Q:
You speak Chinese? How convenient when doing a film like THE REPLACEMENT
KILLERS. How can this be? You learned it in school, or what?
A: Yes, my major in college was actually Chinese studies.
Q:
Excuse me. Am I the only one who finds this ironic?
A:
It's NOT ironic. It's intentional. I've wanted to work with Yun-Fat
because I have been a great fan of his Hong Kong films. I'm very
drawn to filmmakers from Asia, because I want to work over there.
It was VERY intentional on my part. It wasn't random.
Q:
That had to have helped in your acting craft, since you could
communicate with him in a language in which he could handle the
nuance.
A:
Well, you know, he can handle the nuance in English, actually.
He would just kind of humor me when we spoke Chinese because his
native speech is Cantonese. Mandarin is a separate dialect entirely
-- which he speaks really well -- but he was just doing it to
humor me, because I would say, "Oh, please, can I speak Chinese
with you?" His English is much better than my Chinese.
Q:
I'm sure your sensibilities in this area helped the craft. Speaking
of sensibilities, I got into an argument with your father, actor
Paul A, recently. I made the mistake of making some comment about
acting, in an interview, and he said, "No, no, wait a minute.
Let me tell you something about acting. In acting, you can only
'do'. After hearing about this for some time, I said to myself,
"The next time I talk to Mira, I'm going to ask her about 'acting
as doing.'"
A:
Acting is "doing," because everything you say or do is some kind
of an action, is some kind of a verb. Like now, I'm "explaining,"
I'm "doing," I'm not just "talking." Now, granted sometimes WHAT
you're doing is inconsequential. You're passing the potato back
and forth. But you're always connected to the other person through
some kind of action. You're responding to their actions with actions
of your own. It's not like "putting on" some condition or attitude.
But you have to come in at the right point for that character
at the top of the scene. That's why it's not SIMPLY "doing," because
you have a goal that you're trying to accomplish. Acting is what
happens on the way.
Q:
So "being" gives you nothing.
A:
Right. "Being" is like pretending.
Q:
So that explains what a dedicated method actress like yourself
likes about your character in THE REPLACEMENT KILLERS. She's always
"doing" things in a very active way.
A:
Yes, exactly. I liked that about her. She never waits for the
man to spark the action -- like most of the women in action films.
She's a self-starter. She DOES get the job done in a very powerful
way. She's a lone figure, unlike most women in movies. She's as
much a loner as any figure in a Western. I liked that a lot.