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"What a mess!"
Moira Kelly, just in from a New York-to-L.A. road trip that
makes Thelma and Louise’s ride seem luxurious, can
laugh…now. She stuffed all her worldly goods into her
cherished ’61 Oldsmobile convertible, then she and four
friends formed a convoy and hit the highway. "We camped out
every night and none of us showered-we were like road kill!"
Moira recalls. "We got caught in an electrical storm so bad
we had to pull over for an hour. But the worst was when my
car blew up at Mount Rushmore." That meant leaving the
vintage vehicle, renting a U-Haul, and squeezing into the
other car. Rather than collapsing once she arrived in her
new digs on the West Coast, Moira dove straight into a
nonstop round of photo shoots, interviews, even auditions
for future roles. Yet no piece of burnt toast, she! Settling
into the overstuffed sofa of a pseudo-bohemian Hollywood
coffeehouse, Moira is all energy.
It’s easy to understand this young actress’s enthusiasm. Her
career is on a straight-up climb, with her part in Chaplin,
film legend Charlie Chaplin’s life story, marking the
highest point yet. It’s a dual role, actually-Moira plays
Hetty Kelly, one of Chaplin’s early flames, as well as Oona
O’Neill Chaplin, his beloved wife. Talk about dream gigs:
locations in California, London, and Chaplin’s own estate in
Switzerland; working with acclaimed director Sir Richard
Attenborough; and perhaps best of all, sharing some serious
screen tie with Robert Downey, Jr. (whose performance as
Charlie has already sparked an Oscar buzz).
"To me, Robert was the big time. When I was in college, I’d
look through magazines and see his face, and I went to all
his movies…so I was very nervous," Moira says of her initial
meeting with him. "I walked in and Robert was sitting there
getting his makeup done, and I remember he looked up through
the mirror and smiled, and I went ‘Ungh!’ I was so shy, I
didn’t say a word to him all day."
Of course, once they started doing scenes together, things
changed. "He’s wonderful," Moira says beaming. "I don’t know
what he does to me, but he lightens me up." Not only was she
talking to Robert, she was learning from him, too. "He’s
very talented and very smart. The thing I like most about
him is he gives you a lot to work with-he’s not a selfish
actor; he doesn’t keep it all to himself. He’s very
understanding and he listens well."
Portraying Oona and Hetty proved to be as much of a
challenge as any of Moira’s other roles-the abused teenager
in the TV film Love, Lies, and Murder, the ice-maiden
Olympic skater in The Cutting Edge, the daring Donna in
wild, weird Twin Peaks: Fire Walk With Me. "It’s a wonderful
opportunity to play two roles in a film, and people keep
telling me they can’t tell it’s the same person in both
parts, which is the greatest compliment. And for a young
actor to get to age-Hetty is fifteen, and Oona goes from
eighteen to forty-six is a wonderful accomplishment, if you
pull it off."
Twenty-four-year-old Moira lived up to the challenge, but it
was work, particularly because the two characters were so
different. "Hetty was a dancer who worked in a theater that
Charlie was also working in. She was Irish and a redhead. I
did an accent, but that was easy because my parents are both
from Ireland and I’ve been there many times." Moira says. "Oona
was a Vassar girl, the daughter of playwright Eugene
O’Neill. She was elegant and refined, though a little
mischievous in her own way." As Moira sees it, the only real
similarity between the two-and maybe the reason Charlie fell
for both of them-was in the lips. "Charlie had a thing for
big, beautiful red lips."
Moira realizes that many of today’s women may not relate to
Oona. "A lot of the feminists in the world-I don’t think
they would appreciate Oona, because she pretty much devoted
her life to pleasing Charlie. She always stood in the
shadows, she was just there for him." Then again, Oona was a
rule-breaker and she could handle scandal. "Her father
didn’t like the idea of them getting married, so he sort of
disowned Oona," Moira reveals.
What father wouldn’t be, umm, skeptical? Charlie Chaplin was
not just an older man, but one with a notorious reputation
for womanizing. "She was warned about him, and fell madly in
love, anyway," Moira says. "But Oona was very mature for her
age. She could talk to Charlie and take care of him the way
he wanted. The had a beautiful love."
Sounds like there’d be some pretty steamy love scenes
between Moira and Robert. "There aren’t any, really." Moira
says, laughing "There’s one scene where we get to kiss each
other, but it’s sort of a husband-and-wife kiss." Maybe it’s
just as well, since onscreen passion has a way of sneaking
into real life, and Moira’s got a serious boyfriend, a
standup comedian named Chris Frangola.
But, says Moira, that doesn’t mean she and Robert can’t be
buddies, "We have this incredible relationship! We have a
great time together; we talk all the time." And she adds
that she’d work with him again "in a heartbeat!" Chances are
good-Moira’s the type of actress who gets what she wants.
Her next movie, Daybreak, which comes out on HBO in the
spring, puts her with another to-drool-for actor, Cuba
Gooding, Jr. "Cuba is great," Moira says. "He was my saving
grace on the film because there were a lot of hard scenes,
and he was very supportive." Daybreak is a heavy movie about
AIDS in a fascist country, set about ten years from now.
"My boyfriend always says, ‘Aren’t you ever going to do
something funny?’" Moira says. "And I’d love to-but I’m
afraid of comedy. I can cry at the drop of the pin. But
comedy is hard for me; it’s the timing. You’ve got to have
it." She’d also like to do a movie where she could show off
her musical talents. Born in Queens, New York, Moira’s an
accomplished violinist, drummer, and flutist (she gets it
from her dad, who’s a professional violinist); in high
school, she competed in opera. "I grew up mostly with
classical, big band, and a lot of Irish music-I really
didn’t start listening to rock and roll until I was maybe
sixteen," Moira says. "Now I listen to all kinds of music
except rap, which all sounds the same to me. But what I like
to sing mostly is blues and cabaret style."
Moira’s the first to admit that she’s had some lucky breaks.
"I never had to pound the pavement and really struggle after
college." But she’s confident she could do it if she had to.
"I went to Marymount College in New York City with a lot of
kids whose parents paid their way, and I wouldn’t even have
thought of asking my parents-they couldn’t afford it, not
with six kids! So I was working different jobs-I was a
waitress, a nanny-and I pushed my way all through college. I
wanted to perform so much. I did everything I could to stay
in college and pay my own way, so I think that if success
hadn’t come so quickly, I would still be pursuing it."
Right now, though, she’s up for a little fun. Her experience
with a personal trainer has turned her on to working out,
and she likes playing sports. "My boyfriend has a softball
game that goes on every Sunday afternoon," Moira says. "I
usually play shortstop. And I hit like a bandit! Yes! The
last time I played, I got two doubles and the rest were
singles-they wanted to give me an award. But," she adds,
slightly embarrassed, "if you hit a ball out to my part of
the field, I’m sort of like ‘Aargh! Don’t got it!!! Don’t
got it!’"
Well, if that’s true, it’s the only thing Moira Kelly "don’t
got"!
-Nina Malkin
Copyright - People Magazine
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