So John Hurt once asked Tara Fitzgerald. 'And if so, why?' The
actress, who made her sexy screen debut in 1991's Hear My Song and
followed it up with substantially clothing-free TV dramas like The Camomile
Lawn, refused to answer the question. But audiences can judge for themselves
when the upcoming Sirens hits our screens at the end of July. The
steamy Australian romp will, if nothing else, confirm Fitzgerald's reputation
as an actress not averse to a spot of disrobing. Paul Carroll meets Britains
latest screen siren.
'I don't whip my clothes off all the time in the street,' Tara Fitzgerald
avows almost apologetically, responding to a question that often plagues
young actresses early in their careers. In Tara's case, the career only
kicked off three years ago with her debut in Hear My Song, but although
she can undoubtedly act, her second film, Sirens, will only add
fuel to her growing infamy for onscreen divestment. It's just as well the
actress has no qualms about nudity - Sirens is quite the juiciest
piece of mainstream movie eroticism to hit the screen for some time, a
blatant, celebratory fleshfest including full frontal male and female nudity,
suggested lesbianism and onscreen male masturbation. In terms of the famed
Fitzgerald form and her sexy screen image, however, Tara knows where fantasy
ends and reality begins.
'The truth of it is if you're a young girl there's only so many ways
people want to see you,' states Fitzgerald matter-of-factly. 'It's not
unusual pitching things on a sex level, certainly for young women.'
Tara wants to play things differently today, however, and announces
that she will not be taking her clothes off for the PREMIERE photo session,
as a contorted hair stylist busily endeavours to create a complementary
frame for for her classically sculptured cheekbones, full lips and dark,
Italianate eyes. It's a photogenic combination which could almost have
been borrowed directly from the young Sophia Loren, but Tara's mainly worried
about her hair. 'It's the worst hair in the world,' she moans. 'It's been
backcombed to death on this film I just did...It's fine and flyaway and
sticky and...' 'A nightmare?' ventures the stylist. 'A nightmare,' echoes
Tara forlornly.
As the photo session progresses, the petite actress is asked to strike
more and more provocative poses. She remains for the most part unflustered:
'He's a really good photographer,' she confides, explaining her willingness
to oblige. 'It's like directors: if I'm in safe hands, then I trust him.
It's such a vital relationship.' She does however pull the plug when there
is the suggestion of more overtly revealing shots.
'I'm trying to - not redefine myself, it's not that self-conscious -
but I try to play against it a bit. I'm just bored. If I'm always seen
in the same way it's boring.'
Problem hair and image boredom notwithstanding, Tara Fitzgerald, at
the age of 26, has reason to be ecstatically happy. With only one previous
feature film - 1991's Hear My Song - a handful of TV dramas (including
Anglo-Saxon Attitudes and the steamy Camomile Lawn) and one
West End play (Our Song, opposite Peter O'Toole) under her belt,
she has nonetheless entered the ranks of that exclusive Brit pack of young
actors on the cusp of greater things, an ascendancy for which meteoric
actually does fit the bill. Sirens, a joint Australian-British production
in which she co-stars alongside fellow British dream-boat and name-on-everybody's
lips Hugh Grant, is her second film, and the brainchild of antipodean writer-director
John Duigan, who made The Year My Voice Broke and Flirting.
A fictionalized account of the controversial events surrounding real-life
Australian artist Norman Lindsay, Sirens looks set not only to fan
the flames of success for Fitzgerald, but also to generate a sexual frisson
among viewers expecting a run-of-the-mill period drama. As Estella Campion,
demure wife of Grant's ostensibly progressive Anglican clergyman dispatched
from England to set up a parish in Australia, Fitzgerald generates a hefty
proportion of Sirens sexual sparks. Under the provocative influence
of the risque Australian artist (played by Sam Neil), his wife, and the
three young female models in residence - including the superbly statuesque
Elle MacPherson in her screen debut - Tara's Estella begins to experience
strange dreams and an eruption of emotion which culminates in a marriage-threatening
sexual crisis. But isn't Fitzgerald worried that Sirens will be
dismissed by the serious filmgoer as simply a lurid male fantasy film?
'Yes of course, because that's what it is to some extent,' she agrees.
'But it's not as voyeuristic as some stuff that you might see which is
less overt. It is so unashamed in its appreciation of eroticism
that for that reason it is not offensive. The whole point is that it is
a celebration. It advocates the joy of sensuality. I think people have
a problem when they feel something is unnecessary. I don't think it is
unnecessary in this film because, of course, that's what it's all about.'
So what, in Tara's opinion, is the dividing line between tasteful, erotic
art and exploitative rubbish?
'Oh God, I don't know,' she sighs. 'I think when it's unself-conscious.
You know...a film like Betty Blue, for instance. That was seeped
in eroticism and no-one that I spoke to was ever embarrassed by it, because
it was so wholly done. It was embracing.'
On location in the Blue Mountains of New South Wales (they actually
filmed the interiors in the real Lindsay house), Fitzgerald recalls how
the British actors - i.e. she and Grant - experienced the gamut of disconcerting
Australian fauna and wildlife, such as spiders, snakes, leaping insects
and strange marsupial animals, including an unknown creature that came
crashing through Tara's window late one night. Grant, Tara chuckles, was
particularly put out by rat droppings on his bed clothes, although she
professes - much like the rest of the planet at the moment - an adoration
for the actor, particularly his sense of humour, 'as much at his own expense
as at everybody else's'. Mention of Sam Neil, however, sends her into an
altogether giddier mood; one almost gets the sense that the term crush
wouldn't go amiss in this situation. 'He's lovely, really lovely,' she
croons. 'Very gentle,quite quiet, and not at all patronising.'
For the duration of the Sirens shoot, Fitzgerald ended up spending
a lot of time at Neil's hideaway, where his Japanese wife Noriko - also
the film's make-up artist - would cook diner when everyone gathered together
on the Sundays they had off from making the film.
'It was a real family vibe,' she giggles. 'It was kind of like The
Brady Bunch at times.'
Despite the camaraderie, however, Fitzgerald was initially concerned
that Sirens was a potential disaster in the making, what with a
cast containing 'three novices' (MacPherson and two fellow Australian models)
and Fitzgerald herself, 'not that much of an old hand,' she snickers. Consequently,
she heaps lavish praise on director John Duigan for keeping things from
spiralling out of control.
'He's good at making everyone feel relaxed and easy with themselves
and the whole thing. He gave [the models] a lot of confidence and he gave
me a lot of confidence too. Everyone always talks about "actor's directors",
but John really is one.'
Tara was born the daughter of society photographer Sarah Fitzgerald
and artist Michael Callaby; her parents split up when she was three and
her father died when she was 11(though it was only many years later that
Tara learnt he had committed suicide). Her mother remarried the actor Norman
Rodway, to whom Tara feels she owes a lot for her upbringing, even though
she doesn't see him anymore. Unfortunately, she now finds her past has
become fair game for the tabloids.
'You know they're going to do it. They get a hook and that's it,' she
booms. 'What did I read?...How
destroyed I was by my father's death
and how I would never recover. I never said anything like that, but of
course they're going to headline it that way because it's a hook and a
pitch. It's like the whole sex thing. You can talk quite honestly about
sex, but you tell one person and it gets used again and again. Of course
it will change as and when...I mean, you know...' She stares pointedly
in my direction. 'Someone said you should always work out what you're going
to say to journalists beforehand and make sure you know it by heart, but
that would be so boring, wouldn't it?'
Tara sighs, and momentarily looks lost in reverie, perhaps wondering
why she reveals so much of herself to members of the Fourth Estate.
'Do you ever have complete lapses where you just forget who you are
or what you're doing?' she wonders, more to herself than anyone around
her. It turns out that she often experiences this lack of direction immediately
after completing a project (she has just wrapped on the comedy A Man
of No Importance in Ireland, with Albert Finney and Rufus Sewell).
At one time she 'just totally forgot what I was doing. I thought maybe
I should go and get a temping job or something. I waitressed after I did
The Camomile Lawn.' Strangely - as much to herself as to anyone
else - the thought of her professional career suddenly drying up doesn't
fill her with any sense of dread at all: 'It's funny, because I always
wanted to be an actress as a kid.'
Getting married and having children seem to be about the only things
she is pretty certain of, a desire possibly made keener by her suffering
an ectopic pregnancy at the age of 19. But, as with most things in the
laissez-faire life of Tara Fitzgerald, there is still a sense of unpredictability.
Though currently in a 'very friendly' relationship with actor Dorian Healy
of TV's Soldier Soldier fame, she's not in any rush to reach a certain
place by a certain age, least of all insofar as it involves children.