EDINBURGH INTERNATIONAL EIFFFilm Fest
SEX AND THE SETTEE
For her new film, Meet Monica Velour, Kim Cattrall has ditched the glamour of Sex and the City to play a porn star-turned-couch potato. She briefs Miles Fielder on growing old ungracefully
‘T o have a role like this in your fifties is quite extraordinary,’ says Kim Cattrall, who is 53 and has made a virtue of playing sexy older women in a business that refuses to equate the one with the other. ‘When Meet Monica Velour showed at the Tribeca Film Festival,’ she continues, ‘they called it “Requiem for A Porn Star”, which I thought was quite apt, really. No one’s writing roles like this for women.’
In EIFF highlight Meet Monica Velour, Cattrall plays a retired 70s porn star who has fallen upon hard times. Living in a trailer park in the American mid-west, Velour scrapes a living working small-town strip bars and is losing a custody battle with her asshole husband over her beloved daughter. When nerdy teenage fan Tobe (one-time Glee actor Dustin Ingram) turns up on her doorstep to announce his love, Velour finds herself involved in a sweet and ridiculous romance that threatens her already insecure life with a whole new set of headaches.
The film is a bittersweet romantic comedy drama, written and directed
42 THE LIST 26 May–23 June 2011
by first-timer Keith Bearden, that harks back to the offbeat, ‘indie’ American cinema of the 1980s. It’s a low-budget film, certainly in comparison with the blockbusting Sex & the City 2, which Cattrall made in the same year. The character was also a departure for Cattrall – Monica Velour demanded she ditch the glamour of SatC’s New York socialite Samantha Jones, put on the pounds and swear off the make-up. ‘Most actors of a certain age are brought in to “do what they do”,’ Cattrall says. ‘To do the kind of character they often play. When you’re making a departure, preparation is important. This was something I could not just show up and do. This was something I had to take apart and reconstruct for myself, make it my Monica Velour. That’s what I do in the theatre, whether I’m playing Amanda in Private Lives or Cleopatra in A&C. I’ve got to take the thing apart and then I can build my socialite, my queen or my porn star.’
Cattrall was born in Liverpool, grew up in Canada and studied drama in London and New York, where, in her final year, she made her big-screen debut in Otto Preminger’s 1975 film Rosebud. She took bit parts in TV shows – Charlie’s Angels, Starsky and Hutch – and then played sexpots in frat-coms: Porky’s, Police Academy, Mannequin. Her subsequent film career has a handful of highlights – Star Trek VI: The Undiscovered Country, Big Trouble in Little China – but working in Hollywood has also given her opportunities on some high-profile theatre stages. Last year she