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Dame Helen Mirren is back on the big screen playing Alfred Hitchcock’s wife and looking as fabulous as ever. She tells Kate Whiting about almost becoming one of the director’s famous ‘blondes’ in real life.
Meeting any famous actress can be pretty daunting, particularly if they’re a dame and have won an Oscar for playing the Queen. But Dame Helen Mirren is delightfully down-to-earth.
We’re both wearing black lace tops and shoe-boots, hers a wonderful opened-toed leopard skin pair, and she comments on the similarity of our outfits to break the ice.
The truth is I’m a good 30 years younger but she looks way more glamorous, and far more trim, than me. Plus, she looks better in a swimsuit.
Known as much for stripping off in Calendar Girls and those candid red bikini pictures from 2008 as she is for her screen credits, the 67-year-old has bared almost all again in her latest film, Hitchcock, in which she plays Alma Reville, the wife of the great Hollywood director.
There’s a scene where Alma, in defiance of their economic situation, buys a new red swimming costume and plunges into the couple’s pool, which they might lose if Alfred’s next film, Psycho, doesn’t sell.
I simply can’t stop myself from marvelling at her figure. How does she do it?
“Oh God, don’t ask!” she says, laughing, raising her eyes to heaven in mock (I hope) exasperation. “I don’t know. JIf you look there’s some very judicious editing going on...”
Careful editing or not, Hitchcock, in which Anthony Hopkins plays the director, is a fascinating insight into Alma Reville - how incredible a woman she was, and how much she was responsible for making Psycho the success it would become. As a script and film editor, Alma was the strong woman behind the powerful man and made clever choices that would shape the film, including insisting on the screechy soundtrack in the iconic shower scene.
“I didn’t know anything about their relationship before,” admits Mirren, revealing that it was Alma’s “strong character” that drew her to the script.
Hitchcock was obsessed with his leading ladies, almost to the point of cheating on Alma, and Psycho was no different when he cast Janet Leigh (played by Scarlett Johansson) as the tragic heroine, just the latest in his string of ‘Hitchcock blondes’.
But Alma overlooked these dalliances, and spent 54 years as his wife and collaborator.
“It is a love story,” says Mirren. “And I think that Alma and Hitch were, in their own funny, unglamorous way, a great kind of Romeo and Juliet partnership. They were amazing partners in life and I think they could teach us all something about how to make a successful marriage.”
What does she think Hitchcock and Alma would have made of the new movie?
“I think they would’ve loved it actually, I do. I think it’s caught their sense of humour and the nature of their relationship; loving but acerbic and drily funny. I have a feeling that there’s something in the essence of that that is very close to the truth.”
Extra time
WITH DAME HELEN MIRREN
Ilyena Lydia Mironov was born on July 26, 1945, in Chiswick, West London, to a Russian father and English mother
She grew up in Leigh-on-Sea, Essex, and had her first taste of acting in school productions
Her best-known TV role is as straight-talking detective Jane Tennison in ITV’s Prime Suspect
She has played both Queen Elizabeths, winning an Emmy for her TV performance as Elizabeth I and an Oscar for her film portrayal of our current Queen