Showing posts with label role. Show all posts
Showing posts with label role. Show all posts

Thursday, February 17, 2011

Culture Vulture

Actress Minh Chau is a familiar face on the big and small screens. Vietnamese cinema lovers may recognise her as the woman with a double identity in Song Nu (The Two Women) or Ms Nhan in the Berlin Film Festival award-winning Ben Khong Chong (Wharf of Widows).

She spoke to Culture Vulture about the importance of a work ethic in acting and her latest role in the television series Bi Thu Tinh Uy (The Provincial Party Committee Secretary).

Tell us about your role in Bi Thu Tinh Uy ?

My character is named Thuong, and she's got a lot of personality. As soon as I accepted the role from director Quoc Trong, I studied her life, from her childhood through her last days. The character is based on a real person named Dong. She was born in Bac Ninh and later moved to Vinh Phuc. Before 1954, Dong was a revolutionary activist in Viet Bac base with Kim Ngoc. They were very young and their lives were intertwined. When Kim Ngoc moved back to Vinh Phuc to become the provincial Party committee secretary, Dong went with him. He appointed her a position as head of the Vinh Phuc Party inspection board. The further I went into the script, the more I liked Thuong for her straightforwardness, hot-headedness yet she is knowledgeable and decisive.

How did you land this role?

When it comes to casting, the crew was really worried about the role of Thuong. Trong then revealed that he already had someone in mind who would be perfect for the role. As soon as my name came up, screenwriter Thuy Linh instantly agreed. For a while, Trong had been telling me that he had a very interesting role for me.

Is it true that you first rejected the part?

No. The story is that, when I accepted this role, my hair was curly and died strawberry blonde, while my character was a peasant living in the country in the 1960s. I expressed my concerns to Trong, and he promised me a hairdresser who could help me get into character. But when I arrived at the location, there was no hairdresser. Trong had misunderstood that I didn't want to have my hair straightened, but, in truth, it couldn't have been done. I had asked a number of professional hairdressers and was told that if I had it straightened, I would look like a girl in a shampoo ad, which wouldn't be consistent with the character at all. I threw a diva-scale fit and said that I would no longer play this part.

After I returned to Ha Noi and finally calmed down, a sense of responsibility took over. Then I asked a make-up artist friend of mine to make a custom wig for me. It's funny that a little thing could cause such a conflagration, but things happen. As soon as I tried on the wig, I found the peace of mind to play the role and everything was fine. When I play a role, everything must be perfect. You must ask for perfection, first of all in yourself, in order to really get into a role.

Can you share some of your memories of shooting the film?

Thuong is addicted to black tobacco, she walks around with a bamboo hubble-bubble pipe with her all the time. The pipe is her security blanket, with which she shares all her ups and downs. At first, everyone in my family told me horrible stories about pipe tobacco.

One even told the tale of a man who was high on tobacco and dove head first into a burning stove and burned his face off. I was a bit intimidated but knew that I had to make the sacrifice as it was my character's thing. So I got creative because I had no idea how to smoke a pipe.

First, I took a puff of cigarette and held the smoke in my mouth. Then, I placed my mouth on the pipe and we started shooting. But then I thought it wouldn't look real, so I knew I have to practice smoking a pipe. It was definitely no piece-of-cake. Practice makes perfect, and on one lovely day, everyone saw me smoking the pipe like an addict.

You once said you wanted to play a rebel. Have you gotten your dream role?

The national film and television industry hasn't been able yet to produce such a role for an actress my age. I would love to someday play that type of character, someone who is ambitious but with a bit of a dark side. — VNS

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Thursday, November 4, 2010

Culture Vulture

Singer Nhat Kim Anh was granted the Best Actress award at the Viet Nam International Film Festival for her role in Long Thanh Cam Gia Ca (The Fate of a Songstress in Thang Long). She talked with Minh Thu about her award.

How did you feel when the Best Actress prize was announced?

Singer Nhat Kim Anh was granted the Best Actress award at the Viet Nam International Film Festival for her role in Long Thanh Cam Gia Ca (The Fate of a Songstress in Thang Long). She talked with Minh Thu about her award.
I couldn't believe my ears, because I knew the title would only go to one excellent actress, and I assumed it belonged to Fiona Sit from Hong Kong. When the speaker repeated my name and the people surrounding me began to offer their congratulations, only then did I realise I had won the prize.

I was dumbstruck and really nervous on stage. My heart was racing and I couldn't breathe properly.

I'm a singer and have only taken part in a few films. I thought that the film would receive some recognition at the festival, but never dreamed that I'd win a prize.

I'm quite modest about the award though, just because I won it, doesn't mean I'm an excellent actress, I've still got to work at improving my performances.

Can you share some memories about the film shoot?

The film was made over three months in eight provinces. I had a scene bathing in a very cold weather with heavy rain. It was freezing! When the director shouted "cut", people covered me up with piles of blankets as I was shivering due to the cold.

Once in the northern province of Bac Giang, we were shooting in a windy location, and while taking our lunch break, a gust of wind blew our food away.

You're a thoroughly modern beauty, how did you go about portraying Cam, a young songstress from the 18th-century feudal period?

Some people weren't convinced by director Dao Ba Son's choice of me for the role of Cam, but he saw Cam in me. She and I have many things in common. First, we are both singers, and we had to live far from our families from an early age. Even though I speak with a southern accent, my way of speaking still bears some northern features because I was born in the central province of Thanh Hoa.

I read the script many times, and was moved and then totally convinced by Cam. My greatest worry was whether I could bring myself to only cry from one eye as Cam does. I practised many days in front of the mirror with a timer, so as I could concentrate my emotions and cry within the required timeframe.

At first I cried with both eyes, but after three days, I started practising to repress my feelings, and then could push myself to only cry with the right eye because it is more sensitive than the left.

When watching film, the audience will see Cam's tears slowly running from one eye as she explains that she allows "one eye to cry, one eye to see the life". If we had used eye drops, my eyes could not have replicated that effect and would have become red.

What are your views on your role?

Cam was a beautiful and skilful songstress in Thang Long. She met poet Nguyen Du and they empathised and respected each other in terms of their talents for playing instruments and constructing verse. Sadly they didn't have a happy ending.

I think I successfully portrayed her through different periods in her life, when she was 16, 26 and 40 years old, with different appearance and emotions.

I undertook painstaking preparations to portray the role, including learning chau van (spiritual music) and playing the dan nguyet (moon-shaped four-string instrument).

In your opinion, what was the secret to the success of the film?

Well, the film was based on the poetry of Nguyen Du, a great poet, so it's pure Vietnamese, and contains the beauty of traditional culture, literature, customs and the people's lifestyles. The film reflects images representing Viet Nam's countryside.

Have you got any more film roles planned?

Next year I will finish my role in Ve Dat Thang Long (Return to Thang Long). Then I will invest my time in music. My fourth album named Nang La (Strange Sunlight) will be released soon. The prize marks a new era in my life. I hope that I'll have the opportunity to act in other films.

I don't want to divide myself into two parts but will gather my strength in terms of one goal. I won't record an album and take part in a film at the same time. The previous album wasn't successful because I was too focused on acting. I have to learn from that mistake. — VNS

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