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"God Brought This Script To
Me!"
Moira Kelly is the third of six children born and
raised on Long Island, New York, by Irish Immigrant parents, both devout
Catholics.
Her first real encounter with Hollywood success
came when she played two roles in Richard Attenborough's Academy Award nominated
Chaplin in 1992. More recently, she played a Harvard student in With
Honors and took a lead role in the sleeper hit Cutting Edge. Kelly was
heard by millions as the voice of Nala, one of the leading characters in
Disney's The Lion King. Her most recent work, apart from Dorothy Day, is Nick
Cassaventes's film Unhook the Stars.
In January 1993, while Father Ellwood Kieser was beginning
to think about actresses who might be good for Dorothy Day, he read, he read an
interview with Moira Kelly in The New York Times which stated the Kelly was an
"ardent Roman Catholic" and an actress who frequently "dreams of
playing Joan of Arc." Kieser eventually offered Kelly the role, and
she enthusiastically accepted it.
The following interview with Moira Kelly took
place during a break in the shooting in late afternoon of April 27, 1995, at
Broad Beach in Malibu, California. Everyone else on the crew had scurried
off to get a bite to eat. The 27 year old Kelly came over to where I was
sitting and said she would like to do the interview right there - on the edge of
the grass between the cottage and the sand dunes that sloped upward ward the
beach.
Question: Can
you tell me about your religious background?
Answer:
Well, my parents are truly good people. They show us...my brothers and
sisters and me -- through their own actions what it means to be Christen.
For me, they are the strongest example of Christ on this planet.
Question: Did you
attend Catholic Schools?
Answer: Yes, in New
York, up until eight grade, and then I went to public school because we didn't
have the money for all of us to stay in private schools. At college level,
however, I again attended a Catholic school [Marymount Manhattan College in New
York City.]
Question: Have your
Catholic background and helped shape your faith?
Answer: Growing up
Catholic has been a gift. Being in the movie business is hard. There
are a lot of battles to face, and if I didn't have that religious core -- that
base to turn to - I would be truly lost. At times, I see other
people who seem adult because they don't have a spiritual anchor.
I truly believe that God brought this, Dorothy
Day script to me, because for a long time up until I was in eight grade - I
wanted to be a nun. When I started working on my first picture, I went to
a priest and said, "I'm still torn between becoming a nun and working in
the film business." The priest said, "Do you think that maybe this is
the medium that God wants to use to get the message across?"
Well, for five years, I have been battling with
this and waiting for the right character and script to show up. Then lo
and behold, here comes Dorothy Day! So this script is truly a gift.
Question: Are there
any ways that your own life has prepared you for this role?
Answer: Well, my mom
always said that as a child I was so dramatic - and I always had a real fear of
not being able to save the world! I wanted to come up with the answer that
was going to make the rest of the world happy - that would make us all come
together in community.
When I first read the script, I saw a lot in
Dorothy's life that paralleled my own life. It was both interesting and
very frightening to recognize how close to the woman I truly was in a a lot of
ways. Taking this role allowed me to feel all those things. I had
felt before in my own life. I was able to bring them to the surface and
finally put them to rest - to find answers to them by walking in someone else's
shoes.
Question: In your
opinion, what was Dorothy Day's greatest struggle in this film?
Answer:
Abandonment. She always felt abandoned by her father, by the men in her
life, and at one point, by God. She also had a problem with taking on too
much and expecting herself to carry the whole load, rather than putting it in
God's hands and saying, "I will just be your instrument; You work through
me/"
But Dorothy's fear of abandonment is really a
strong thing in her life. The title of her autobiography. The Long
Loneliness says it all. It is certainly a fear I can appreciate and sympathize
with greatly.
Question: Do you
think your growing knowledge of Dorothy Day and your playing this role in the
movie will affect your own life and future?
Answer: We'll
See! (Laughing a bit mischievously!) We'll see!
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