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10 Questions for Michelle Williams
The Oscar-nominated actress stars in Blue Valentine. Michelle Williams will now take your
questions
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Were there any �lms or books that helped you prepare for your role
in Blue Valentine? —John Bajada, MALTA, MONT.
When I �rst met Derek [Cianfrance], the director, I bought him two
presents. One was a CD [and the other] a copy of my favorite book of poems by Galway Kinnell. There's a
line in one of his poems, "Being forever in the pre-trembling of a house that falls." It's about the atmosphere
that you live in when you're a child of divorce. The poem is called "Little Sleep's-Head Sprouting Hair in the
Moonlight." Go �nd it. All my prep work is in there.
I really enjoyed your �lm Dick. Will you do more comedy? —Bob Zeid, OAK ISLAND, N.C.
I would love to. Got any for me?
You seem to favor independent movies. Do you ever see yourself doing blockbusters? —Emily Hansen,
SANDS POINT, N.Y.
Never say never, because then you have to eat your words. But I don't think so. I like working on movies
where it feels like a family. One thing that I �nd very hard about acting is all the transience. Sometimes I feel
like I live my life in a circle of hellos and goodbyes, and that's not really my nature.
Which actors would you most like to work with? —Li Bingyang, HARBIN, CHINA
I would love to work with Tilda Swinton. Kate Winslet. Sometimes when you let a dream escape your lips,
it's scary.
Did being covered by tabloids make it harder to do your job? —Gcobani Qambela, GRAHAMSTOWN,
SOUTH AFRICA
Yes. It made me not want to do my job as an actress. It's just not a nice way to live, feeling under scrutiny
and like you're being followed and like somebody's waiting to catch a private moment. But I'm trying to �nd
the balance so that I can continue to work.
If you weren't acting, what would you be doing? —Tessa Bayrante, MADRID
I would be a full-time mom. There's nothing else I know how to do. There's nothing else that I could earn
money from, that anybody would pay me to do or want to see me do or ask me to do for them. There are
things that I would like to be better at, but there would be no other way for me to earn a living. In my dream
version of me, I would be maybe a writer, maybe a circus performer, maybe a seamstress.
What has been your most important role, and how has the experience changed you? —Sandra Bento,
TORONTO
Mother. Somebody once told me that being a parent is like dying and being reborn, which sounds drastic, but
I understood what she meant. It's the thing that's most important to me. If I don't get that right, then nothing
else really matters. I feel reborn as a human being in every way. There's not a part of my life that it hasn't
touched.
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