots.
Q: But you are playful on your feed. In one post
you actually toyed with a whip.
A: I was sitting with a friend in my office, and we didn’t know
where the conversation was going. She brought up the “Catwoman” whip. I told
her, “I think I have it right here.” I opened up my closet and there it was,
looped over the door. The moment looked ridiculously staged, but it wasn’t. On
social media, you really control your own narrative. It allows you to be as
goofy as you want to be.
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