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Thread: Meryl Streep's got legs

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    Elite Member celeb_2006's Avatar
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    Default Meryl Streep's got legs

    Meryl Streep's got legs -- latimes.com

    Pop quiz: Over the last three years, which A-list actress has become a potent force at the box office, starring in a string of films that have taken in almost $1.2 billion worldwide? Is it Angelina Jolie? Reese Witherspoon? Kate Winslet? Or Sandra Bullock?

    If you answered "none of the above," then you are probably already clued in to what has become one of the more surprising success stories to hit Hollywood in quite sometime.

    Need a hint? She turned 60 in June.

    Yes, Meryl Streep, she of the multitudes of Oscar nominations, has for the first time in her career become genuinely popular, at a time when most of her female peers have been shoved into early quasi-retirement, and even slightly younger male cohorts, such as Kevin Costner and Bruce Willis, are shedding commercial viability as fast as their hair.

    Streep, once famed for playing a suffering Holocaust victim ("Sophie's Choice") and chilly ex-wives ("Manhattan" and "Kramer vs. Kramer") is now best known to audiences of all ages for eating young fashion assistants for breakfast in "The Devil Wears Prada," enthusiastically jumping up and down on a bed, wearing overalls and singing Abba tunes in the $600-million smash hit "Mamma Mia," and trilling happily in Julia Child's distinctive voice in this summer's "Julie & Julia."


    It's been a grim year for the A-list. Many recent expensive star vehicles have fizzled at the box office, including Adam Sandler's "Funny People," Will Ferrell's "Land of the Lost," Russell Crowe's "State of Play" and "The Taking of Pelham 123," which starred John Travolta and Denzel Washington. Even Julia Roberts' "Duplicity," with Clive Owen, failed to connect with moviegoers. And now, for the first time in two decades, the industry is seriously re-evaluating movie-star worth and applying downward pressure to actor paydays.

    Yet Streep has not only survived but prospered. In the face of the summer's typical onslaught of teenage-boy- oriented whammies and explosions, she's gaily offered character and panache, going full tilt after the usually-ignored female audience.

    In the last three years, she's mixed up the menu, jetting from comedies to musicals to biopics, with a stopover at classic Oscar fare. Unlike Nicolas Cage or Robert De Niro, who seemed to have consigned their credibility when they went ultra-commercial in films such as "Con Air" and "Analyze This," Streep remains a perennial Oscar darling, nominated (yet again) last year for her turn as the tough but protective nun in "Doubt."

    Although she is not bullet-proof commercially (the art house films "Evening" and "Dark Matter" both sank quietly), Streep has finally shed her elite air. She is no longer a figure more admired than beloved, and has become a movie star for the masses.

    "She's found the right hybrid that mixes her dramatic and comedic skills," says David Frankel, who directed her as the steely fashion editor in the 2006 hit "The Devil Wears Prada."

    "There's a warmth to her performances now that I think maybe wasn't there earlier in her career. There's also a joy to her performances. In 'Julie & Julia,' she's downright giddy."

    "We don't have to worry about her suffering any more," says film historian Jeanine Basinger, referring to her penchant for painful roles. "It looks as if she's matured to a point that very few actresses get to, arriving at the 'Hell, I don't really care anymore' place. She's not afraid to be mean or hated. She's not afraid to be unglamorous. She's more at ease with it. It looks like she's over the career part and just having fun with the roles. That energizes everything she's done."

    The list of actresses who enjoyed careers spanning multiple decades is not a particularly long one: Joan Crawford, Bette Davis, Katharine Hepburn for example, all stayed in the spotlight for close to 50 years or more. But the number of actresses who experience a commercial resurgence during their third decade on screen is even shorter, especially in this era of instant and often talentless YouTube celebrity.

    For many, Streep's "presence in a film is an endorsement that says to the ticket buyers that you're not going to be cheated," Basinger says. "That is what stardom has come down to -- value for your money."

    "Mamma Mia" producer Gary Goetzman says, "There's such respect out there for her, that when she does anything close to being a mainstream movie, she classes it up."

    And as consumers yearn for comfort, reassurance and escape during this economic downturn, Streep has never been more appealing, says Jane Buckingham, a marketing consultant and expert in youth culture who has advised numerous studios.

    "We're all sort of looking for that mother figure that we wish we had when times are tough, especially Generation X, who didn't have the parents we wish we had." Buckingham says the mother-daughter tale in "Mamma Mia" made Streep "relevant" to the under-25 set.

    Even as she does more mainstream fare, Streep remains exacting in her artistic standards, a perfectionist, notes Nora Ephron, director of "Julie & Julia," recalling how the 5-foot-6 Streep insisted that she was going to be 6-foot-2 in the film, like the real Child. "I didn't know how she was going to do it," Ephron says. "For me, she didn't have to be 6-foot-2. But for her, she had to be 6-foot-2. For me, she needed to be Meryl Streep playing Julia Child. But for Meryl, everything was about her height."

    Until recently Streep was primarily known for her mastery of accents and dramatic sweep, but she did make a stab at comedies in the early 1990s, appearing in "Death Becomes Her," "She-Devil," and "Postcards from the Edge." Dealing with topics such as plastic surgery and drug addiction, these comedies alienated some of her core constituency.

    "A lot of it was painful comedy, very punishing for the female presences," Basinger says.

    Streep declined to comment for this article, but last year pointed out that three of her four latest movies ("Mamma Mia", "Julie & Julia", and the upcoming comedy "It's Complicated") were directed by women, and all her box-office hits were championed by female movie executives or producers.

    "People operate on instinct and they do things that kind of make them feel good on some level, and so every time we complain there's not enough things for women, that's because the people that are making the decisions are not turned on by material we are," Streep said. "It's a very simple equation."

    Many of Streep's recent hits have opened solidly but not spectacularly, then kept chugging along, bucking the trend of movies making the majority of their money in the first weekend (her movies have "legs," to use the industry parlance, indicating positive word of mouth from audiences after they leave the theater). "Julie & Julia," which has Oscar prognosticators seeing a nomination for Streep, had a $20-million opening weekend and has earned $82 million domestically so far (it will continue rolling out around the world this fall).

    With the exception of "It's Complicated," with a budget of $75 million, Streep's films have tended to be moderately priced ("Julie & Julia" was made for about $40 million), and her reported $7 million to $8 million salary is about half of what actresses such as Jolie or Witherspoon can command, let alone the top male stars.

    But with her four children largely grown, Streep has also been working more frequently than many of her younger peers who are juggling child care with movie work.

    "She's always been the most highly decorated actress of our time, but there's real artistic freedom that comes with enormous box-office success," director Frankel notes.

    "For years, she played opposite all these male movie stars who made fortunes, and now suddenly at age 60, she cashed in, not because she went out and did action movies, but she scored doing movies she loved and embraced.

    "That power is liberating."

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    Elite Member Belt Up's Avatar
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    Just the two?
    Who lit the fuse on your tampon?

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    Elite Member sparkly's Avatar
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    It's about damn time talented women were respected for their craft instead of their looks at her age. She's earned the right not to get plastic surgery. It just goes to show that you don't need to go the route of Pam Anderson if you're an actress.
    Everyone is entitled to be stupid, but some abuse the privilege.

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    Elite Member rollo's Avatar
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    Kudos to Meryl Streep. She's done well because she can act! How novel is that?

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    Elite Member HWBL's Avatar
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    She can do it all, drama, comedy, musical. She could easily have had
    a successful singing career (see her in A Prairie Home Companion).
    Warren Beatty: actor, director, writer, producer.

    ***** celeb

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    Elite Member Sasha's Avatar
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    ^^Yes, she can do anything. She's proven over and over again that the accolades she has gotten over the course of her career were well earned. Now that she is enjoying commercial success, she's doing it with wit and integrity and I admire her more than ever.
    Don't fear the reefer..

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    Hit By Ban Bus! Pippin's Avatar
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    I really want to see Julie and Julia.

    I just watched the trailer and Meryl Streep certainly sounds like Julia Child!

    I have a feeling that Meryl Streep would be a nice person IRL.

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    Gold Member Nevan's Avatar
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    I haven't read the article (almost time to take my little guy to school) but I just have to say that I am one of the biggest Meryl Streep fans. She can act circles and cartwheels around any of this generation's actresses. She is the BOMB. I love her choice of roles and she always makes them her own. One of my favorite movies of hers (and there are many) is Death Becomes Her. It was so off character for her, especially being a campy comedy, but she was AWESOME in it. I am looking forward to seeing Julie and Julia, but have to wait for the DVD ... we don't get to go out to the movies that much anymore, at least not ones that don't involve action figures or cartoon characters. LOL

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    Elite Member NoNoRehab's Avatar
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    She did this really little known movie with Roseanne in the '80s called She-Devil. It was a terrible flop but she was great and hilarious in it as a bratty self-absorbed romance writer who banged the pool boy.

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    Elite Member greysfang's Avatar
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    tl; dr, but I must say, i've always loved Meryl.
    FUCK YOU AND GIVE ME MY GODDAMN VENTI TWO PUMP LIGHT WHIP MOCHA YOU COCKSUCKING WHORE BEFORE I PUNCH YOU IN THE MOUTH. I just get unpleasant in my car. - Deej

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    Gold Member Witchywoman's Avatar
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    You will love Julie/Julia. I couldnt stop smiling throughout the movie. Meryl was marvelous. Oh and that life of Julia Childs what a lil devil she was.....at 6' tall.

    As for Meryl I believe she is the best actress of all time. Our wonderful actresses of the early years were wonderful but not one of them had her range......there's nothing Meryl can't do, she even has a beautiful singing voice. Something also very rare about a celebrity is that she stays out of the lime light. We don't know every little detail of her life. Stay healthy Meryl.

    ~Laughter is an instant vacation.

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    Love, love, LOVE Meryl.
    Real talent without the fake tits and lips, which usually means no talent.

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    Elite Member Brookie's Avatar
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    Perennial favorite! Watched "Out of Africa" for the umpty-billionth time yesterday.

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    Elite Member MohandasKGanja's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Nevan View Post
    I haven't read the article (almost time to take my little guy to school) but I just have to say that I am one of the biggest Meryl Streep fans. She can act circles and cartwheels around any of this generation's actresses. She is the BOMB. I love her choice of roles and she always makes them her own. One of my favorite movies of hers (and there are many) is Death Becomes Her. It was so off character for her, especially being a campy comedy, but she was AWESOME in it. I am looking forward to seeing Julie and Julia, but have to wait for the DVD ... we don't get to go out to the movies that much anymore, at least not ones that don't involve action figures or cartoon characters. LOL
    I really liked "Death Becomes Her", too. Great role for Streep. And a pretty good role for Bruce Willis playing against type as a nerdy, hen-pecked husband.

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    Elite Member Moongirl's Avatar
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    Why did I think this thread was going to be about her having great legs?

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