Latest news with #WhiteMischief


Telegraph
7 hours ago
- Entertainment
- Telegraph
Greta Scacchi: Sex scenes used to be beautiful ... now they're just odd
Sex scenes have degenerated from soft focus and beautiful in the 1980s to 'explicit rutting' today, according to Greta Scacchi. The actress, who made her name playing a string of femmes fatales, said the portrayal of sex had changed for the worse and was now an ugly thing to watch. 'In my 20s, the female voice was still struggling to emerge, directors were mostly male and simulated love-making was obligatory. But in the '80s, it was soft focus and made to look beautiful and slowed down, whereas now I find it really gratuitous – this explicit rutting stuff is very odd to see. 'I find it so uninteresting, ugly and very compromising for the actors,' said 65-year-old Scacchi. 'It sounds funny coming from me, because I got labelled for nudity and sex scenes, but I don't believe it was a deserved label.' Speaking to Radio Times, the British-Italian star of White Mischief and Presumed Innocent said that she would not have benefited from an intimacy coordinator when she started her career. 'No, I don't at all. Actors don't want to be choreographed into positions unless there's a real antipathy or a communication problem. Luckily, I didn't have that. 'Charles Dance on White Mischief was a very disciplined actor and so am I – we could talk and be frank,' she said. 'We were both, at the time, very beautiful and confident about ourselves physically. He was always very considerate and made sure I was comfortable.' Scacchi said the only discomfort she ever felt was with voyeuristic directors. 'That's where you need the intimacy coordinator,' she said. Her children were teased over her sex scenes, and the actress speculated that it must be '100 times worse for the kids today' because such scenes can be taken out of context and plastered all over social media. She turned down the chance to star in Basic Instinct, rejecting it as a 'male fantasy'. The role went to Sharon Stone. Scacchi is now appearing in Darby and Joan, a cosy crime drama in which she plays a widowed English nurse who teams up with an Australian ex-detective, played by Bryan Brown. The pair have a will-they-won't-they relationship, but Scacchi said she and Brown had refused to entertain the idea of a love scene, given the age of their characters. She revealed that there was tension between the actors and the writers, because the latter wanted to 'sneak a French kiss into an episode' and had also written a scene in which the two share a bed platonically on one occasion. Scacchi explained: 'If you're in your 60s or 70s and you have a kiss or a spoon, the landscape would change forever. The writer was saying, 'We don't want to show these people as being old and unable to enjoy a one-night stand,' and I said, 'Well, we don't enjoy a one-night stand'. 'One day, Bryan and I saw there was an intimacy coordinator booked and we had to say, 'Sorry, you've come under false pretences. It's not happening.''


Daily Mirror
14 hours ago
- Entertainment
- Daily Mirror
Eighties film icon unimpressed by 'gratuitous' modern day sex scenes
Greta Scacchi did not hold back on her thoughts on bedroom scenes and intimacy coordinators English-Italian actor Greta Scacchi says she wouldn't have benefited from an intimacy coordinator when she started her career in the 80s in Hollywood films including White Mischief, Heat and Dust and The Player. Asked if it would have helped, Greta, 65, said: 'I don't at all. Actors don't want to be choreographed into positions unless there's a real antipathy or a communication problem. Luckily, I didn't have that. The most discomfort I've had in those situations was with directors and their own… appetites, let's say. It sometimes gets muddied by voyeurism, and that leads to us being shown stuff that a lot of us don't want to see. That's where you need the intimacy coordinator.' Since 2022 Greta's screen appearances have been a little different. In cozy Australian murder mystery Darby and Joan on U&Drama in the UK, she stars as widowed English nurse Joan Kirkhope. She teams up with Australian ex-detective Jack Darby (played by Bryan Brown). The pair have a will-they, won't-they relationship in the series but Greta says both actors think it would be a mistake if their characters got together. Asked if things have changed today on TV, Greta highlighted in the Radio Times that sex scenes on screen were now very different. She said: 'In my 20s, the female voice was still struggling to emerge, directors were mostly male and simulated lovemaking was obligatory. But in the 80s, it was soft focus and made to look beautiful and slowed down, whereas now I find it really gratuitous – this explicit rutting stuff is very odd to see. I find it so uninteresting, ugly and very compromising for the actors. It sounds funny coming from me, because I got labelled for nudity and sex scenes, but I don't believe it was a deserved label. 'I had a bed scene with Laurence Olivier [in 1984's The Ebony Tower] and that's where it started. I got that label. It made me wish I'd used a stage name.' Last year when promoting her work for Netflix show Bodies, Greta also looked back at her earlier work on screen. She told the Guardian: 'It was very clear to me even then that I was always being invited to play a male fantasy. I had to work very hard to punch some integrity into the idea of being a woman when I was placed inside that male gaze. "I've seen that change a lot, and there are so many more female directors getting attention, which is great, but the way older women get portrayed is often still very odd. Where are the glamorous – or even not glamorous – representations of today's older women? Where are the women who went through women's lib?' Greta was born in Milan, Italy but spent her childhood in England. She began working in theatre when she spent two years of her teens in Australia, where she began working in theatre. Her films include White Mischief, The Player and Emma. In 2024 Scacchi played Mrs Hardcastle in a 1930s-style update of Goldsmith's She Stoops to Conquer at the Orange Tree theatre, Richmond. On theatre work, she said: 'It's like my sacred space. As you get older, life itself continues to throw more challenges and dramas your way, and doing theatre, with its pace, its timings of rehearsals and its rules, makes me feel a bit more in control.' Greta has been in two long term relationships that resulted in children. She had a four year relationship with actor Vincent D'Onofrio, with whom she has a daughter named Leila George. They split soon after they had their first child in 1992. The split reportedly left her so distraught she was unable to work for four years - just when her Hollywood career was taking off. Later, she began a relationship with her first cousin, Carlo Mantegazza, and they have a son Matteo, born in 1997. This relationship ended more than a decade ago but was only confirmed years later in 2022 by her publicist. * The full interview with Greta is in the Radio Times, out now.


The Guardian
11-03-2025
- Entertainment
- The Guardian
‘I demand to have some booze!': how do actors fake being drunk or on drugs?
'Iam not a big drinker, I don't do drugs, I don't smoke,' says Sagar Radia, best known as the ruthless, potty-mouthed trader Rishi Ramdani in the HBO/BBC banking saga Industry. 'But when friends and family watch, they're like: 'You look like you do know what you're doing.'' Nowhere was this more the case than in season three's White Mischief, an episode focused entirely on the character's grim descent into gambling addiction, inflamed by booze and cocaine. Previously described by a colleague as 'the ghost of Margaret Thatcher in a handsome Asian kid', here Rishi starts to look more like a disgraced Tory MP in the 90s, as he binges on shots and coke in a seedy casino. At first he's euphoric – dancing like a drunk uncle at a wedding – but soon his behaviour becomes erratic, his movements shaky and impaired, his legs unsteady. Despite rising debts, he gambles away all he has, and even seems to consider pawning his wedding ring for a few, long seconds. The next morning, we see him stagger into work on a comedown – bloody cuts and bruises all over his face. Be it on film or TV, it does feel as though we are seeing more of these emotional – and occasionally absurd – rock-bottom moments, with increasingly hardcore amounts of drink and drugs swilling around in characters' systems. Industry and the Zendaya-led drama Euphoria are oft-cited examples. But who could forget Murray Bartlett's out-of-control hotel manager Armond in the first season of The White Lotus, a recovering addict who falls off the wagon so severely that he decides to defecate in a bratty guest's suitcase? Season two was equally marked by the presence of powder and pills, not least when Jennifer Coolidge's already dopey Tanya is plied with party drugs at a Sicilian villa (after that series aired, one fan wrote on Twitter/X that judging the Emmys would be 'tough this year as cocaine, viagra, and molly battle it out for best supporting actor'). Cinema isn't immune, either. A new 'proper naughty' hooliganism comedy, Marching Powder, sees Danny Dyer reunite with The Football Factory director Nick Love for what the actor has described as a film with 'more violence [and] more drugs' than its predecessor, released back in 2004. Of course, we know that actors aren't likely to be necking tequilas or snorting the devil's dandruff on screen; on Industry, the actors sniff milk powder rather than cocaine, and once the director shouts 'Cut!' someone brings over a tissue and the actors blow out as much as they can. But how do they manage to make it look so real? Ironically, a great amount of focus is required for this kind of acting. For Radia, somewhat counterintuitively, that meant concentrating hard on appearing sober. On set, Konrad Kay, one of Industry's showrunners, advised him to steady his legs, so as not to overcompensate. 'It's that classic thing of drunk people not trying to play drunk,' Radia says. 'Drunk people are trying to be sober!' His attention was also on the personal and professional pressure bubbling under the surface that might lead someone like Rishi to misuse drugs and alcohol in the first place. 'I think if you're trying to [act these scenes] without a sense of 'Where is this coming from?' and 'Why is he sabotaging himself like this?', then you're just a guy playing drunk, and it makes no sense,' he says. 'I didn't think too much about the substances. I was thinking more about the pressures – whether it was his wife, his kid, his debt, or how much money he was losing at work. You bring all of that into his walk, his thousand-yard stare, his longing when he's lost the money …' It would be naive to think that great acting underpinned all depictions of drink and drug use on screen. Method acting has definitely played its part: James Gandolfini and Michael Imperioli were once so sozzled on the set of The Sopranos that they chained themselves to a tree so they wouldn't fall off a cliff. For Withnail and I – a comedy as alcoholic as it is melancholic – Richard E Grant was encouraged by director Bruce Robinson to drink, in order to have a 'chemical memory' of inebriation. Despite an intolerance to the stuff, Grant has said that Robinson sent him home during rehearsals for the film with a bottle of champagne, and told him to 'work your way through that, even if you vomit in between – which I did all night long.' Meanwhile, Billy Bob Thornton's liquor-fuelled mall meltdown in Bad Santa was powered by an actual binge (he would later tell Entertainment Weekly: 'I drank about three glasses of red wine for breakfast … then I switched over to vodka and cranberry juice, and then I had a few Bud Lights'). There are also the more troubling tales of actors turning up drunk for unrelated reasons, such as Oliver Reed who – says Ridley Scott – 'probably had a couple of pints [during the filming of Gladiator] … said, 'I don't feel good', laid on the carpet and died.' These days, unsurprisingly, drinking on set is less acceptable, though not totally unheard of – especially when a performer is struggling with an alcohol problem off screen. 'There have been times when an actor has substituted their non-alcoholic drink with an alcoholic one,' says Matt Longley, who also cites what he describes as a 'one-off' example of an actor who managed to get their hands on some booze at a filming location (it was, after all, a shoot at a pub). Longley is one of the founders of 6ft from the Spotlight, a non-profit that aims to support cast and crew in the filming of difficult material, and whose 'wellbeing facilitators' are to portrayals of drugs and alcohol – or any other potentially problematic subject matter – what an intimacy coordinator would be to a sex scene. The organisation has to date trained 40 people to go on to sets, completing risk assessments and offering support to cast and crew, 'from the SAs [supporting artistes, AKA extras] to the Mark Ruffalos of the world'. Industry is one production that benefits from a wellbeing facilitator. 'Our whole ethos is to be preventive, and to try to work out what the issues might be before we start, by going through the script,' says Longley. 'We offer training beforehand as well, so that people can support each other through that process, and also support themselves.' On some productions, he says, directors want something to happen that the performers don't know about, in order to capture an authentic reaction (think: a character who we suspect takes drugs, suddenly snorting a line in front of their colleagues). 'Much like an intimacy coordinator, we would say, 'No, I wouldn't do that.' They're actors, they're able to act a reaction!' In the US, a similar role has also started to become more widespread. Mental health coordinators now work across all of the major networks, according to Amanda Edwards, a therapist and intimacy coordinator who has spearheaded the movement. Coordinators support actors and crew in a similar way to their UK counterparts, and also offer guidance around the acting process itself. 'It's about how to act the thing without traumatising yourself, or risking injury to yourself,' says Edwards. This can mean finding ways to adjust an actor's breath and how they move the muscles in their face, or modifying their speech patterns, vocal intonation and posture. 'There are so many tricks that we can use so that a performer doesn't actually have to feel or even imagine that they are feeling the effects of a substance; they can just make their body do the things it would do if it was under the influence.' It is as important to think about how to get into character as it is to think about how to get out of it once production has wrapped, says Edwards. There are, she says, 'documented cases of crew members who maybe have a sober journey behind them, but through participating in a project that involves substance use, have gone into a relapse or have struggled tremendously with their mental health'. In 2023, Euphoria's Dominic Fike, who was struggling with addiction at the time, talked about the impact filming the HBO series had on him: 'I was a drug addict and coming on to a show that's … mainly about drugs, is very difficult' (he was subsequently provided with a sober coach on set). If this all sounds rather heavy, then it's a relief to know that acting drunk, high or both on screen can be a welcome challenge. In a 2021 interview, Murray Bartlett told the Observer that playing Armond had been 'a gift. There were moments of terror, but mostly it was pure joy.' As for Radia, he says he had a blast. 'It was an amazing moment for a south Asian actor like myself to get an opportunity to carry an episode on one of the biggest networks in the world,' he says. 'I know it can seem like it's all deep and high stakes, but actually sometimes they're the fun things to play.' Season three of The White Lotus is airing on Sky Atlantic & Now; Marching Powder is in cinemas 7 March.