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My New Hero: Glenn Close

Oct 27 2009 | Comments 3

glenn
Not because she’s a phenomenal actor, which she is, but because she’s just initiated a new project to banish stigma. The project is highly personal, as she explains on Huffington Post:

As I’ve written and spoken about before, my sister suffers from a bipolar disorder and my nephew from schizoaffective disorder. There has, in fact, been a lot of depression and alcoholism in my family and, traditionally, no one ever spoke about it. It just wasn’t done. The stigma is toxic. And, like millions of others who live with mental illness in their families, I’ve seen what they endure: the struggle of just getting through the day, and the hurt caused every time someone casually describes someone as “crazy,” “nuts,” or “psycho”.

What’s remarkable is not her frankness about this personal history, but her motivation to act, which seems almost like a wholesale rethinking of her career and what it’s meant in popular culture. In Fatal Attraction, for example, she played a woman obsessed with Michael Douglas (those were the days, right Michael?). She loses control of the obsession and becomes terrifying. As Close writes, the movie was a great success, and audiences loved to hate her character.

Alex Forrest is considered by most people to be evil incarnate. People still come up to me saying how much she terrified them. Yet in my research into her behavior, I only ended up empathizing with her. She was a human being in great psychological pain who definitely needed meds. I consulted with several psychiatrists to better understand the “whys” of what she did and learned that she was far more dangerous to herself than to others.

The original ending of Fatal Attraction actually had Alex commit suicide. But that didn’t “test” well. Alex had terrified the audiences and they wanted her punished for it. A tortured and self-destructive Alex was too upsetting. She had to be blown away.

So, we went back and shot the now famous bathroom scene. A knife was put into Alex’s hand, making her a dangerous psychopath. When the wife shot her in self-defense, the audience was given catharsis through bloodshed — Alex’s blood. And everyone felt safe again.

The ending worked. It was thrilling and the movie was a big hit. But it sent a misleading message about the reality of mental illness.

This is a bold admission from a woman who derived so much success from this role, but there’s no escaping what she says. It has long bothered me — and, I suspect, other advocates — that the message there is one of terror and fear.

Not only does Close take on her role in that film, she assesses the entertainment industry as a whole:

Whether it is Norman Bates in Psycho, Jack Torrance in The Shining, or Kathy Bates’ portrayal of Annie Wilkes in Misery, scriptwriters invariably tell us that the mentally ill are dangerous threats who must be contained, if not destroyed. It makes for thrilling entertainment.

There are some notable exceptions, of course — Dustin Hoffman in Rainman, or Russell Crowe’s portrayal of John Nash in A Beautiful Mind. But more often than not, the movie or TV version of someone suffering from a mental disorder is a sociopath who must be stopped.

I like to think that her speaking out will change this. As she so eloquently says, silence is the problem. Read more of her elegant prose here. It is well worth it. There you’ll find links to the initiative she’s promoting.

Thank you, Glenn, for speaking out against silence. You rock.


liz | 10:30 AM | SCHIZOPHRENIA, bipolar disorder, celebrities, depression, media, meds

herb Says:

I think it wonderful of Ms. Close and others who have “star attraction” and who have access to public platforms and the media to come forth and courageously share of their personal experiences and loved ones in order to dispel century’s old myths and stigmas relating to serious mood disorders.

Dialog certainly being one of the first steps as exhibited by a number of these blog forums along with a number of other issues as cited by Mr. Martin Nichols in his comments to Ms. Close’s article:

“1) Fear of losing one’s job or compromising one’s application for a post, 2) Fear of losing one’s entitlement to health insurance, 3) Fear of losing friends and one’s place in society in general.“

We have a along road to hoe. It can be done.

Warmly,
Herb
VNSdepression.com

Oct 27 11:51 AM

Carter Nelsen Says:

I also enjoyed seeing Ron Howard participate in the Grand Central commercial (from Close’s anti-stigma Web site), esp. since I wasn’t a huge fan of A Beautiful Mind; I thought it over-gimmicked the reality of Nash’s life & mental illness.

But I’ve especially loved listening to Glenn’s sister, Jessie, who appeared in the Grand Central ad & on at least one news talk show together w/Glenn. The fact that she would go along on this, w/a sister whose acting career makes her naturally outspoken in a way Jessie probably isn’t, speaks volumes about her courage & the courage of a hell of a lot of people with mental illnesses.

Bravo to them all.

Oct 27 6:25 PM

Miranda Says:

I’ll have to check out Close’s project, but I was disturbed by her saying Alex “definitely needed meds.” Liz, based on your own bad experiences with meds and ECT I would think you’d not let that pass. If Alex were real, one could say she definitely needed counseling, but what “disease” was the character actually suffering from that heavy psych drugs would ease?

I also don’t think stigmatizing fictional characters in movies is the real problem here. In film, you need an antagonist, someone unrealistically evil; no one expects movies to reflect real life and real people. I’m more concerned about stigma and misrepresentation of actual living people with mental health problems.

Oct 31 2:06 PM

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